Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Syria's Bashar al-Assad Chooses the Qaddafi Model

THE ATLANTIC: Syria's dictator is following the same path that led Libya's leader to his death

This morning, in his first public speech in two months, Assad made an angry, rambling, nearly two-hour long speech vowing to crush with "an iron first" the "conspiracy" against his regime. He made delusional claims that nobody believes: there have been no orders to fire on civilians, the protesters are all terrorists, foreigners are to blame. He sounded, in other words, like the "mad dog of the Middle East" himself, Muammar Qaddafi, whose defiant and wild-eyed speeches nearly a year ago presaged the Libyan civil war.


Back in April, an NPR producer wrote up the 11 steps that Middle Eastern dictators take on the path to losing power. Her list, like the many similar lists floating around Arabic-language blogs and social media, drew from the examples of Tunisia's Zine el Abidine ben Ali (fled in January), Egypt's Hosni Mubarak (forced out in February), and Yemen Ali Abdullah Saleh (pressured by the U.S. to resign in early April, a still-ongoing process). The pattern looked indelible, and still does. Here's the list:
1. Shut down the internet
1. Send thugs (on foot or horseback)
2. Attack and arrest journalists
3. Shoot people
4. Promise to investigate who shot people
5. Do a meaningless political reshuffle
6. Blame Al Jazeera
7. Organise paid demonstrations in favor of your regime
8. Make a condescending speech about how much you love the youth
9. Warn that the country will fall into chaos without you
10. Blame foreign agitators
» | Max Fisher | Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Related »

BBC: Syria: US condemns Bashar al-Assad 'conspiracy' speech – The US and France have condemned a speech by Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad which blamed an "external conspiracy" for the mass uprising against his rule. ¶ The US state department said President Assad had thrown "responsibility on everybody but back on himself". ¶ France's foreign minister said the speech amounted to "denial of reality". » | Tuesday, January 10, 2012