Syria: American Action for a Complex Crisis
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Authors
Anderson, Lily
Bar-Sela, Gil
Bertram, Wanda
Brauer, Kell
Chouery, Alexis
Donato, Rebecca
Eng, Melanie
Gallagher, Patrick
Holmberg, Trenton
Hubbard, Winthrop
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Abstract
Though no complex framework is needed to gauge the grave human costs brought about by three years of conflict in Syria, the crisis itself has been driven by a complex of motivations and interests across multiple systemic levels. Beginning as a nonviolent popular movement seeking reforms to Bashar al-Assad’s authoritarian regime, Syrian protests escalated to violent means when it became clear that the government, rather than accommodating bulleted requests, would retaliate with bullets of its own. The intractability of the conflict frustrated the opposition into splitting along strategic and ideological lines. Today, the number of opposition groups in Syria allegedly exceeds 1,000, their divisions hindering outside powers from organizing an opposition front worthy of broad-based international support. Furthermore, the very support of foreign actors delegitimizes rebel groups in the eyes of many civilians, who recognize that theirs are not the most powerful interests at play in the now-international crisis.
Description
Created as part of the 2014 Jackson School for International Studies SIS 495: Task Force. Denis Bašić, Task Force Advisor; Frederic C. Hof, Evaluator; Winthrop Hubbard, Coordinator.
