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PAUL JAY: Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Paul Jay in New York. In Syria the conflict
continues. The rebellion seems to be spreading and the Assad regime teetering. Well, that's
one version of the events. The other version of the events is Syria's put down these kinds
of uprisings before, and the Syrian elite is likely to hang together. So which is it?
Or maybe it's somewhere in between. Now to help us understand what's going on in Syria
is Hamid Dabashi. Hamid teaches at Columbia University, and he's the author of the book
Brown Skin, White Masks. Thanks for joining us.
HAMID DABASHI: Thank you, Paul.
JAY: So what's your take on Syria?
DABASHI: Yes, Syria has managed to put down these events in the past, especially Bashar
al-Assad's father, Hafez al-Assad. But we didn't have Arab Spring going on. Now Arab
Spring is happening. And the Syrian uprising was in response to the Arab Spring. After
Egypt, the greatest apple that will fall is Syria. It is going to so fundamentally change
the situation, 'cause with the fall of Egypt, you had the ally of United States to fall.
With the fall of Syria or any--by "fall" I mean any democratic change in Syria--you will
have a major adversary of United States and Israel to fall. That will change the geopolitics
of the region. Anything, any democratic change that may happen--as we speak, leading intellectuals,
journalists of Syria have been allowed to have a meeting in a hotel in downtown Damascus,
a miracle nobody would have imagined. I mean, one of my dearest friends recently--Syrian
filmmaker Omar Amiralay--passed away. I mean, if he were alive to see a day like this--it's
just unimaginable. Has happened. I mean, it's not totally credible. People are criticizing
it. But the fact of the matter is that this sea change, these seismic changes that are
happening with various degrees of success or failure, or temporary failure, are coming
to the fore and will happen in Syria. Right now what is on the record is more than 1,000
civilians have been killed. You have a mass humanitarian crisis on the border with Turkey.
Turkey is very agitated and incensed with Syria, which means there is international
crisis for Syria generated on its borders. Whatever factor of the Syrian elite coming
together, they're facing the most fundamental challenge of their history since the Assads
have been in power.
JAY: There seems to be quite a debate or difference in interpretation about just what the [crosstalk]
you had, Hillary Clinton's calling Assad a reformer. He's not really the--almost putting
him in the same basket with the way they talk about the Gulf Cooperation Council: oh, yes,
it's not democratic, but they're reforming. And they kind of put Assad there in that basket
early on. Is US policy itself somewhat confused here, in the sense that better the Assad you
know than what the hell's coming next?
DABASHI: Exactly, exactly, because, you see, these democratic uprisings have thrown a monkey
wrench at these--precisely these arrangements. So far as you have Bashar al-Assad in there,
you know who you are dealing with. And what it exactly Bashar--when I hear the word Maghouama,
"resistance", Syria is in the forefront of resistance, what exactly--. Golan Height
is still under the Israeli occupation. The Palestinians are in fact going their own way.
The rapprochement between Hamas and Fatah is extremely important in terms of Hamas has
given up hope on Islamic Republic or on Hezbollah or on the Syrians coming to its aid and trying
to have their own, you know, rapprochement. The thing is, United States, Israel, European
Union, all of these, NATO, they have lost the plot because the plot has changed. Suddenly
we have a democratic will of the Syrians involved in a factor, and it is, like all democratic
[incompr.] open-ended. We don't know in what direction it will go. The only thing that
it has done, it has destabilized, it has made it impossible for you to have regular sort
of chess player with all of these arrangements. And in what direction it will go, they cannot
control it. The confusion of Secretary Clinton, by extension American foreign policy, is because
the rug from under their feet is pulled. And they're trying to control it, they're trying
to micromanage it, but it's very difficult, fortunately.
JAY: In terms of what could happen next in Syria, if the Syrian army doesn't split--and
I don't think there's any too serious signs that it has--and there's no outside intervention,
which is impossible to imagine, that--I mean, not impossible, but highly unlikely there's
going to be some foreign intervention, and I think the majority of Syrian people don't
want it--how does this shift? Because the dictatorship's willing to use any force necessary.
DABASHI: If a year--Paul, think a year back. If six months ago somebody would tell you
that Bashar al-Assad is going to lift the emergency condition, allow for some of the
leading intellectuals, activists, and oppositional forces to gather in downtown Damascus and
negotiate democratic issues, you would have said you're out of your--our mind. But it
has happened.
JAY: So it's not so much about, perhaps, the fall of the Assad regime as an opening up
of a democratic space in Syria.
DABASHI: Exactly. Exactly. And, also, if you go to the models of Tunisia and Egypt, in
Egypt all that has fallen is just a figurehead. There are many, as you know, mini-Mubaraks
lurking in the army. But the thing is, because the people--as of yesterday, there was a demonstration
in Tahrir square. Because people are present, those mini-Mubaraks are not coming out. This
is the synergy. So this, in fact, we are reconsidering what exactly it means, "revolution". It's
not a revolution on the model of the French Revolution or American Revolution. It is a
revolution in terms of the expansion of the political space and participation. That expansion
is a Hannah Arendt conception of revolution. That expansion of the public space is already taking
place. People have agency. Journalists, intellectuals, activists are out; they're articulating their
positions. And in the absence of democratic institutions, political party, freedom of
expression, freedom of peaceful assembly, etc., we are for the first time witness to
the formation of democratic institutions for enduring democracy. To me that is far more
important in enduring for future than just a figurehead falling and so forth.
JAY: And from the Western press point of view, they always look at it just from the point
of view of figurehead, leaders, geopolitics, alliances within the imperialist game. But
for the people it's about a democratic state.
DABASHI: Of course, because in much of this so-called Western press, still the Orientalist
imagination is. I mean, just one figurehead goes; another figurehead comes. But that--now
we are in fact reinventing, reconvening the idea of democracy from ground up, from the
vox populi, from the will of the people, is something that the Western press also has
to stand up in awe and admiration and behold.
JAY: And still don't understand. Thanks for joining us.
DABASHI: Thanks.
JAY: And thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.