Commentators in the West will surely declare that it was their
democratic systems of government that forced US President Barack Obama
to back down on attacking Syria. But the events that led up to
Washington’s de-escalation suggest there were other factors at play.
The story starts shortly before the Israeli-Saudi intelligence operation that engineered the chemical attack near the Syrian capital. The Americans and Europeans had begun negotiating with the Russians and the Iranians for a political settlement, after having failed to remove the regime by force. The West’s only condition was that Bashar al-Assad would not be part of the solution, even proposing to Moscow that they would be willing to allow the Syrian president to pick a successor of his own choosing.