6
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6
Documents
75
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Organization referenced in documents
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vously identified as the "Shia crescent." Washington is assuming that the Muslim Brotherhood, the most influential party within the Istanbul-based Syrian National Council, would end the Iran-Syria alliance if it came to power. The organization's deputy secretary, Mohammed Faruk Tayfur, told The Washington Times on Ja
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a disturbing signal of prospects for stability after Assad goes. Western and Arab powers have spent more than a year trying to turn the exile-based Syrian National Council into a legitimate alternative national leadership, to no avail. It remains divided and EFTA00701760 ineffectual, and lacks legitimacy among popul
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atrocities carried out by Bashar al-Assad and his aides, who belong to all religious sects." According to Monzer Makhouz, an Alawite member of the Syrian National Council, a leading opposition group, Alawites are joining protests in the coastal cities of the Alawite territory. And in recent weeks, evidence has emerge
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erce battles between the Assad Government and the mobilized popular opposition EFTA_R1_00225443 EFTA01840548 forces. Politically, the opposition Syrian National Council operating outside of the country remains divided and is marked by serious internal dissent; in contrast, the internal opposition groups seem more o
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's current strategic position in the region that is the fruit of two decades of hard work and billions of dollars. Burhan Galyoun, the head of the Syrian National Council that groups all main opposition forces has already stated that the first order of business for the nex government of a Syria after Assad will be to
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and supported creating buffer zones and humanitarian corridors between Turkey and Syria. Turkey also houses one of the biggest opposition groups, Syrian National Council, as well as the FSA. Although Saudi Arabia and Turkey share a common goal in Syria, there are some tensions between their positions. First, for T

Barack Obama
PersonPresident of the United States from 2009 to 2017

Bashar al-Assad
PersonPresident of Syria from 2000 to 2024

Benjamin Netanyahu
PersonPrime Minister of Israel (1996–1999; 2009–2021; since 2022)

Saddam Hussein
PersonIraqi president, army officer and Baathist politician (1937–2006)

George W. Bush
PersonPresident of the United States from 2001 to 2009

Damascus
LocationCapital and largest city of Syria

Baghdad
LocationCapital city of Iraq

Terje Rod-Larsen
PersonNorwegian diplomat

Tehran
LocationCapital city of Iran

Lebanon
LocationCountry in West Asia

Tunisia
LocationCountry in North Africa

Bill Clinton
PersonPresident of the United States from 1993 to 2001 (born 1946)

United States
LocationCountry located primarily in North America

Yemen
LocationCountry in West Asia

Bahrain
LocationCountry in the Persian Gulf

Qaddafi
PersonSurname reference in Epstein-related documents

Muslim Brotherhood
OrganizationIslamist political organization

Hosni Mubarak
PersonPresident of Egypt from 1981 to 2011

Kofi Annan
Person7th Secretary-General of the United Nations (1938-2018)
the Arab League
OrganizationLeague of Arab states