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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Ammar Abdulhamid

Interviewed January 7, 2011

And what really fed it was international indifference as well [referring to the government crackdown on Syrian protests that began in March 2011]. People in the international community said some of the right words. How are we going to ensure that Assad is out? How are you going to support the process movement? There was no real policy of support.

There were only talk of sympathy and words of sympathy, occasional words of sympathy. And that, in the due course of time, made people feel that they are abandoned and that no one really cares. And at the same time, it emboldened Assad. Because no red lines were drawn. So he used tanks, and no one said anything. Then he used heavy artillery, and no one said anything. Then he used helicopter gunships, and no one said anything. Then he used MiGs [Russian-made fighter jet]. In these kinds of conditions, you cannot sustain a nonviolent momentum.

The rebellion under these conditions turned violent. And that only increased the fears of the minority groups for change. Groups became more radicalized. The goodwill that people had in the beginning towards the United States and the West, because they hoped that they will come to their rescue and to their aid and to their succor, all of this goodwill evaporated.

So this is the unfortunate aspect. Because it started as a protest movement that wanted to open a new page with the rest of the world and especially with openness to the West. And now we are back, and so we fell back on the tendencies of anti-Americanism. It´s unfortunate that the international community has played a very negative role in allowing this kind of deterioration. Nonviolence, as an ethos, does not work when there is indifference. And it does not work when the other side succeeds in demonizing you.

The ethos of nonviolence is aimed at striking at the human side of your enemies, basically, of the other side. You´re rebelling against a dictator but yet, at the same time, you´re trying to appeal to the human side of many of his supporters. And at the same time, you´re trying to appeal to the human side of the observers, of those who are outside looking in and who have a stake in the matter or simply, out of a sense of decency, they will decide to back the nonviolent movement and try to put pressure on the dictator in order to help this movement achieve its goals.

But when there is international indifference and continued cold calculations that simply look at this situation and say, “We are not concerned with this,” and when the other side, that you´re trying to appeal to, the dictatorial side, looks at the situation and manages to demonize you and use a sectarian card and play out sectarian fields, then that creates an irrational mindset, where people simply don´t care about your humanity anymore.