by Tony Badran
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is known to have a penchant for brinksmanship. Calculating that he has nothing to fear from a timid Obama administration, he is upping the ante in his direct military support to Hezbollah in
Assad's move appears to have followed his recent tripartite summit with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah. It also comes after numerous reports in recent months about a steady increase in the quantity and quality of Syrian-supplied weapons to Hezbollah – from anti-aircraft systems (outdated models, like the SA-2, but possibly also the man-portable SA-18 and SA-24 Igla) to longer-range, Syrian-made surface-to-surface missiles (the M-600/Fateh-110). It is unclear whether
This development has quietly set off a seemingly heated discussion in
Through such behavior, Assad has confused those who had high hopes for "engagement" of
Assad has been doubling down on "resistance" both in his rhetoric and in Syrian material support – exceedingly so ever since the US voiced its desire to improve relations with Syria in the hope of prying it away from Iran and ending Syrian backing for Hezbollah and Hamas.
The Syrian president made a telling remark at the last Arab League summit to the Palestinian Authority president, Mahmoud Abbas. He observed that "the price of resistance is not higher than the price of peace." And therein lays the problem. Assad has not been made to feel that the costs of continued destabilization can be prohibitive. Instead, all he gets from
The Israelis may currently be unwilling to divert attention from their primary concern, which is blocking the Iranian nuclear program. As a result they might be leaving
Furthermore, the Syrian president may calculate that, in the event of a conflict, the administration will ultimately prevent the Israelis from going all the way with
Assad's mantra is that "peace and resistance are two sides of the same coin." As he sees things, it's not either peace or resistance. For him the two are simultaneous tools of attrition, with peace talks providing
Some have tried to paint Assad as a victim of Iranian entrapment. But this is simply wrong. By making Hezbollah's arming a Syrian, as opposed to an Iranian, issue, Assad hopes to increase his leverage in Lebanon in order to bargain over Syrian control there with the US and Israel. Recalling the "red lines" agreement of 1976 and the April understanding of 1996, the Syrian president may be trying to gain
The Syrian wager always was that
However, this could end up being a bad miscalculation for
PLO official Bassam Abu Sharif once recounted how, in 1982, ahead of the Israeli invasion of
When Assad's father, Hafez, crossed
Tony Badran is a research fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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