Home Page - Gulf in the Media
HomePoliticsEconomy                               Set Gulfinthemedia.com as home page
Politics
 Print  Send This Page
Save Listen to this Article
The Series of Syrian Pictures   

Al Hayat - 01 August, 2012
Author: Ghassan Charbel

I saw the picture of Walid al-Moallem with Ali Akbar Salehi in Tehran. Before it, I saw the pictures of the vacant Syrian seat at the meetings of the Arab League.

A picture is worth a thousand words.

Today, the old pictures that were both possible and promising, the day they were taken, are impossible. I am talking about the pictures which made Syria a player, not a playground. But analyzing the pictures taken in the recent past may help explain the dismal present.

Turkish-Syrian relations were once strong, warm and intimate. President Bashar al-Assad personally drove his car with Erdogan by his side, touring the streets of Damascus and discussing bilateral, Arab and international affairs that no one witnessed except the interpreter.

Their personal and political relationship went very far. In the summer of 2008, Assad and his family spent a family holiday with Erdogan and his wife in the coastal city of Bodrum in Turkey. A year later, they put their initials on a strategic cooperation agreement, during an iftar in Istanbul. And two months after that, Walid Moallem and his Turkish counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu lifted the barriers across their countries’ borders, after they agreed to abolish visa requirements between the two countries.

On December 23, Erdgoan almost caused a major coup in the region. He received then-Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, with Davutoglu present. The aim of the meeting was nothing less than bringing about a Syrian-Israeli agreement. During the six-hour meeting, Erdogan would go to the office next door and contact Assad, and then return to settle the dispute over certain words. Olmert promised to get the approval of his cabinet, but when he returned home, he launched the war on Gaza, and the entire project collapsed.

Other pictures are still fresh in memory. These include the picture of Assad, Ahmadinejad and Hassan Nasrallah in Damascus in February, 2010, which paved the way for another: that of Assad, Erdogan and the Emir of Qatar Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani in Istanbul the following May. What is common between the two pictures is Assad. So was it a race between two pictures that reflected the competition over Syria? Or was it that Damascus wanted to compensate for the previous picture by taking a different one, to say that its policy was not hostage to the first picture?

The Syrian-Qatari honeymoon lasted for a while, too. With Turkey’s help, Qatar played a role in returning Syria to the international community. There is another important picture in this context: The whole world saw Assad when he was French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s guest in the celebrations of July 14. That picture turned the page on Damascus’s isolation, following the assassination of Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

The Qatari-Syrian relations were strong and warm. There were tours in the presidential car in Damascus, and family holidays on the coast. There were investments and mediations. Here, too, there is another relevant picture: That of the Lebanese politicians gathering around the Emir of Qatar the day General Michel Suleiman was elected president, just like they had once stood around King Fahd bin Abdul Aziz in al-Taef. In politics, it is hard to accuse some pictures of being innocent.

The past years in Syria were rich in such pictures, lest we forget the reconciliation initiative launched by King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz at the Kuwait summit in 2009, and the Saudi-Kuwaiti-Syrian-Egyptian summit held two months later in Riyadh - followed by Assad’s participation in the opening ceremony of the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Riyadh.

There is an even more impactful picture. In July 2010, King Abdullah visited Damascus, and escorted Assad to the presidential palace in Baabda, Lebanon, where the Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri sat down next to the Syrian president. Before that, Hariri had entered the series of Syrian pictures, after many entreaties and pressures. On December 19, 2009, Assad received the Lebanese Prime Minister, who was Saad Hariri. The two men made an exceptional effort to suggest that their handshake meant reconciliation. Only the subsequent months revealed that there was no love lost between the two men in the talks and the visits.

In October 2010, Assad drove an Iranian-made car in Tehran, and went on a tour with Ahmadinejad.

The race between these pictures was tough and long. Some of those who appeared in them wanted Syria to move away, even if slightly, from the Iranian program in the region. The others wanted Syria to become further entrenched in the pro-resistance axis.

With the eruption of the Syrian uprising, the majority of the old pictures were rendered impossible. Syria entered the phase of the picture of the vacant seat, and of Moallem in Tehran.
 
