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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Assad's isolation
2011-11-17
[Dawn] PRESIDENT Bashir al-Assad's international isolation is deepening. The UN has condemned his brutality, the European Union
...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing...
has slapped sanctions, the Arab League
...an organization of Arabic-speaking states with 22 member countries and four observers. The League tries to achieve Arab consensus on issues, which usually leaves them doing nothing but a bit of grimacing and mustache cursing...
has suspended Syria's membership and the Organisation of Islamic Conference has come out with an unusually strong warning. The Arab League's ire is understandable. On Nov 2, Arab foreign ministers gave Damascus
...Capital of the last remaining Baathist regime in the world...
15 days to implement its plan, which asked it to end the crackdown on civilians, withdraw troops from protest hubs, release the detainees, negotiate with the opposition and allow foreign observers in. The AL also threatened to close its embassies in Damascus and to negotiate with all "currents" of the opposition. The AL decision was not unanimous, but the fact that only two members -- Yemen and Leb (besides the regime's representative) -- voted against it shows that an overwhelming majority of Arab opinion considers the Assad government guilty. The AL felt humiliated when pro-regime supporters attacked the Qatar and Saudi embassies, besides those of La Belle France and Turkey. The Arab League is meeting again today to review the situation, because there were some doubts about the utility of the Nov 2 decision. Nevertheless, given the deteriorating situation, Mr Assad's options are getting fewer and fewer.

There are desertions in the army on a larger scale, the casualty toll --3,500 deaths -- is approaching the Libyan figure, and protests have spread to outlying areas. Over the past two days alone, some 70 people have been killed in festivities between protesters and security forces. While a Libya-like foreign intervention is not feasible or desirable, both AL and OIC have given hints about what lies in store for Syria. The AL said it would have to consider seeking international protection for Syrian civilians, and OIC Secretary General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu warned that the intransigence of the regime risked an internationalisation of the Syrian crisis. Whether Mr Assad has learnt from Col Qadaffy's
... who is now napping peacefully in the dirt...
fate we do not know. But a widening of the internal conflict, especially in a country that borders Israel, will have geopolitical ramifications, unless sense dawns on Mr Assad. As Mr Ihsanoglu said an internationalisation of the crisis would not be "in anybody's interest".
Posted by:Fred

#5  Saudi Arabia must be the oddest relationship we have in this world

Look up "deceptive pollination"
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2011-11-17 17:38  

#4  Saudi Arabia must be the oddest relationship we have in this world. The bred our radical enemy, but tampered back on it and actually became allies by default due to Iran. Iran's sponsoring of Hezbollah through baby Assad is in close proximity in Saudi Arabia's eye.

Do not forget also, their meddling in Lebanon. Such a tragic thing.
Posted by: newc   2011-11-17 15:09  

#3  I ha&ve mixed feelings about El Assad: He is a pan-Arab nationalist but he is also an Alawite (a branch of chiism that and enmity with Sadam made for ties with Iran) ie people whose "Musliminess" is very thin: they drink alcohol, their women don't wear hijabs ans have a degree of freedom unknown in the Arab world and finally, but perhaps I confound them with the Ahmedists they don't face towards Mecch for praying.

In other words for orthodox Muslims they are marginally better than Kaffirs, perhaps even Kaffirs who "disguised" as Muslims to avoid discriminations and pogroms. I am wary of rebels who are being sponsored by Saudi Arabia and Quatar: anyone sponsored by them can't be good.
Posted by: JFM   2011-11-17 09:01  

#2  House of Saud

If Baby Assad goes down, it will be Alawite extermination season. Sunnis could pick up or the Kurds really take it for real.

What a strange time
Posted by: newc   2011-11-17 04:37  

#1  Daffy had the option of take the money and run. I don't think Assad has that option. The fate of the Alawites is too closely tied to his. Any attempt to run and he'd be dead before he made it to the airport.

I'm rather baffled by the AL position. Assad's only option is to keep killing protestors. The UNSC isn't going to do anything, nor is NATO.

The AL proposal to send in 500 observers is frankly bizzare, unless they are accompanied by a couple of armoured brigades. And where would they come from? Saudi?
Posted by: phil_b   2011-11-17 02:52  

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