With the protests in Syria still just getting underway in the south of the nation, the US is already eying regime change. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates cited Egypt as an example and called on Syria’s army to “empower a revolution.”
Which seems like a revisionist take on what actually happened in Egypt. The military refused (largely) to massacre Egyptian protesters, but it was the protesters themselves, in massive numbers, that ousted Hosni Mubarak. The protest movement in Syria, by contrast, is still in its infancy, and it is unclear if it will reach the sort of critical mass where the army will even be faced with an Egypt-style revolution.
But as with Egypt, the protests are growing, and it is the Syrian government’s crackdowns in the south that seem to be riling people up more than anything. Shooting protesters and attacking mosques is bringing a lot of new people into the streets, and adding to the long list of grievances.
The White House, for its part, is condemning Syria for “brutal repression.” The charge appears accurate from the accounts in the southern city of Daraa, but the White House claims ring hollow amid ambivalence over similar measures in Bahrain and Yemen, key US allies in the region. Indeed, the Syrian protesters will likely want to keep a safe distance from the US, as any whiff of an American imprimatur to their uprising will give officials more excuse to use violence.
(cough cough) Bradley Manning.
Good thing the US government is there to lecture the world on what is the right and wrong thing to do.
Sahib is constantly looking for countries and people to enslave.
It will be interesting to watch the british official who helped bomb Libya because of the treatment of citizens of Libya towards its citizens. From the film I was it was not kisses that the citizen of england was getting from the helmeted guys with night sticks. Gee what a shocking case of pointing the finger at another nation for what comes natural to the colonial rulers of England.
Be careful what you wish for, Mr. Gates.
I don't recall Mr. Gates making a similar statement regarding the uprisings in Bahrain, Yemen, or Saudi Arabia. The difference is that Syria's leadership is not an American stooge. The message is clear to tyrants everywhere: cooperate with Washington and you can run roughshod over your own people.