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- <text id=90TT3215>
- <link 93HT0626>
- <link 91TT0478>
- <title>
- Dec. 03, 1990: Syria:Siding With The U.S. Sheriff
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990 Highlights
- The Gulf:Desert Shield
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 03, 1990 The Lady Bows Out
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 70
- SYRIA
- Siding with the U.S. Sheriff
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Bucking mounting doubts at home, Hafez Assad continues to ride
- in the American-led posse against Iraq
- </p>
- <p>By LISA BEYER/DAMASCUS
- </p>
- <p> Early risers in Damascus these days are treated to what is
- ordinarily an unthinkable sight in the Syrian capital:
- antigovernment graffiti. LONG LIVE SADDAM HUSSEIN, one scrawler
- proclaimed recently in a bold protest against President Hafez
- Assad's participation in the U.S.-led alliance against Saddam.
- The inscriptions are quickly erased, but government authorities
- know that all the whitewash in the world cannot obliterate the
- sentiment they express. "To be anti-U.S. and pro-Arab
- nationalism is what people in Syria have been groomed for, and
- it's very difficult to shake off," says a Western diplomat in
- Damascus. "This feeling is all of the government's making, and
- now it doesn't serve their purposes."
- </p>
- <p> It is no small irony that as President Bush and Assad met in
- Geneva last week, both men found themselves under attack at home
- for the get-together -- the American for cozying up to a
- dictator who has never been reluctant to use terrorism to
- achieve his goals, the Syrian for dealing with the U.S. Posters
- of Assad have been defaced. Anonymous leaflets criticizing the
- alliance with the West have quietly circulated and, according to
- diplomats, have resulted in arrests in southern Syria.
- Authorities have confided to foreign dignitaries that an
- estimated 85% of the public opposes Syria's gulf policy. Even
- Syrian military officers have privately expressed misgivings.
- </p>
- <p> Assad is hardly concerned about winning a popularity
- contest. As he once said, "It is not public opinion that makes
- government but government that makes public opinion."
- Nonetheless, Damascus has fired up its propaganda machine to
- assure the public that Assad has not completely changed course
- -- and in so doing has underscored some of the problems
- confronting the coalition against Saddam in the gulf. The
- state-controlled media continue to attack the U.S. bitterly for
- its support of Israel. In addition, Damascus officials have
- asserted that the 3,000 Syrian troops in Saudi Arabia will
- defend the desert kingdom but will not participate in an attack
- against the army of another Arab nation, even though Saddam and
- Assad, who head rival wings of the socialist Baath party,
- bitterly resent each other.
- </p>
- <p> Assad's allies profess not to be worried. "It's what the
- Syrians do, not what they say, that counts," says a Western
- diplomat. That point was emphasized earlier this month, when the
- first of 300 Syrian tanks and other armored vehicles arrived at
- the Saudi port of Yanbu. Assad had agreed to the shipment in
- September but claimed that transportation problems had delayed
- the deployment. Though Western diplomats initially dismissed
- that excuse, they now believe Assad and are confident that
- Damascus will honor its original commitment to send its entire
- 9th Armored Division, totaling 15,000 men.
- </p>
- <p> Though a government official asserts that Damascus does not
- require any return on its investment in Saudi Arabia, diplomats
- say the Syrians are piqued at what they believe have been
- miserly rewards for riding in the U.S.-led posse against Iraq.
- So far, Damascus has reportedly received at least $1 billion
- from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and the exiled
- Kuwaiti government for stationing its troops in the gulf. But
- the West has been less generous, especially in light of the
- U.S.'s decision to forgive Egypt's $6.7 billion in military
- debt. Syria remains on Washington's list of countries that
- sponsor terrorism and thus is cut off from U.S. aid. Britain
- maintains its refusal to restore relations with Damascus, which
- were severed in 1986 after Syria was accused of complicity in
- the attempted bombing of an Israeli airliner in London.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the Syrians are exasperated by the aid
- Washington has promised Israel. For the first time the U.S. is
- to supply Jerusalem with Patriot missile systems, which will
- greatly strengthen Israel's antiaircraft defenses. Such
- unqualified U.S. support for Jerusalem makes Assad's alignment
- with Washington all the harder to sell at home. But at least
- one diplomat in Damascus believes Syrian authorities may be
- inflating their assessments of the domestic opposition to
- convince Washington of the need to downplay relations with
- Israel. Damascus has asserted that if Jerusalem gets involved in
- any conflagration in the region, it will quickly switch sides.
- Said a government official: "Against Israel, we will stand with
- Iraq."
- </p>
- <p> But Syria is betting that this scenario will never occur
- and that Saddam will not emerge victorious from the crisis. "In
- the case of war, Saddam will be toppled," says a government
- official. "If there is peace, Saddam will be in trouble
- internally because the Iraqis will demand to know why he pushed
- them into Kuwait just to give it up. Either way, he will not
- come out of this as strong as he was." Assad may well prefer the
- first outcome, especially if his soldiers are not called upon
- to do any fighting. "If there is war and we do not approve it
- beforehand," says an official, "we will not be responsible for
- the results." Being happy with the results is another matter.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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