Sunday afternoon, in typical London fashion, the sunny day quickly turned cloudy and started pouring. I was in the middle of Trafalgar Square and had forgotten my umbrella. So I ducked into the nearest Caffe Nero to stay dry. Next to me sat a doctor reading an academic journal. He moved to England many years ago to study medicine and earned citizenship, but he identifies as Syrian. So we discussed Syria's history, Assad's recent atrocities, relations with China and Russia, the Sunnis and Shi'a Muslims, the rebel groups, the best case scenario for Syria's future, how the international community should respond, Britain's non-response, Assad's relationship with Israel, the refugee situation, and his brothers and family who are living in Damascus. Most fascinating! If you want to hear his thoughts on any of these topics, put a comment on one or two, and I'll write his answers here.
To give one example, my friend Ghazi said that an international response is warranted, especially due to the fact that Assad has used chemical weapons on his citizens 14 times, in the outskirts of Damascus. The supposed reason is that Assad wants the land back and wants to crush the rebel groups, and chemical weapons are his most effective means. Ghazi says that Obama should provide arms and resources to the Free Syrian Army, which he considers the most effective and hopeful rebel group. He also made a comment about the thousands of people that are being held by the government and tortured daily. He really wants Assad to leave (obviously), and for these people to be freed. Although they're removed from the chemical weapons, they're still being treated completely inappropriately. I wonder how the international human rights organizations are going to handle this one. It's not against the rules of war, but it's abominable.
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