Archive: syria

3rd December 2014
By: Brian Whitaker
Here's a little puzzle for readers. Can you work out which Arab country the the writer is talking about in the passage below? Its school textbooks for 14-15 year-olds say that pagans should be killed if they don't convert to Islam:  "It is tucked away in the ninth grade [textbook] under the… Read more
25th September 2014
By: Brian Whitaker
Yesterday's session of the UN General Assembly brought fine words from President Obama.  "Humanity’s future," he said, "depends on us uniting against those who would divide us along the fault lines of tribe or sect, race or religion". And yet, despite the noble sentiments, his speech only deepened… Read more
5th March 2014
By: Brian Whitaker
A report issued on Wednesday by the UN Human Rights Council came closer than any previous UN report to blaming the Syrian government for the chemical attacks near Damascus last August, as well as an earlier attack in Khan al-Assal. While not directly accusing the Assad regime, the report says "the… Read more
12th February 2014
By: Brian Whitaker
The Geneva talks on Syria resumed this week with the opposition eager to see the question of political transition figuring prominently on the agenda while the regime seeks to avoid that at all costs. Today, the opposition played rather a smart move by issuing a 1,900-word document setting out its "… Read more
12th February 2014
By: Brian Whitaker
“One day, it will be an Alawite who finally kills Assad.” This rather startling prediction – that the Syrian president’s own community will eventually turn against him – comes in a blog post from Aboud Dandachi, an activist now living in Turkey. Dandachi, it should be noted, used to live in Homs… Read more
9th February 2014
By: Brian Whitaker
For as long as people have been writing books there have been others who sought to destroy them. When it's driven by moralistic or political objections, book-burning often takes a ritualistic form, carried out in public. Regardless of the books in question, setting fire to them strikes many people… Read more
5th February 2014
By: Brian Whitaker
Two years ago, in a letter to potential investors Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook's chief executive, wrote: "By giving people the power to share, we are starting to see people make their voices heard on a different scale from what has historically been possible. These voices will increase in number and… Read more
3rd February 2014
By: Brian Whitaker
Calling for a negotiated solution has long been a central plank of Russian policy on Syria. So long as peace talks were not in prospect this was an easy position to adopt. It sounded reasonable and portrayed Russia – despite being one of the Assad regime’s key international backers – as a potential… Read more
8th January 2014
By: Brian Whitaker
"How should we judge a country's foreign policy?" Stephen Walt asked in an article earlier this week. "How do we decide whether it is smart, foolish, shrewd, lucky, successful, or disastrous?" Answering these questions is less straightforward than it might seem. Walt, a professor of international… Read more
16th December 2013
By: Brian Whitaker
If Syrian government forces did not launch the chemical attacks near Damascus on August 21, we have to assume that rebel fighters did. Short of denying that the attacks took place at all, there is really no other possibility. Although many people continue to dispute that the Assad regime was… Read more