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The Origins of Syria’s Crisis: A Conversation with Reinoud Leenders (S. 5, Ep. 4)

The Origins of Syria’s Crisis: A Conversation with Reinoud Leenders (S. 5, Ep. 4)

On this week's POMEPS podcast, Marc Lynch speaks …

POMEPS Middle East Political Science Podcast · Marc Lynch

June 20, 201616m 47s

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Show Notes

On this week's POMEPS podcast, Marc Lynch speaks with Reinoud Leenders about the origins of the Syrian conflict. Leenders is a reader in the Department of War Studies at King's College London. "In the beginning, it was a question of who would move first, and where." Leenders says. "Why it happened in certain places and not others, it is because of local characteristics." Aleppo, Leenders says, held back. "It was a very conservative, middle class [place] that felt it was too much to get involved and put a stop on mobilization initially." "In hindsight, lots of people have said it was a mistake of the [Syrian] regime to have applied such vast levels of repression," Leenders said. "But I think that, beyond moral considerations, I don't think the repression as such was a mistake...The brutality of the regime touched on some really sensitive registers, include dignity and honor of women." Even as Leenders's research focuses on the parsing out the conflict through the lens of two narratives, "We are five years down the road, and every day the conflict goes on, I get more questions than answers."