Thursday, April 16, 2020
Syrian Conflict Essays - Middle East, Politics Of Syria, Syria
  Syrian Conflict                  Jessica Galati                 American Government               Bergen Community College                 December 3, 2013                       Abstract   Currently the most urgent debate in foreign policy is the use of chemical   weapons. The Syrian civil war has come into the spotlight of that debate   due to the government's alleged use of chemical weaponry against its own   citizens. After following this topic in newspaper articles, to understand   the topic fluently, I have been able to form an understanding of the topic   and form my own opinions This paper will focus on the following, the events   that took place in Damascus and how the country was effected, the evidence   of chemical weapon use by the Syrian President, Bashar al-Assad, and taking   a detailed look at how the American government responded to the attacks and    how they should continue to act in response these attacks. I will also    inform you of my opinions of the actions and events within the paper.     For years now the United States conflicts with the Middle East has  been getting more severe and expanding. With what started as a conflict  within the Iraqi government has now expanded to more countries with higher  stakes. The United States has begun trying to remove themselves from more  conflict, however the civil war in Syria is hard to ignore. After violating  many agreements and regulations, the Syrian governments alleged chemical  attacks on their citizens has spurred many countries ready to pick up arms.  Much debate is taking place about military involvement as opposed to  diplomatic talks and agreements. Syria is relying on their allies to save  them from military strikes.     The president of Syria, Hafez al-Assad, took the country after a  series of coups, and held the country in an iron hold of human rights  violating law. His successor, and son, Bashar al-Assad, promoted change for  the country but did very little to change the course of the country.  Protests of the regime, wishing to have the president's reign ended, began  in March 2011. The protests and uprisings began as peaceful representations  of resentment and rebellion, however the Syrian army was sent to control  such actions as to avoid a revolt. The deployed troops "controlled" the  unarmed protestors by open firing. Months of firing squads taking on  protests followed. This sparked the development of a full scale civil war  expanding in the two years following.     The civilian public was outraged and began taking on the Syrian  military as volunteers in the form of militias with little coordination.  After the order of many government strikes against protests, many of the  Syrian nation's military officers defected to the rebel group, beginning  the Free Syrian Army, an umbrella group of the rebel military power, and  went on to later represent and control the opposition's army. Their goal is  to remove Bashar al-Assad from power. The rebel group's armies, lacking  much needed unity, sought help from turkey, and the Syrian National Council  was brought to creation. This is now recognized as a legitimate  representative party of Syria by dozens of countries.      Since the beginning of the civil war, over one hundred thousand have  been killed, over two million Syrian refugees have fled to surrounding  countries, and tens of thousands of protestors have been imprisoned and  tortured.     These attacks from both the government and opposition escalated  immensely. While we can all say definitively that the Damascus chemical  strike was the most deadly Hundreds of men, women, and children, some still  in diapers, are found dead or injured across the streets and filling the  hospitals. This attack grabbed the worlds attention and brought many to  their feet, ready to take action. This was the first definitive chemical  strike in which the UN could collect incriminating evidence.     There were a number of chemical weapon strikes reported throughout the  year besides the one occurring in Damascus. According to American reports  there were around 10 chemical attacks since 2012 and the number of  casualties from these alone has reached over fifteen hundred men, women,  and children. The UN has been attempting to gain access to highly  concentrated areas. After the Damascus attack and potential threats coming  in across the globe the UN pressed immediate access to the area to test for  chemical weapons. They were refused access until weeks later when almost  all of the evidence would have cleared, raising red flags about the  governments involvement. The regime released several claims that rebel  armies had taken the gas and released it. However, UN investigators had  found enough residue and taken enough victims for testing to    
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