
Syria, the Druze, and Israel
Israel’s continued involvement in Syria in my opinion is more likely to bring more danger to the Druze than it is to bring stability to the region. Continued Israeli strikes against the government will harden anti-Druze sentiment in both Syria and the greater region. It also risks further dividing the Syrian community and possibly sparking intra-communal violence. Ultimately, I’m of the opinion that a stable Syria is in Israel’s long-term interests, unfortunately Israel doesn’t see it that way.

Syria and the Long Shadow of Sectarian Violence
The Levant, also sometimes referred to as Greater Syria, could be called a rich tapestry of ethnic and religious diversity. Various Christian sects, Sunni and Shi’a Muslims, Druze, and Alawites all call the region home as do Arabs, Kurds, Armenians, and Circassians. Until the last century, even a significant number of Jews called its urban centers home. Instead the region is more often portrayed as a simmering cauldron of ethnic and religious tensions, blood feuds, and sectarian hatreds frequently boiling over into massacres, killings, and discrimination. When reporting on sectarian violence, like the recent events in Syria, the media often resorts to simplistic narratives of sectarian violence that often place the causes in primordial hatreds of difference. On a very surface level sectarian violence is easy to explain, but its root causes are often more convoluted and complex than they appear.