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kra19.at Elliotrow 24/12/2(月) 5:11

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 Elliotrow E-MAILWEB  - 24/12/2(月) 5:11 -

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   gOur leader forever” was a slogan one often saw in Syria during the era of President Hafez al-Assad, father of today’s Syrian president.
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The prospect that the dour, stern Syrian leader would live forever was a source of dark humor for many of my Syrian friends when I lived and worked in Aleppo in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Hafez al-Assad died in June 2000. He wasn’t immortal after all.
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His regime, however, lives on under the leadership of his son Bashar al-Assad.

There were moments when the Bashar regime’s survival looked in doubt. When the so-called Arab Spring rolled across the region in 2011, toppling autocrats in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya, and mass protests broke out in Yemen, Bahrain and Syria, some began to write epitaphs for the Assad dynasty.

But Syria’s allies Iran, Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Russia came to the rescue. For the past few years the struggle in Syria between a corrupt, brutal regime in Damascus and a divided, often extreme opposition seemed frozen in place.

Once shunned by his fellow Arab autocrats, Bashar al-Assad was gradually regaining the dubious respectability Arab regimes afford one another.

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デイムズDAMES
この掲示板は文字だけでなく画像も投稿できます。 又、自由にスレッドも立てることができますので、お気軽にご利用下さい。
※投稿された書き込み、画像、情報等は「情報誌ぱど」をはじめとする、 ぱどグループが発行する媒体及び、WEBサービスに掲載される場合があります。