Arab forces to Syria? The mistake of 1976 once again

Image above from the head­line of the Guardian 1976

Race against time before the com­ing Arab Sum­mit in Bagh­dad next March (Three GCC coun­tries Saudi Ara­bia, Qatar and Bahrain are already plot­ting to post­pone the Sum­mit, accord­ing to to Al-Seyassah). Emir of Qatar’s call of send­ing Arab troops to Syria to stop the blood­shed and pro­tect civil­ians is an odd sug­ges­tion con­tra­dicts the facts on the ground.

Syria already rejected this plan, because it will cre­ate a new atmos­phere of the con­flict, which is undoubt­edly will embar­rass Rus­sia and the China in case that some Arab coun­tries to sup­port such a proposal.

Prob­a­bly, Qatar is pushed by West­ern power to announce this plan for two reasons:

- Indi­rect giv­ing endorse­ment and legit­i­macy to the for­ma­tion of the so called “Syr­ian army free”
– May soon help in acti­vat­ing the idea of the buffer zone (human­i­tar­ian cor­ri­dors or any other dubi­ous name) that can be set up by Turkey, and pro­tected with the par­tic­i­pa­tion of Arab military.

But it seems that the Arab League is not inter­ested in this option includ­ing the Saudi media who crit­i­cized this option. This is Saudi news­pa­per alriyadh:

There is no leg­is­la­tion approved by the Arab League coun­tries, and even the terms of the com­mon defense pro­to­col are still hazy, directed against any exter­nal aggres­sion, not an inter­fer­ence in the Arab coun­tries affairs.

Arabs already tried this option in Oct. 1976 in Lebanon. Under the same recent rea­son “pre­vent­ing a civil war”, Arab heads of state endorsed a peace plan call­ing for deploy­ment of 30,000-man joint Arab peace­keep­ing force in Lebanon (inter­est­ing is that at that time, Iraq is the only Arab coun­try opposed send­ing troops).

Arabs sent their forces, but the plan was a total fail­ure and the pres­ence of the forces cre­ated more trou­bles and con­flicts in Lebanon than before. The Arabs with­drew the mil­i­tary peace keep­ers from Lebanon, except the Syr­ian forces who remained until 2005.

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