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Lebanon Power Deal: Beginning of the end of Syria’s isolation?

A new Syrian-Jordanian deal on energy for Lebanon is being seen by some as another step toward the international rehabilitation of the brutal Assad regime. Last Sunday, the Syrian defense minister, General Ali Ayoub, went to meet his counterpart, General Yousef Heunieti, in Jordan to discuss security on their shared borders.

Lebanon Power Deal: Beginning of the end of Syria’s isolation?
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Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (File Photo)

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It was the first meeting at that level in a decade and marks a significant turnaround in Jordanian attitudes to its war-torn, dictatorial neighbour. At the beginning of the Syrian conflict in 2011, Jordan supported anti-government protesters who wanted to bring down the authoritarian regime led by Bashar Assad. Back then, Jordan’s King Abdullah II was the first Arab leader to call on Assad to step down peacefully. However, over the 10 years since the first peaceful anti-government demonstrations that led Syria into a vicious and increasingly complex civil war, attitudes have changed. 

The defense ministers’ meetings in Jordan follows on from other talks held earlier this month that were also described as a “diplomatic breakthrough” for the Syrian government. On September 8, energy ministers from Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Egypt came together in the Jordanian capital, Amman. They agreed that Lebanon, which is dealing with a severe political and financial crisis that has resulted in an almost total power outage, would import Egyptian gas and Jordanian electricity via Syria. 

Countering Iranian influence 

The plan is supported by Jordan’s government and the US ambassador to Lebanon, Dorothy Shea. The latter sees the Jordanian imports as a way of countering Iranian influence in Lebanon. On August 19, the leader of the Lebanese group Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, said its ally, Iran, was sending fuel shipments to help Lebanon weather its power crisis. On the same day, Shea announced that the US was talking to Egypt and Jordan about different solutions to the Lebanese power crisis. 

Some of what are known as the Caesar Act sanctions — named after the Syrian military photographer who defected with 53,000 photographs documenting torture and murder by the Assad government — could be amended to deal with the fuel transports, Shea said. Taken altogether, the high-level meetings and the sanctions relief are being seen by some as yet another sign that the brutal Assad government is undergoing something of a diplomatic rehabilitation. But is it really? 

Regional reintegration 

“I think calling it ‘diplomatic rehabilitation’ goes a bit too far,” Julien Barnes-Dacey, director of the Middle East and North Africa program at the European Council on Foreign Relations, told DW. However, he conceded, “a kind of regional re-integration has been going on for a while now.” 

Since 2011, Syria has been suspended from the Arab League. However, in December 2018, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain re-opened embassies in the Syrian capital, Damascus. In October last year, Oman reappointed its ambassador to Syria and in April this year, Syrian and Iraqi energy ministers met to discuss cooperation. This May, Saudi Arabia apparently held talks about re-opening its embassy too. 

“By and large, governments in the region have accepted that Assad has survived and that he’s going to stay [in power] for some time,” Barnes-Dacey explained. “So it’s in their own interests to normalise ties with Syria. There are economic and energy issues that play to everyone’s advantage,” he said. 

Barnes-Dacey pointed out that Syria and Jordan, which is itself in difficult economic straits, previously did significant cross-border trade with one another. 

This also has to do with the US using a softer touch in the Middle East under President Joe Biden. “The Biden administration is not going to invest in placing the Assad regime under significant pressure,” Barnes-Dacey confirmed. “The result is regional actors recalibrating.” 

This article was provided by Deutsche Welle 

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