The Western debate over the protracted Syrian war has often taken place online or, worse still, on social media. As a result, it has become increasingly simplified and polarized to the point where only knee-jerk rooting and cheering, but not analysis or substantive discussion, is possible. Propaganda posing as analysis has dominated the discourse on Syria. As a result, there are now two dominant narratives regarding the causes of the war. While they contain some grains of truth, both narratives are equally simplistic and thus, appealing for social media wars, but also quite misleading. One view — promoted by the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad and its supporters — holds that Western powers and Gulf regimes plotted the overthrow of the Assad government, instigated protests against it, and hired the rebels to do the job on the battlefield. In this telling, the conflict in Syria is primarily the byproduct of outside agitators. The second narrative holds that the underlying causes of the war can be explained by the legitimate grievances expressed by the Syrian people against the regime, and that they revolted against it in the era of Arab uprisings. This narrative demands that one view the violence against the regime as a byproduct of legitimate protest by ordinary Syrian citizens against their repressive dictator. Both sides are adamant about the validity of their narrative and the falsehood of the counternarrative. In reality, both narratives are rather valid — simultaneously so.

The Syrian people had indeed accumulated plenty of grievances against the repressive dynastic rule of the Assad family and were fed up with a series of failed promises. Meanwhile, the Gulf regimes and the U.S. were plotting a regime change operation in Syria, dating from at least 2006. But these two endlessly recycled narratives obscure a critical cause of the Syrian conflict and the longevity of the war: namely, the intense competition between Saudi Arabia on the one hand and Qatar on the other. The struggle between these two foreign powers has been a crucial dimension of the war — and their struggle and involvement has only been made possible with full U.S. and European Union support, although different Western countries sided more with one side or the other at different periods of the conflict. To begin with, media coverage and debate about the Syrian war — in the East and West — have been largely colored with the propaganda interests of both Qatari and Saudi regimes. Both regimes control — directly or indirectly — almost all of the various media of the Arab world. Beyond their media ownership, both regimes have been able to control or influence the narratives of Western journalists and pundits through heavy investments in the elite Washington foreign policy community, especially through think tanks and PR firms. Think tanks in Washington, such as the Brookings Institution, the Middle East Institute, and the Center for Strategic and International Studies, are notoriously awash in funding from Gulf regimes and thus, reflect their agenda. Most of the Middle East experts at leading think tanks who most prolifically commented on the war in Syria were, unsurprisingly, split along the Saudi-Qatari divide. The United Arab Emirates also invested in D.C. think tanks, and that regime’s policies (on Syria at least) mirrored those of the Saudi regime. Not since the rise of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee have Middle Eastern governments been able to wield such influence in the nation’s capital. To be sure, AIPAC would have fought to undermine the influence of these newer Gulf players to shape the discourse had their views on Syria not been congruent with Israel’s interests. But when it comes to Syria, AIPAC and its affiliates largely echo the propaganda clichés of the Gulf state regimes.

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, left, stands alongside Syrian President Hafez al-Assad, center, and Crown Prince Abdallah of Saudi Arabia, on June 8, 1996, at Damascus Airport at the end of a two-day meeting in the Syrian capital. Photo: Sana Pool/AFP/Getty Images

The competition between Qatar and Saudi Arabia in Syria is steeped in history. Both have had longstanding ties to the Syrian regime. Many often forget that the Saudi regime was a benefactor of Hafez al-Assad, the father of Bashar, for close to three decades, and that the two regimes’ interests often converged in the region. Examples of an Assad-Saudi convergence include the crackdown against the Palestinian resistance and Lebanese left in 1976, the 1991 war on Iraq, the coordination of policies in the U.S.-sponsored peace plans, and the enmity to Yasser Arafat, the late leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization. The Saudi-Syrian convergence during these years was also important to the U.S. role in the region. American officials relied on the Saudi regime to sway Syrian foreign policy through the Saudis’ financial largesse. Hafez al-Assad was as a key member of the Syrian-Saudi-Egyptian axis that formed after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990, and this axis dominated Arab politics. It was in the 1990s that the interests of Qatar and Saudi Arabia diverged. By the late 1990s, Qatar was basically isolated due to its conflict with Saudi Arabia (the new Qatari emir, Hamad bin Khalifa, had overthrown his pro-Saudi father). Grudgingly, Qatar became a cautious member of the mumana`ah camp (literally “refusalness,” which opposed compromising positions in the Arab-Israeli conflict), while it also normalized relations with Israel and hosted U.S. troops. The new Qatari emir had accused the Saudi regime of trying to overthrow him in order to reinstall his father back to the throne (the emir’s accusation was most likely true). When Bashar al-Assad began consolidating his power in Syria, he shifted its foreign policy in Lebanon against the interests of Saudi Arabia and Lebanese Prime Minister Rafic Hariri. As a result, Qatar became Assad’s natural ally, while Saudi Arabia pulled away from the Syrian regime. This is the divergence and competition between Saudi Arabia and Qatar that has shaped the war in Syria to this day. With Bashar in power, the Saudi regime has sought to undermine Syrian dominance in Lebanon (Syrian dominance over Lebanon had been sponsored since at least 1989 by the U.S., France, and Saudi Arabia). Indeed, Saudi Arabia was part of the coalition which, in 2004, pushed for United Nations Security Council Resolution 1559, designed to end the Syrian role in Lebanon and disarm Hezbollah. Furthermore, Saudi Arabia sought to bring about regime change in Syria, relying on key elements in the ruling elite (mostly top advisers from the era of Hafez). During this time, Saudi Arabia’s favorite Lebanese politician, Hariri, began clashing with Bashar. As a result, the Saudi break with the Syrian regime was almost complete, and the Saudi-sponsored clique inside Syria, also supported by Hariri, escalated their plot against Bashar. This was the beginning of the end of Syrian dominance in Lebanon. The discovery of this plot was most likely what brought an end to Hariri’s life in 2005 (he was assassinated). As the Saudis broke from Bashar al-Assad, Qatar had other plans for the region. The Qatari regime was emboldened by the weaknesses of Saudi foreign policy and the rise of Recep Erdogan, its new ally in Turkey. Both Qatar and Turkey developed a plan to spread the influence of the Muslim Brotherhood throughout the region — from Palestine to Tunisia. Those two regimes did not instigate the Arab uprisings. All Arab uprisings started spontaneously due to legitimate citizen complaints about repression, torture, socio-economic injustices, and Arab foreign policies being subservient to Western interests. But the two new competing alliances in the Middle East – Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Israel on one hand, and Qatar and Turkey on the other — sought to exploit those uprisings for their own interests.

Demonstrators take to the streets of Wadi Khaled, on the Lebanese-Syrian border, during the Crawling Friday protest against the Syrian regime on Dec. 30, 2011, waving Syria’s old national flag and a placard mocking President Bashar al-Assad. Photo: Si Mitchell/AFP/Getty Images