After diplomatic breakthrough with Tehran, Riyadh sets its sights on Damascus

The balance of power in the Arab world has shifted and Damascus is not capable of regaining its regional role without help

A handout photo made available by Syrian news agency SANA shows President Bashar al-Assad (R) meets the Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan (L), in Damascus, Syria, 18 April 2023.
EPA
A handout photo made available by Syrian news agency SANA shows President Bashar al-Assad (R) meets the Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan (L), in Damascus, Syria, 18 April 2023.

After diplomatic breakthrough with Tehran, Riyadh sets its sights on Damascus

Saudi Arabia is making a major effort to build on the diplomatic momentum generated by its agreement to normalise relations with Iran.

The Kingdom has already established a ceasefire and prisoner exchange with the Houthis in Yemen. Its next efforts are centred on Syria, as the Arab world tries to reconnect with Damascus after a long period of isolation for the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.

Syria was suspended from the Arab League in 2011 after a majority vote of 18 amid concern over the number of fatalities in protests against the government, which went on to develop into a fierce civil war.

Top-level talks on Syrian roadmap

There are now moves to bring the country back into the fold as power balances shift within the Middle East, with Riyadh prominent among them.

After the Saudi-Iranian agreement was struck in March this year, Syria’s foreign minister, Faisal Mekdad, was invited to the Kingdom to discuss a new roadmap for Syria. He met with Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud, the Saudi foreign minister, in April.

A joint statement issued after the talks outlined a series of crucial options that would require the Syrian regime to abandon policies and alliances that have isolated the country within the region, making it into a source of threat and depriving it of its potential as a politically active state.

The importance of a political solution to the Syrian crisis was highlighted in the statement, that also called to preserve Syria's unity, security, stability, Arab identity, and territorial integrity.

It stressed the need to support and strengthen state institutions in Syria’s territories — not least by putting an end to the presence of armed militias and foreign interventions, while improving cooperation to combat drug trafficking.

Read more: Can US-UK sanctions dismantle Syria's drug industry?

It stressed the need to support and strengthen the state institutions in Syria and put an end to the presence of armed militias and foreign interventions.

Further steps were taken later in April.

Foreign ministers from the Gulf Cooperation Council met in Jeddah alongside Egypt, Jordan, and Iraq for consultative discussions on establishing an Arab leadership role to bring Syria back into the international community and toward reclaiming its natural role in the region.

AFP
A handout picture provided by the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) late on April 14, 2023, shows the meeting of top diplomats from the six Gulf Cooperation Council countries plus Egypt, Iraq and Jordan, in Jeddah.

Faisal bin Farhan went to Damascus on 18 April to put the points drawn up to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad.

The high-level meeting showed that the Saudi initiative to strengthen its relations with Syria, which come despite opposition from the US, is more significant than efforts at other regional states to normalise ties with the brutal al-Assad regime, which has mistreated those opposed to it within the country.

Wide eyes in Washington 

Running at a fast pace, the diplomatic developments in the Middle East have caused international surprise.

The Wall Street Journalreported on 6 April that the director of the US's Central Intelligence Agency, William Burns, expressed shock over the rapprochement between Riyadh and Tehran, as well as the al Assad regime, which is still under heavy sanctions from the West.

Burns warned Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman the moves are akin to sponsoring "global rivals."

Meanwhile, Moscow is backing a summit that will bring together the leaders of Syria, Turkey, and Iran to establish a four-way or 'quad' alliance following agreements made after the four countries' leaders met in Tehran last July.

Although Moscow aims to promote its initiative regionally and in the Arab world, it had separate meetings with the ambassadors Iran, Israel, Turkey, Egypt, and Algeria, who met with Mikhail Bogdanov, deputy foreign minister and presidential envoy to the Middle East and North Africa. They were entitled "Deep Exchange of Views for the Settlement of Crises in the Middle East and North Africa."

Russia seems to be struggling to establish the track on which relations between Syria and Turkey could be normalised — a critical point for this nascent alliance.

