Pro-Regime Syrians Support Army but Dodge Draft

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Young Syrian men in regime-controlled areas are using any means necessary, including violent protests, to avoid military conscription -- even if they support the government.

More than 80,000 soldiers and other pro-regime fighters have been killed in the four-year-old conflict, out of a total of roughly 220,000 dead, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

"I'm with the regime but I am a deserter, because military service in Syria means death," said George, a Christian student from Damascus.

"Very few young men accept to enlist because at our age, no one wants to die."

As the territory that has fallen out of regime control is predominantly Sunni Muslim, the government is heavily recruiting from among the Druze, Christian, Alawite, and Ismaili minorities.

Now these communities feel they have paid a heavy price to defend President Bashar Assad's rule against deadly opponents including al-Qaida-linked militants and the Islamic State jihadist group. 

"Even if they support the army and the regime, they're not willing to serve its flag," said Sema Nassar, a human rights activist from the northwest province of Latakia, a heartland for the Alawite sect from which Assad hails.

"Everyone without exception is discontent. After four years of an ugly war, who isn't unhappy?"

 

- 'Comb through neighborhoods' - 

Faced with a "war of attrition... the government must use considerable coercion" to replenish its ranks, said Joshua Landis, director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma. 

"The rebels speak about being able to outlast the Alawites and kill their young men. They probably can if the war goes on long enough," Landis said.

Sunni Muslims make up about 80 percent of Syria's population, while Alawites constitute roughly 10 percent.

Syrian men by law are required to serve a two-year military service, which can be extended for much longer.

Hit by defections and desertions, Syria's 300,000-strong military has halved in size since 2011, according to Aram Nerguizian, a military affairs expert from the Center for Strategic and International Studies. 

To reverse the trend and snare draft dodgers, military police have redoubled their efforts. 

"They set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and check the buses coming through them for young men," said Omar al-Jeblawi, an activist from Jeblah in Latakia province.

He said security forces also stand guard at university gates to screen male students and teachers.

"They comb through neighborhoods and take all of the guys, 18 and up," Jeblawi told Agence France Presse by phone.

According to George, deserters are also caught when they seek a government service, like getting married.

 

- Druze resistance - 

To avoid the draft, some have fled the country while others have paid exorbitant bribes to officials.

In Damascus, "young men enrol in university just to get a waiver", said George. 

Others, including Sunnis, join local pro-government militias like the National Defense Forces to avoid being stationed in distant provinces, Jeblawi said. 

He said young men in Latakia had also set up guards around houses they thought may be raided by security forces.

But the most significant resistance took place in Sweida, a southern bastion of Syria's Druze minority.

In April, in the town of Salkhad, Abdallah Abu Mansur was arrested by local police for deserting the armed forces, a resident said. 

Relatives and friends then held a violent protest outside the police station.

It was the latest of many similar incidents in the province.

In December, residents of another town took a man hostage and broke into the office of local security forces and released a relative. In November, a mob attacked a military patrol after it had forcefully recruited someone.

And in the summer of 2014, Druze religious leaders stopped a military patrol from arresting another young deserter.

In all these cases, the deserter being held was released -- some say due to political considerations.

"The government doesn't dare respond brutally, as it fears that the Druze will change sides and join the opposition," the resident said.

Comments 4
Thumb Mystic 19 April 2015, 08:59

Real westernized propaganda Naharnet, yeah sure that is what the Wahabis wants us all to believe, that this is a secterian war all along and you are trying to further complicate that agenda.

The Syrian army consists of all sects like the LAF, army deserters shouldn't be proud of themselves, they should be proud in serving their country. Because if they don't fight, the takfiris will behead them and their families anyway.

Missing mohammad_ca 19 April 2015, 11:51

Really Mystic, you takfiri that makes takfir of scholars, Agence France Presse are Wahhabis??

Thumb lebanon_first 19 April 2015, 12:00

Watch the decline of the last representative of Staline on earth. The EVIL Assad tribe that has fought Lebanon, colonized its land, stolen its economy, killed its leaders, fomented troubles in it, armed half the population against the other, planted bombs.... is on the way out.

Its own people who were instrumental in doing above are now turning against it.

However much Israel wishes bad for Lebanon and is our enemy, Assad is a hundred fold worse. Let us just hope he gets crushed.

Thumb Mrowwe 19 April 2015, 15:46

I agree with this George in the article. You would have to be really stupid to die for bashar el assad so he can remain a dictator and opressor of a large part of the syrian people. Even if one supports the regime because of not liking the opposition, it's still not a cause worthy to die for. Baath and this disgusting regime doesn't deserve for anyone to shed a single drop of blood for them. May peace come to Syria and all forms of opression end from whatever side they come from. And may hizb el shaytan and their fellow filthy shia iraqi militias and filthy alawi shabbi7a thugs self destruct with their bashar and iranian ayadollars. Ameen