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"Anticipatory account of the demise of Bashar al-Assad, Syria's
struggling dictator, and the quake potentials building in the regional
political, religious and ethnic fault lines that run through his
country. Lesch (Middle East History/Trinity Univ.; The Arab-Israeli
Conflict: A History, 2007, etc.) first met with Assad in 2004 and has
come to know key figures in Syria's political leadership directly. Assad
was not groomed for the position of president--his assassinated
brother-in-law was the choice for the top spot--but hopes were high for
reform when he took over in 2000. Lesch goes through the process by
which Assad became the dictator of the Syrian military state, and
Assad's career provides the frame for the author's account as he
discusses the way power is wielded in Syria, the religious and ethnic
composition of the country's population, and how Assad and his country
responded to the Arab Spring. The author provides a timeline and
geographic discussion of the ongoing revolt since its beginning and an
analysis of the many international interests that have a stake in the
conflict. He shows that Assad, like his father, rules over an alliance
of minorities. The revolt and its suppression have unleashed historical
demons of the sort that came to the surface with the dissolution of
Yugoslavia. Because of divisions between external and internal factions
and fears of the consequences of domination by the Saudi-backed
Salafists, Assad, Lesch argues, has succeeded so far in suppressing the
uprising. However, in the meantime, Syria is being transformed into the
center of an expanding region-wide religious and ethnic conflict.
Personal knowledge and on-the-ground experience inform this
behind-the-headlines chronicle of the Syrian conflict." (Kirkus Reviews)
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