Bassam Haddad Profile picture
Dec 8, 2024 7 tweets 4 min read Read on X
Quick Notes/Thread on Syria angles: What explains the stark polar reactions we are observing everywhere in the wake of the Syrian regime’s collapse? It is as though people are watching different realities, or approaching reality from singular angles. I’ll try to unpack here though I treated this phenomenon extensively elsewhere 12 years prior, and since. [warning: this is not fun reading] 1/7Image
Deeper inquiry aside, what we are and have been witnessing in Syria since the eruption of the uprising in March 2011 revolves in a significant way around what I called back in 2012 “the political economy of pain,” i.e., how some observers, Syrians or otherwise, prioritize opposing local authoritarianism and others prioritize opposing Imperialism, and the pain they both cause. This translated into closed workshops that we will revive publicly soon. In most cases, neither is oblivious to the other argument, but the other angle somehow vanishes in much of one’s commentary/analysis/position. This is as close as can be of an explainer to the immeasurable rift we are witnessing, not least for people living in Syria. There are other considerations/angles to be sure. 2/7
And those of us who are actively, not just theoretically/analytically, opposing both repression and imperialism are maligned by all sides depending on what part of our discourse/commentary they happened to have read/heard at any given moment. I have been accused by both sides for being wishy-washy (to be polite here) given my firm opposition to both domestic repression and external intervention. Admittedly, it can become somewhat of an untenable/nuanced position in decisive moments, making you sound naive, unrealistic, and even opportunistic, if your opposition to both is just a matter of an intellectual/moral position—because it can be a copout. So what to do? What to think? What not to ignore? How to measure pain (collective/individual) in space and time? How to develop a rich and layered position that translates into practicality without sounding anti-human? 3/7
I have always found only imperfect answers, but they are my own, developed from a class-based social justice political-economic perspective that sees culprits in hierarchical concentric circles: there is no doubt that local dictators are horrible/brutal/repressive, generating an untold amount of pain in space and time. While true, there are usually also bigger external culprits that can be held responsible for fashioning this horrid context, also in space and (much longer) time, and often on an even larger scale that includes global metrics of political-economic power (from global capitalism and financial power to colonialism and notions of supremacy, racial or otherwise). 4/7
I lived in Syria and visited family yearly until I was banned after 2011. I know well how ordinary decent grown men and women shiver (or piss their pants literally) in the face of a visit/communication from a Mukhabaraat/مخابراتagent. I studied the horrific Syrian prison system with political prisoners who are far more pro-resistance and anti-imperialist than the regime itself. I do not undermine any of this pain. It kills me. But I also view many such dictatorships in a global context of colonialism, subjugation, grand land/resource theft, ruling class complicity (in the periphery), and wars/invasions/genocide that devastate an entire people (Palestine, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, Sudan, Somalia, Libya—in the region alone) and set them back decades/centuries in the service of attaining/maintaining/expanding global political-economic power. So while I cannot but firmly despise dictatorship at a human and granular level, I cannot lose sight of the structuring (or direct) impact of this context by imperial/colonial powers. The bigger structural culprits. 5/7
Hence, I am ecstatic for the release of prisoners of conscience who languished/tortured for years/decades, and people generally who had suffered immensely in Syria, including friends and family; but, aside from the immediate precarity, I am even more wary of the now increased reach and control of imperial powers and their local allies in subverting further any forms of self-determination, not least because of the degraded nature of resistance to the domination of U.S. and friends in the region. The United States, Israel, conservative Arab Monarchies, and Turkey, all of whom participated in dirty intervention in Syria, have now ensured a weakened capacity of popular self determination for some time to come. Syria was just the latest. Mark these words. And NO, Iran, Syria, Hizballah are/were certainly not flawless in this formula. 6/7
Despite the privilege of opining from afar, we all have to, and often do, find a balance of sorts. And despite the fact that I wrote books and articles for the past 2.5 decades about the regime’s brutal repression and neoliberal gutting of Syria/ns (bit.ly/3ZnpISV), I have no compunctions regarding prioritizing opposition to the bigger culprits as I look to the future of Syria/region/beyond amid a Genocide conducted by the same parties that benefited the most today. We can only wait and see, but follow the capital. 7/7

