(CNN) -- Syria's
President Bashar al-Assad looks more isolated with each passing day as his
regime continues a bloody eight-month crackdown on pro-democracy protests.
His Arab neighbors
signaled their displeasure with him this week by suspending Syria from the Arab
League, a stinging blow for a nation that sees itself at the heart of Arab
concerns. Jordan's King Abdullah went a step further, telling the BBC he would
step down if he were al-Assad, an unusually blunt assessment that followed
Western calls for al-Assad to go.
And Turkey, formerly
an important ally and trading partner, threatened to cut off electricity
supplies to Syria as the European Union moved this week to extend sanctions
against more members of al-Assad's circle.
This week, the
conflict inside Syria entered a new era when army defectors attacked
pro-government targets. That ratcheted up the pressure even more -- the Russian
foreign minister was widely quoted as saying attacks on government buildings in
Syria resembled "civil war."
So can al-Assad cling
to power? Or will he become the fourth leader forced from office in the Arab
Spring, following in the footsteps of ousted leaders of Egypt, Libya and
Tunisia?
Analysts say that the
odds are stacked against Syria's president.
Steven A. Cook, Hasib
J. Sabbagh senior fellow for Middle Eastern studies at the Council on Foreign
Relations, said it is hard to predict what might come next for al-Assad -- but
the pressure is on.
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"The kind of
traditional support he had externally is clearly crumbling," Cook said.
"His prospects this week are worse than they were last week."
Emile Hokayem, senior
fellow for regional security at the Bahrain office of the International
Institute for Strategic Studies, thinks it highly unlikely al-Assad will hang
on to power.
Three main factors
will likely contribute to the downfall of Syria's president after 11 years in
power, he said.
One is that he has
lost legitimacy in the eyes of his own people. "It's hard to see how he
would recover his legitimacy after killing almost 4,000 of his
countrymen," said Hokayem. The United Nations puts the toll of deaths at
well over 3,500 since protests began.
Second is the
economy, as sanctions imposed by the West and Turkey start to bite. This
matters, said Hokayem, because al-Assad may struggle to keep the support of the
country's urban and business elites in Damascus and Aleppo if the economy is
failing.
The third factor is
security, despite al-Assad's mobilization of the military. Unlike previous
challenges to the al-Assad regime, "this time it's the Syrian people
leading it and very clearly regime change is their goal and they are not going
to accept anything less," Hokayem said.
Shashank Joshi, an
associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and
Security Studies (RUSI), also doubts al-Assad will survive -- but says it is
far from clear what might follow.
The Arab League's
decision to suspend Syria, after Damascus failed to abide by a peace deal that
had been brokered earlier with the 22-nation league, signals a shift in views
that would have looked extremely unlikely even a month ago, he says.
The regime's military
is also increasingly over-extended as those fighting against it find footholds
in Lebanese and Turkish soil, he said.
Turkey might also
choose to intervene more directly, perhaps by creating a buffer zone along its
long border with Syria or providing weapons to the rebels, he said.
At this point,
descent into civil war could be as likely a scenario as a clean change of
regime at the top, he said.
Nonetheless, Joshi
cautioned against thinking the 46-year-old's grip on power will be loosened
immediately, pointing to the example of Iraq's former dictator, Saddam Hussein.
In 1991, he said,
Hussein had just lost a major war, had two no-fly zones, U.N. sanctions and an
oil embargo imposed on his country, was facing an enormous Shia uprising in the
south, and endured overwhelming diplomatic isolation.
"And yet he
survived for 12 years," Joshi said. "Regimes that are used to being
isolated, that are used to being under sanctions and under pressure, can be
extremely resilient."
Joshi also points out
that while al-Assad may well be forced out, that doesn't necessarily mean the
regime will fall with him.
Bashar al-Assad is
not as well entrenched as was his father, the late President Hafez al-Assad,
who ruled with an iron fist for three decades -- and it's possible other
members of his ruling Alawite sect might decide to throw their hat in with his
brother Maher, an army commander, or parts of the military instead, Joshi said.
"They might even
decide to get rid of Bashar al-Assad to save themselves, and portray it as a
concession, or compromise," he said.
He cites the example
of Egypt, where the Arab Spring uprising may have forced President Hosni
Mubarak from power in February but the military leadership has not yet handed
over power to a democratically elected government.
Salman Shaikh,
director of the Brookings Doha Center, also predicts that al-Assad will
eventually go -- but that his regime will cling on for as long as possible,
with Syria following the example of Libya rather than that of Tunisia, where
ousted President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia.
Shaikh sees "the
makings of a very powerful coalition" lined up against al-Assad, uniting
the Arab nations, Turkey, the United States and Europe, which could move
"quite forcefully" to sanctions.
And al-Assad has few
friends to whom he can turn for help.
One key question is
how long Syria can still count on the support of Russia, a historic ally and a
major arms supplier to Damascus.
Moscow, which sold
$3.8 billion of weapons to Syria last year -- 10% of its total arms sales, is
"giving a lifeline" to al-Assad at the moment, said Shaikh, largely
by delaying international action.
If Moscow opposes
efforts to impose U.N. Security Council sanctions on Syria, as anticipated,
international efforts to present a unified stance -- as on NATO action to
protect civilians in Libya -- will be thwarted.
"The same action
can be viewed as a just war or an act of imperial aggression depending on
whether Russia allows a U.N. resolution to be passed," Joshi said.
Germany, France and
Britain will hand in a draft U.N. resolution Thursday condemning the Syrian
government's actions, a German diplomatic spokesman in New York told CNN on
Wednesday. Diplomats from Arab countries are considering co-sponsoring the
resolution.
An attempt this week
by a Syrian opposition group to persuade Russian officials to shift their
position and demand al-Assad's resignation appears to have gone nowhere, with
Moscow instead reiterating a call for peaceful dialogue to resolve the
situation.
China also has a
history of opposing U.N action but appears at the moment to be hedging its bets
on Syria, probably in the interests of stability in the region, Joshi added.
Iran has in the past
few days given a strong statement of support for al-Assad, Shaikh of the
Brookings Doha Center said, but Tehran may still in the end be pragmatic and
seek to build ties with the Syrian opposition.
Perhaps the biggest
danger ahead, the analysts say, is that whether al-Assad goes or not, Syria is
teetering on the brink of civil war, as opposition elements such as the Free
Syrian army turn to arms to combat pro-government forces.
Such violence lessens
the chance of a peaceful resolution to the uprising and smooth shift to
democracy -- and will undoubtedly lead to greater loss of life.
"We are entering
into a new phase now in the Syrian situation," said Shaikh. "We are
seeing a greater militarization.
"I think the
window for an orderly transition is over and now it will be a mixture of
international pressure and whatever support is given to these protesters and
even those fighting against the regime.
"The main game
for the foreseeable future will focus on the protection of civilians, and
measures to ensure that, as we saw in the Libyan case."
By Laura Smith-Spark, CNN
CNN's Joe Sterling contributed to this report.
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