Moscow's moves collide with Damascus's mandatory conditions for discussing the change, which include Turkish withdrawal from Syria and Ankara's cessation of support for terrorist groups, including Syrian opposition factions in Idlib.

Read more: Arab normalisation with Syria gains appeal amid clashes in Sudan

No breakthrough in Moscow

The Syrian president reaffirmed these conditions during his recent visit to Moscow on 15 March, stating that he would not meet with the Turkish president until Turkish forces withdraw and Ankara ceases to support terrorist organisations.

dpa
A photo released by the official Syrian Arab news agency (SANA) on 15 March shows Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad shake hands ahead of their meeting at the Kremlin.

In contrast, Turkey's foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, announced that Ankara would not accept any preconditions, including the withdrawal of Turkish forces from Syrian territory, in exchange for direct negotiations with the Syrian government.

Turkey's foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, announced that Ankara would not accept any preconditions, including the withdrawal of Turkish forces from Syrian territory, for direct negotiations with the Syrian government.

Cavusoglu emphasised that such a withdrawal would mean "a return of threats against Turkey." As a result, the scheduled Syrian-Turkish-Iranian-Russian quad meeting in Moscow in mid-April was postponed indefinitely, impeding progress in the Russian initiative.

Kurdish complications

There was a very different approach from the self-administered Kurdish-controlled region of northern and north-eastern Syria. It expressed its willingness to meet with the Syrian government to resolve the crisis, reflecting regional changes and the adding to the Arab outreach underway towards Damascus.

Read more: Kurdish Rojava region in northern Syria faces uncertain fate

The Kurdish statement, issued in mid-April, affirms its commitment to "the unity of Syrian territory" while emphasising the importance of "establishing a decentralised, pluralistic political administrative system that preserves the rights of everyone without exception." 

It also calls for a "fair distribution of economic wealth and resources among Syrian regions, including oil and gas fields, through agreeing with the Syrian government based on dialogue and negotiation."

Read more: Syria looks to Libya oil deal as blueprint to access vital revenue stream

The Kurdish statement further complicates the picture for Russian attempts to reconcile the contradictions in the political positions of its potential allies. It contains points that create confusion for both Turkey and Syria, weakening Moscow's initiative.

The Kurdish statement further complicates the picture for Russian attempts to reconcile the contradictions in the political positions of its potential allies. It contains points that create confusion for both Turkey and Syria, weakening Moscow's initiative

Economic crisis

Damascus is currently struggling with a debilitating economic crisis and remains in a state of international and regional isolation. It recognises that the balance of power in the region has shifted, and its capabilities are no longer adequate to restore its central regional role.

Ankara seeks to gain territory in northern Syria while claiming to protect its security from Kurdish groups. However, it cannot cross American red lines, including the Caesar Act designed to protect Syrian civilians.

As a result, Damascus's cooperation with Moscow to normalise relations with Ankara will come without compensation and will not contribute to finding a solution to the ambitions of Kurdish groups, whose decisions also remain subject to Washington's will.

Conversely, its alliance with Iran will not serve as a fully protective shield for the Syrian regime, creating problems of its own.

The heavy presence of the Revolutionary Guard on Syrian territory has become a source of danger and a legitimate reason for Israel and the international coalition to launch missile attacks and air strikes on Syria.

Read more: Is Israel on 'red alert' yet?

International limits on al-Assad

Syria's options look limited — by Security Council resolutions and US restrictions. The regime's alliances with Moscow and Tehran continue to leave it isolated internationally.

It is powerless domestically against Kurdish militias allied with the US, who are determined to achieve a political solution establishing a share of national oil and gas resources, along the lines of the federal model in Iraq.

And so Syria faces choices — some of which come down to political realism.

Damascus must weigh up how two sets of international diplomatic efforts centred on the country may define its future: the Saudi initiative to return Syria to the Arab fold versus Russia's moves to set up the quad.

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