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Syria: The Case for 'the Devil We Don't Know' (Commentary, Text and Context)

Syria: The Case for 'the Devil We Don't Know' (Commentary, Text and Context)

The Obama administration's announcement specifically sanctioning Syrian President Bashar al-Asad begins to clear the fog that has clouded policy toward this pivotal country since the outbreak of mass protests weeks ago. As U.S. and international leaders have grappled with popular uprisings across the Middle East, the tension between moral values and strategic interests has often complicated decisionmaking, and until yesterday, this appears to have been the case with regard to Syria. But now that the administration has adopted a policy of "reform or go"--i.e., calling on the Syrian president either to begin an improbable transformation of his family-led dictatorship into an accountable, rights-respecting democracy or step aside from his leadership of the country--Washington may finally have shed its reluctance to adopt measures that could bring about the demise of the al-Asad regime. In other words, President Obama now at least entertains the idea that the "devil we don't know" in Syria--an alternative to Asad--is preferable to the one we do. Context

More Books from DC) Iran Times International (Washington & Amos Yadlin
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