A struggle for positions precedes the Geneva conference
Source : The Daily Star  
Date : 2013-05-24
It's a rule of thumb in Middle East conflicts that whenever peace talks are announced, each side steps up the fighting so it can grab as much territory as possible...
Yemeni women make their voices heard
Source : Aljazeera.com  
Date : 2013-05-24
Yemeni women are some of the fiercest women I have ever met. Through conflicts and famine, many have had to struggle for the survival of their families. The abject poverty...
The road to Jerusalem does not pass through Damascus
Source : alarabianet  
Date : 2013-05-24
Hassan Al Mustafa Hezbollah's direct involvement in military operations in Syria's Qusayr has caused a political controversy among the party's supporters as well as among the party’s opponents. This involvement...
The Gitmo slur
Source : Khaleej Times  
Date : 2013-05-24
A renowned US publication, in its cover story last week, remarked that President Barack Obama himself is a "prisoner of Gitmo"....
A damning report
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-05-24
The official Bangladeshi government report into the April 24 Dhaka garment factory collapse in which no less than 1,130 people died and some 2,500 were injured, many of them maimed...
Kerry's Qusayr concern
Source : Khaleej Times  
Date : 2013-05-24
The US Secretary of State has officially listed out his concerns over the ongoing mess in Syria....
Mideast peace: Why is Kerry bothering?
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-05-24
Few people are giving US Secretary of State John Kerry's fourth and latest visit to the Middle East much chance of success in rekindling the fading embers of a Palestinian...
Guarding against disasters
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-05-24
The change in weather patterns in the Kingdom has led to torrential rains in recent years. While there has mercifully been little loss of life, there has been considerable destruction...
The lessons of Woolwich
Source : The Peninsula  
Date : 2013-05-24
The reprehensible killing of a British soldier in London on Wednesday by Islamic terrorists shows us that the threat of terrorism will not be easily eradicated and Muslim leaders, both...
Nerves on edge on Israel-Syria front
Source : Gulf Today  
Date : 2013-05-24
The Israeli take on the Syrian conflict goes like this: the forces of the Syrian regime of President Bashar Al Assad, in more than two years of fighting a civil...
Pathetic indifference
Source : Oman Tribune  
Date : 2013-05-24
Myanmar's President Thein Sein is certainly a happy and contented man today. With US President Barack Obama waving the green flag at his reforms, the Myanmar president has got the...
Obama struggles to redefine the 'war on terror'
Source : Gulf Times  
Date : 2013-05-24
US President Barack Obama has conjured the prospect of an eventual end to the perpetual, largely covert, global "war on terror" launched by his predecessor, George W Bush, in response...
WFP concerned over food rations reaching families in Syria
Source : Kuwait News Agency  
Date : 2013-05-24
The UN World Food Programm (WFP) said on Friday that it is concerned about the plight of families fleeing the ongoing fight in Syrian city of Al-Qusayr....
'Safe exit' for Assad proposed
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-05-24
Syria's outgoing opposition chief published an initiative for his war-torn country Thursday that would grant President Bashar Al-Assad a safe exit, and urged dissident factions to adopt his plan....
32-year-old GCC faces threats, makes accomplishments
Source : Kuwait News Agency  
Date : 2013-05-24
Thirty-two years ago, leaders of the regional countries held a summit conference in Abu Dhabi, the UAE, where they approved constituent law of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)....
5 die as Assad backers, foes clash in Lebanon
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-05-24
Opponents and supporters of Syrian President Bashar Assad traded heavy machine gun fire and mortar shells in the Lebanese port city of Tripoli, leaving five people dead in what was...
AL to submit Syria proposals to UNSC
Source : Gulf Today  
Date : 2013-05-24
The Arab League (AL) said on Thursday it will submit to the UN Security Council a list of proposals for a June peace conference aimed at ending the conflict in...
Iran: IAEA report shows nuclear drive is peaceful
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-05-24
A new report by the UN atomic watchdog validates Iran's progress in its "peaceful" nuclear activities despite international sanctions, the country's envoy to the agency said yesterday....
Iraq violence kills 11
Source : Khaleej Times  
Date : 2013-05-24
Attacks in Iraq on Thursday killed 11 people, including four soldiers, officials said, the latest in a wave of violence that has left 420 people dead so far this month....
Journalists abducted in Yemen
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-05-24
At least three journalists have been held hostage by armed tribesmen for a week in Yemen, according to news reports....
Total 606 Results in 31 Pages
1 
For more news, views and reports about this topic, please subscribe
to GRC website: www.grc.ae
Sat May 25, 2013| 15-رجب-1434هـ
5 die as Assad backers, foes clash in Lebanon
SAMA's net foreign assets surge to SR 2.506 trillion
Iran: IAEA report shows nuclear drive is peaceful
Dubai among top four in prime global cities index
Iraq violence kills 11
Retail investors spur Kuwait market
Saudi charities face funding crisis over terror fears
Bahraini banks in merger talks as consolidation picks up
Iran denies its drone entered Bahrain airspace
Most Gulf markets plunge
Journalists abducted in Yemen
Archelons plans to invest $ 1mn in Qatar
Disqualified Rafsanjani blasts Iran's rulers
Jeddah food and hotel expo sets new standards
OIC condemns 'barbaric' murder of British soldier
UAE economy gains momentum
    Newspaper Editorials
The Gitmo slur
A damning report
More>>  
    Opinions
Iran's Moment of Truth
Battered and bloodied
More>>  
    GCC Press Agencies
Day's main stories from the GCC Press Agencies
    Reports
Iraq Ten Years On
US Goals and Strategies toward the Arab World
More>>  
    Bank Reports
Saudi Arabia: Interest rate outlook, 2013-15
GCC Markets Monthly - May 2013
More>>  
    GRC Analysis
Building a Strong Saudi-Japan Relationship
Poor Gulf: Inequality and the Lack of Statistics
Whither GCC-US Relations?
    GRC Commentary
On Relations between Rulers and Citizens: The Need for a New Social/Political Contract in the GCC States
Key Issue Facing the Saudi Ruling House.
    GRC Book Review
Beyond Regionalism? Regional Cooperation, Regionalism and Regionalization in the Middle East
India, GCC and the Global Energy Regime: Exploring Interdependence and Outlook for Collaboration.
    GRC Press Release
Gulf Research Center press releases to the media
    GRC Publications
Asia-Gulf Economic Relations in the 21st Century: The Local to Global Transformation
Assessment of the Security Situation in Iran, Iraq, Yemen, Syria and the Arab Gulf States
China in the Eyes of the Saudi Media
    GRC Newsletters/Bulletins

Enter your email to get the Newsletter
Go
      
Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Terms & Conditions | About Us |
Weather | Qibla Directions | Hijri Date Conversion Tool
Full Page :total time:0  |   58-- 58 Middle Page :0  --   | Right : 58 - 58--en--sess-enreq-en-coming