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More from @4Bassam

Dec 14, 2024
Short / dull #Thread on Knowledge Production on Syria: beyond the profound relief Syrians feel after the dictator ran away without a word, we found ourselves, and will keep finding ourselves for some time to come, reconstructing events and understandings of what transpired before and since November 27. But we keep falling into the fallacy of making discoveries fit our narratives. This is at some level unavoidable but can be mitigated if we can keep a few precursors in mind, especially during the first two weeks after November 27. 1/7Image
First, let us be clear: what we do not known about yet regarding the background to the HTS mobilization (beyond Turkish involvement) and the cowardly fleeing of Bashar is as important or even more important than what we have witnessed so far in Syria. We do not know exactly who (else) knew what and when and what trade-offs/understandings were forged/signaled. Only reports that have yet to be confirmed. We are beginning to learn about deals and trade-offs between the United States and Turkey. But not sufficiently. 2/7
Second, Syria today is not Syria of 2010; neither is the region. The momentous consequences of the Arab Uprisings and the toll they have placed on states and societies, Syria being in the forefront of such cases (weakened, embattled, divided, not sovereign), has changed internal equations. Israel’s Genocide in Gaza and its operations against the states/actors that have resisted it has weakened them, even if temporarily. Conservative Counter-Revolution proved effective nearly everywhere, unfortunately. 3/7
Read 7 tweets
Dec 10, 2024
Notes/Thread on the "Days After," with focus on Israel’s destruction of Syria’s defense capabilities and its implications: There is no mincing of words regarding the (realistically temporary) relief that pervaded Syria for the past couple of days. But as we discover what we expected regarding the infinitely atrocious/inhumane prisons of the regime, the effective unprecedented defanging and destruction of the Syrian state’s defense and intelligence capabilities by Israel as of today will have reverberations for decades to come. This is the Janus-faced context of the Ba`thist regime collapse that will become more evident by the day, if not hour, starting, well, yesterday. Thread 1/9Image
Israel quickly mobilized to occupy Syrian land in the south of the country as a “permanent” "sterile defense zone" according to PM Netanyahu, with continuing advances that occupied rural towns in Syria, less than 15-18 Km south of Damascus. Further, in the absence of any deterrence and potentially under international cover Israel arguably launched the largest and most intense air campaign ever against an Arab state in the past couple of days, with 300+ air raids that destroyed 250+ military targets (bases and installations) according to Israeli sources, also confirmed widely. Israel also destroyed Syria’s entire Naval fleet and (nearly) all military airports and jet-fighters. 2/9
While the Syrian Army was not dismantled as the United States did after its invasion of Iraq in 2003, Syria is now left almost completely defenseless against any Israeli or other military aggression, with existing military capability being limited to light arms and armaments that cannot withstand any battle of significance. The complete vulnerability by sea, air, and ground is compounded by increasingly credible reports of the seizing/stealing of intelligence documents that reveal sensitive military intelligence information at the level of the state (regardless of who rules Syria). This is accompanied by the assassination of the Chemist/Scientist Hamdi Ismail Nada in his home, akin to similar operations/assassinations of Iraqi scientists after 2003’s invasion. The writing is on the wall. There is no confirmation as to who conducted this operation, with potentially others to follow. The future is also under attack in Syria. 3/9
Read 10 tweets
Dec 7, 2024
Quick Thread: Many, notably among supporters of the resistance axis, are lamenting that the timing of this surge/advance benefits Israel as it pursues its Genocide uninterrupted, and therefore could have been orchestrated, or signaled, by the US, etc., with the power of initiative by Turkey, without which none of this could have been possible, leading the way for its own purposes. 1/5
While all this might be true to some extent--smart and demonstrably effective, isn't it?--this functional thinking which should have been anticipated precisely to preserve the axis, elides that all this has been made so easily possible by the Syrian regime's continued repression, corruption, and de-development to preserve itself (starting decades before the uprising), not the axis, or the majority of the Syrian people. This, of course, notwithstanding the criminal US sanctions and the horrible regional and international actors that intervened in Syria during the past (almost) 14 years. 2/5
If you and I can recognize that this timing is cynical and opportune for the imperialists and colonizers and their Arab minions, as well as Turkey (sp?), surely the Syrian regime should have known/anticipated. Its hubris, tyranny, and deep corruption continued/continues to prevent it from lifting a finger, or engage in the least of compromises on near-absolute power, to begin crafting a Syria for (let's say) most Syrians. 3/5
Read 5 tweets
Jun 11, 2024
THREAD 1/7 This is an important but thoroughly politicized conversation because it allows us to understand and point out the inconsistencies in the speakers’ comments about the difference between anti-Israel, anti-Zionism, and anti-Judaism, even if assuming good faith;
2/7 The speakers want to have their cake and eat it too. They do this by stretching definitions of some terms to include things that do not belong to them and by constricting certain definitions to mean only one thing, when they actually are patently broader in nature;
3/7 They must say it is ok to criticize Israel and Zionism, but then proceed to associate Israel and Zionism so firmly with Jewish identity that it makes criticism of either potentially Antisemitic, pending interpretation by those who take offense. i.e., the offended party may then stretch a critique of Israel/Zionism to be construed as Antisemitic even if the critique has nothing to do with Judaism. This is not a first order error, but a second order one, because they already said reasonably that it’s ok to critique Israel/Zionism. However;
Read 7 tweets

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