Do you also remember their demands, and whether they wanted to negotiate anything with the government?That's not how I remember it. I remember peaceful demonstrators being shot at.
Do you also remember their demands, and whether they wanted to negotiate anything with the government?That's not how I remember it. I remember peaceful demonstrators being shot at.
But whereas Egypt managed to "negotiate" (in the sense of finding its way) through, without landing itself in a civil war (yet), Syria didn't.
I can remind you, they were demanding Assad to leave. From the beginning. Your question was, why Assad didn't negotiate with them - he tried to, proposing elections and creation of coalition government. Answering your question, if Assad after years of war starts negotiating with the opposition, that would be what he tried to do from 2011. They are not trying to talk, they are seizing the power forcefully.No. I can't say I do. I expect they were full of demands - like the rest of the Arab Spring.
This is true, though it doesn't mean Syrian government is responsible for civil war.But whereas Egypt managed to "negotiate" (in the sense of finding its way) through, without landing itself in a civil war (yet), Syria didn't.
The Syrian civil war, also known as the Syrian uprising[54] or Syrian crisis (Arabic: الأزمة السورية,[55] is an ongoing armed conflict in Syria between forces loyal to the Ba'ath government and those seeking to oust it. The conflict began on 15 March 2011, with popular demonstrations that grew nationwide by April 2011. These demonstrations were part of the wider Middle Eastern protest movement known as the Arab Spring. Protesters demanded the resignation of President Bashar al-Assad, whose family has held the presidency in Syria since 1971, as well as the end of Ba'ath Party rule, which began in 1963.
Yes, and welcomed by many other Syrians, as everybody have noticed. Knowing the outcome of "Arab spring" revolutions in all the other countries, we can safely assume that the replacement government wouldn't be any more secular or democratic than the current one. Not because of civil war, Sunni radicals were behind all recent "democratic" revolutions in all Arabian countries, including Egypt and Libya.It would seem that Assad's role as heir to his father's dynasty is not a welcome one to many Syrians.
"Arabian countries" is a pretty empty category. It doesn't tell us anything about the internal politics of a country.Yes, and welcomed by many other Syrians, as everybody have noticed. Knowing the outcome of "Arab spring" revolutions in all the other countries, we can safely assume that the replacement government wouldn't be any more secular or democratic than the current one. Not because of civil war, Sunni radicals were behind all recent "democratic" revolutions in all Arabian countries, including Egypt and Libya.
Yeah. Well.
See, that's the difficult trick with democracies. Those elected have to undertake to represent even those who vote against them.
But, then, Assad has never been elected. Or has he? I wouldn't know.
Pangur Bán;12784930 said:In case people are blah-blahing the US's road deaths, I'll put what I said above in another more dramatic way. Poor US driving standards wipe out the equivalent of a city the size of Seattle every two decades. Most of the victims are mutilated, burned or gassed to death.
I guess it's something you'll only care about if it happens to someone you care about, but just because there's no evil villain and baddie cronies behind it doesn't make US road deaths better than Syrian political deaths. It's actually something however that the ordinary American should be able to understand and engage with, unlike the labyrinthine micro-politics you need to master to understand whether or not bombing a place may or may not save or kill more people.
Perhaps. As many leaders in the world, if not majority of them. I would say though, the uprising would unlikely be possible without foreign support, yes.He does seem to have rather upset a major portion of the Syrian population, though, wouldn't you say?
Wanna volunteer to discuss ceasefire terms with democrats from Al Nusra?Now, about that ceasefire...
And the truth and reconciliation commission.
Compared to the amount of money spent on keeping the US road network up to standards (quick search says $80 billion per month), the political will to invest in safe transportation is absolutely massive compared to support for intervention in Syria.
Pangur Bán;12784930 said:In case people are blah-blahing the US's road deaths, I'll put what I said above in another more dramatic way. Poor US driving standards wipe out the equivalent of a city the size of Seattle every two decades. Most of the victims are mutilated, burned or gassed to death.
I guess it's something you'll only care about if it happens to someone you care about, but just because there's no evil villain and baddie cronies behind it doesn't make US road deaths better than Syrian political deaths. It's actually something however that the ordinary American should be able to understand and engage with, unlike the labyrinthine micro-politics you need to master to understand whether or not bombing a place may or may not save or kill more people.
Two Syrian rebel groups in the town of Azaz have agreed a ceasefire.
The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (Isis), linked to al-Qaeda, seized the northern town on Wednesday from the larger Western-backed Free Syrian Army.
Fighting between rebel groups has raised fears of a war within a war.