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By

Michael Weiss

Analysis

There's hope for Israel if Assad goes

September 1, 2011 11:05
Protesters use their shoes to hit a poster of Assad during rally in front of the Syrian embassy in Ankara
1 min read

Tel Aviv's response to the Syrian uprising has vacillated between quiet non-support and nervous semi-support, a posture best captured by what one Israeli cabinet official told the Washington Post in late March: "We know Assad. We knew his father. Of course, we'd love to have a democratic Syria as our neighbour. But do I think that's going to happen? No."

One can be slightly more optimistic about Syria's alternatives to Assad, however. The campaign to topple the dictatorship has been waged mostly by young men hitherto averse to politics but sickened by a regime built on lies and minority rule.

What price anti-Zionist "resistance" now? The Syrians make better Middle East analysts than the Guardian staff, which is why it's been Iranian and Hizbollah and Russian and Chinese flags being burnt on the ground.

As for the politics of the opposition, all published platforms have been remarkably consistent in affirming the country's ethnic and religious mosaic and calling for a democracy with freedom of expression and religion enshrined in a new constitution.