Recommended Read on Civilian Authorities in Insurgent-held parts of Syria: Keeping the Lights On in…
Sam Heller authored a very interesting article, detailing facts that are completely ignored by the media (whether in Syria, in the West…
Sam Heller authored a very interesting article, detailing facts that are completely ignored by the media (whether in Syria, in the West, but especially in the ‘East’):
One of crucial paragraphs:
> Rebel-held Idlib is a showcase for how rebels can pursue influence in nonmilitary spaces, as they reverse-engineer international aid dynamics and, through relatively sophisticated administrative structures, compete with each other for legitimacy. It also demonstrates how, in a civil conflict, even seemingly mundane municipal services like trash disposal and road repairs can be inseparable from issues of political and military control. The civilian and military opposition in Idlib had hoped to create a revolutionary alternative to the Syrian state under the Assad regime. In important ways, they have fallen short. But the service bodies and administrations they have built have shown how insurgents can challenge an incumbent regime’s claims to state legitimacy; how they can construct functioning, participatory government, even amid an ongoing civil war; and how they can invest those efforts to win local legitimacy.