Al-Assad Is Still Dangerous: Bashar al-Assad
On A Crash Course With Satan
31 July 2012
By Dr. Hamad Al-Majid
Despite being wounded, Bashar al-Assad is still an
aggressor. Recently, four close members of his inner
circle were killed in the national security
headquarters, his control of border points is eroding,
his officers are defecting, his barracks are
dispersing, and his allies are despairing. His iron
grip has weakened to the extent that it has become as
soft as silk, wilting under the pressure of the storm
caused by the Free Syrian Army (FSA), which has
trampled al-Assad's dignity and prestige into the
dirt, and is now carrying out mass carnage. If Bashar
al-Assad has any sense of logic or concern then his
primary thoughts should revolve around packing his
bags and travelling to Russia, where he can enjoy his
stolen fortune side by side with the infamous Russian
mafia, which shares the same ugly crimes and spirit of
banditry first founded by Hafez al-Assad.
Is it conceivable that al-Assad and his aides are
deaf, dumb and blind? Do they not understand the
course of events, since the outbreak of the revolution
until today, a course that has moved rapidly towards
their inevitable doom? Perhaps we can find the answer
in Bashar al-Assad's disappearance after the "great
battle of Damascus", where all we saw was a single
picture of him as he listened absentmindedly to his
newly-appointed Defense Minister. This disappearance
is not only due to the stunning success of the FSA in
infiltrating the President's inner circle and closest
aides, but it also shows that perhaps al-Assad's chest
is beating with genuine fear for his life, with the
decision to flee no longer in his own hands, in
contrast to the situation in Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and
even Yemen.
In these states this decision was always,
regardless of the continuous resistance of the
revolution or the intransigence of the leader, in the
hands of Mubarak, Ben Ali, Saleh and Gaddafi. Although
there was an entourage who benefited from their
continued presence in power, this inner circle never
held enough influence to force these leaders to resist
until their last breath. As for Bashar al-Assad, his
decision is mired in Russian, Chinese, Iranian, Iraqi,
sectarian and ideological considerations, and there is
a fierce group around him, consisting of sectarian
symbols and those determined to hold onto power, who
would challenge any attempt to flee. He is like the
leader of an organized gang consisting of a terrifying
crew of murderers and drug traffickers, who will
decide whether he should leave or remain dedicated to
the gang. If they do not allow him to flee along with
his treasure of secrets, they may well assassinate him
whilst he tries.
Certainly the great assault on the Damascus
security headquarters had disastrous results for the
al-Assad regime, leaving Bashar al-Assad on a crash
course with Satan. A number of border points have
fallen into the hands of the FSA, and this clearly
demonstrates the weakening of the regime's grip, and
more importantly the ability of the FSA to smuggle
arms to its members inside. Yet the most dangerous
development that indicates that the regime is cracking
comes from reports leaked from inside the Syrian
capital, revealing that some military teams have been
transferred from Syrian towns and villages to
Damascus, and this may explain the regime's weakening
grip in rural towns and border areas.
At this stage, it is important not to focus only on
the case of Bashar al-Assad, but we must also discuss
the post-Bashar phase. It should be noted that pushing
for dialogue with the regime at a time when the
revolution is tightening its grip and the regime is
being defeated would mean making unnecessary
concessions. This reminds us of the Bosnian scenario
in the final stages of their conflict with the Serbs,
when they started achieving decisive victories on the
ground only for the West to intervene and reach a
settlement that equated between victim and
executioner.
Dr. Hamad Al-Majid is a journalist and former
member of the official Saudi National Organization for
Human Rights. Al-Majid is a graduate of Imam Muhammad
Bin Saud Islamic University in Riyadh and holds an
M.A. from California and a Doctorate from the
University of Hull in the United Kingdom.