Rating: Not rated
Tags: History, Lang:en
Summary
Includes pictures Includes footnotes, online resources
and a bibliography for further reading “I'm not a puppet.
I wasn't made by the west to go to the west or any other
country. I'm Syrian. I'm made in Syria. I have to live in Syria
and die in Syria." – Bashar al-Assad, 2012 In December
2010, a 26-year-old Tunisian street vendor’s self
immolation triggered protests that spread from his hometown in
Sidi Bouzid to cities across the country. The next month, on
January 14, the country’s autocratic president, Zine
el-Abidine Ben Ali, fled the country. This would be the start
of what became known as the “Arab Spring,” which
ultimately saw anti-government protests responded to with
violence, reform, or both in countries across the Middle East.
In Syria, the protests that began as early as January 2011 and
increased in intensity the following March devolved into a
complex armed conflict that involves multiple armed groups and
wages to this day. Like the other dictators, Bashar al-Assad
faced popular demonstrations against his regime at the height
of the Arab Spring, but he steadfastly refused to step down
from power, and the protests against him and his government
quickly turned violent, which eventually enveloped Syria in a
civil war that has already killed over 400,000, created over 4
million refugees, and shows no signs of ending anytime soon. In
August 2016, over five and a half years after the initial
protests, an image of a young boy captivated the world. Young
Omran Daqneesh, who had been born around the time the Syrian
civil war started, had been pulled out of a destroyed building
in the Syrian city of Aleppo by a rescue squad and put inside
an ambulance. He stared at the cameras - most likely in shock
-covered in blood and debris from the collapsed building. His
silence seemed more powerful than all the statements of
condemnation from politicians around the world. This boy and
his family were actually living the nightmare that Syrians
across the country have experienced for more than five years.
The video and image went viral and was picked up by several
news outlets and spread quickly and globally across social
media platforms. Once again, the average citizen was faced with
images depicting the consequences of this deadly and seemingly
intractable conflict. While citizens and politicians again
debate and discuss what to do about the Syrian Civil War, the
people on the ground continue to suffer. The city of Aleppo is
one of many battlegrounds in the war, but it has been directly
in the war since 2012 when protests erupted against the regime
of Bashar Al-Assad and the rebels of the Free Syrian Army
became involved in the conflict. In many ways, the city of
Aleppo and the ongoing battle there can almost be thought of as
a metaphor or microcosm for the civil war in general.
Historically, Aleppo has been a very large and diverse city,
comprised of several religious and ethnic groups living side by
side throughout its long period of human inhabitancy. Syria
itself is a large and diverse country, whose citizens include
Sunnis, Shi’a, Christians, and Druze that come from Arab,
Kurdish, Armenian, and other ethnic backgrounds. Interestingly,
Aleppo has indeed become a battleground in which all the forces
(both domestic and international) have come to exercise their
agendas and their might against each other. The longer the
parties fight, the further away they seem to get from peace
agreements, and the more difficult it becomes to deescalate the
conflict. Today, Syria remains a flashpoint in the Middle East,
and Aleppo is at the center of it. The Battle of Aleppo: The
History of the Ongoing Siege at the Center of the Syrian Civil
War looks at the Syrian civil war’s most famous battle,
and the way it has dominated the world’s attention. Along
with pictures of important people, places, and events, you will
learn about the siege of Aleppo like never before. **