Author (Person) | Cebeci, Erol, Üstün, Kadir |
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Series Title | Insight Turkey |
Series Details | Vol.14, No.2, April 2012, p13-22 |
Publication Date | April 2012 |
ISSN | 1302-177X |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
The Assad regime has been playing all the diplomatic, political, and security cards it has accumulated over the past several decades. While keeping the violence under a certain threshold on a daily basis so as not to provoke immediate international action, the regime has benefited from the entangled and often conflicted international interests in Syria. The opposition has been unable to deal a serious blow to the regime and international pressure has so far yielded no major results. Though calls for international and regional action have recently intensified, there exists no clear international leadership or consensus on how to handle Syria. The Arab League and Turkey, along with other countries, have created the “Friends of Syria” group after the failure of the UN Security Council resolution on Syria, but Russian and Iranian backing for the Assad regime is seriously limiting options. Given its support for the people against authoritarian regimes during the Arab Spring and its anti Assad stance, expectations for Turkey to “do something” are increasingly more pronounced. So, what’s holding Turkey back? |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://www.insightturkey.com/ |
Countries / Regions | Middle East, Turkey |