Syria Burning

nhboy

Ubi bene ibi patria
Syria Burning by Charles Glass

"Since its commencement in the upsurge of the Arab Spring in 2011, the Syrian civil war has claimed in excess of 200,000 lives, with an estimated 8 million Syrians, more than a third of the country's population, forced to flee their homes.

A stalemate now exists in the country with the government of Bashar al-Assad maintaining its grip on most of the cities in the west, while large swathes of the countryside in the north and east are under the control of the Islamic fundamentalist groups ISIS and the Nusra Front. The Caliphate announced by ISIS in the summer of 2014 occupies some 35% of the country, as well as vast territory across the border in Iraq.

The nuances of this conflict have never been well-understood in the West, least of all, it seems, by governments in the US and Europe, who, anticipating Assad's sudden departure, made it a condition of any negotiated settlement. The consequences of that miscalculation, Charles Glass contends in this illuminating and concise survey, have contributed greatly to the unfolding disaster that we witness today.

Glass has reported extensively from the Middle East, and traveled frequently in Syria, over several decades. Here he melds together reportage, analysis and history to provide an accessible overview of the origins and permutations defining the conflict, situating it clearly in the overall crisis of the region.

His voice, elegant and concise, humane and richly-informed, is a vital antidote to the sloganizing that shapes so much commentary, and policy, concerning the civil war. "More than ever in the era of 24-hour sound-bite news, events demand the long view if they are to be explicable.

With his deep experience of the Levant, that is exactly what Charlie Glass offers the student of the Middle East in this timely, elegant and penetrating study of turmoil that has reshaped the region." -Alan Cowell, former Middle East Bureau Chief, The New York Times"

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CrashTest

Well-Known Member
NY Times on the Arab Spring - Secretary Clinton's failure of leadership is only part of the story. What should be on trial is the Obama administration’s – and really the reigning Washington policy elite’s -- misconceived vision of a new Middle East and the sources of rage against us.
 

tommyjo

New Member
NY Times on the Arab Spring - Secretary Clinton's failure of leadership is only part of the story. What should be on trial is the Obama administration’s – and really the reigning Washington policy elite’s -- misconceived vision of a new Middle East and the sources of rage against us.

Yes of course...because as we all know the Middle East was a bastion of US friendly nations and citizenry prior to Jan of 2009. All the nation states of the Persian Gulf region were wonderful trading partners and military allies prior to January 2009. It was a beautiful relationship wasn't it?

Only after Mr. Obama became President did the Middle East turn against the US.
 
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