Arab League Observers Arrive Amid Syria Violence

Assad looks to be trying to buy time to put down revolt
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Dec 22, 2011 6:15 PM CST
Arab League Observers Arrive Amid Syria Violence
This image made from amateur video shows smoke clouds after heavy shelling in Homs, Syria.   (AP Photo/Shaam News Network via APTN)

Bashar Assad's regime would appear to be setting itself on a collision course: It let in outside observers for the first time today to monitor his commitment to halting the crackdown on dissent, even as his security forces unleashed a fiercer onslaught this week, killing more than 200 in two days. Fresh raids and gunfire by government forces killed another 19 today. But the Syrian president and his inner circle are veterans at playing for time, maneuvering and denying realities on the ground, and they seem confident they can deflect pressure from Arab neighbors without easing their campaign to crush the uprising.

As an advance team for the Arab League observers flew into Damascus, activists said the regime was already acting to prevent the mission from seeing protesters arrested in the crackdown, which is supposed to be part of its mandate. Thousands have been moved into military facilities, which are off limits to the monitors, two dissidents said. By allowing the observers in, Syria has avoided a worse scenario for the time being, defusing Arab League threats to ask the UN Security Council for action against Damascus. The strategy, opponents and outside observers say, is to keep international pressure at bay for as long as possible while the regime tries to snuff out the uprising. (More Syria stories.)

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