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General News    H3'ed 1/9/13

Bashar Assad's night out at the Opera House

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Message Franklin P. Lamb
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Tipping Point or Turning Point?

Easy walking distance from this observer's hotel near the city center, the Damascus Opera House, the site of yesterday's Presidential  address, was inaugurated in May of 2004 by the President and his wife,  completing a project of his late father, Hafez, who actually planned the opera house in detail, but which had been put on hold since the late 1970's.  Located off Umayyad Square, the multipurpose culture center complex, presented its most recent opera, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's, The Marriage of Figaro, just months before the current crisis erupted.

The nearly 1,400 seating capacity Opera Theater was packed for yesterday's presidential address, and as in the final scene of Mozart's Opera, the conclusion of Bashar Assad's performance was followed by, as Mozart wrote, "a night-long celebration" among many of his supporters here in Damascus.  Bashar Assad's glory, as he tried to leave the stage last night and was swarmed by scores of admirers, may not have been that of Caesar's during the Gallic wars as the latter also portrayed a domestic crisis and challenge as a defensive struggle to save Rome. And granted, it is unlikely that Syria's president will appear to his critics as posh as John Kennedy at    Vienna's Opera House.  

But the man connected with his audience during his watershed speech.  He excelled in delivery, content and, most critically, stating and advocating what he believes is his countrymen's case.  While welcoming foreign advice on how to end the current crisis, he insisted that the Syrian people throughout their history of resistance to occupation and hegemony have rejected the orders from certain governments he referred to, in the current crisis, as the "masters of the puppets" who are every day causing death, destruction and deprivations across the Syrian Arab Republic.  Admittedly sleep deprived, this observer, as he listened to Bashar Assad's address was reminded of a Macbeth or Brutus soliloquy. I could not help but transpose in my mind Brutus' plea in Act 3, Scene 2 of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar:

"Who is here so rude or unpatriotic that would not be a Syrian nationalist?  "- Who is here so vile that will not love his country? If any, speak--for him

I have not intentionally or unjustly wronged. I pause for a reply."

 

Following his presidential address to the nation, one local journalist, who is sometimes critical of the regime, elaborated an answer to my question about Assad's apparent enduring popularity during this tragic period for people of Syria: "It's true. And it's partly due to the fact that he is modest, even humble and well-educated in contrast to some regional monarchs who are essentially illiterate and uninterested in the world outside their fiefdoms' palaces.  She continued, "Before the crisis it was not unusual to spot him, without a security convoy, driving himself around downtown, his car full of  "- kids doing errands or taking them out to eat, sometimes collecting them from school. You saw his almost boyish charm yesterday as he entered the hall and made his way down the aisle to the podium as he greeted members of the audience. As he departed he did not appear in a hurry as he shook hands.  Bashar Assad obviously enjoys being among people and is not at all a sullen, remote type personality as some critics wrongly portray him."

Following the speech, when the lovely chamber maid who daily spruces up my hotel room dropped by in early evening to do something,  I was reading and watching the news. They showed a clip of the president delivering his noontime speech.  She lit up when she saw Bashar, spontaneously walked across the room, wrapped her arms around the TV set and hugged it while kissing the screen. I noticed that the lady's hands were wet and became fearful that the dear woman might get electrocuted! 

One well known politically connected Sheik in Damascus offered his view last night to this observer that Assad's message was to the Syrian people and  to his country's foreign friends and to those who are neutral, and not to his governments enemies. He also suggested that the President will deliver two more speeches in the near future, the next one perhaps having an FDR fireside chat" format.  The Sunni Sheik referred to yesterday's speech as the first of three victory speeches he expected to be delivered.  He also spoke about the UAE and Saudi Arabia in relation to what was happening in Syria and the fact that they are experiencing challenges of their own.  In the case of the Saudi Kingdom, and against the backdrop of increased Iran-Saudi consultations regarding Syria, the ill health of King Abdullah and the evident succession power struggle which has intensified recently, with some of the royal family potentates reportedly being strongly opposed to the current campaign to undermine the Assad regime. The Syrian government, despite its detractors, is seen by many in the Gulf countries as being pedigreed Arab nationalists with a history of mutual respect for other countries. 

The Sheik also sees signs of the Obama administration backing off from its covert war against Syria partly due to the fractured and often incoherent message coming from various spokesmen of the misguided coalition.  Mr. Assad, in what historians and Middle East analysts may well dub an historic speech, offered a new plan to his countrymen, friends and foes alike, and to the international community to immediately end the crisis.

It includes, in sequential order:

* foreign countries to stop financing the rebels;

* Syria's government putting down its arms and declaring  "- an amnesty;

* a national conference and dialogue;

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Since 2013, Professor Franklin P. Lamb has traveled extensively throughout Syria. His primary focus has been to document, photograph, research and hopefully help preserve the vast and irreplaceable archaeological sites and artifacts in (more...)
 

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