NYT:A multilingual former military officer, he says he is among many friends  and colleagues who feel trapped: disenchanted with President 
Bashar al-Assad, disgusted by the 
violence engulfing Syria and equally afraid of the government and the rebels, with both sides,  as he puts it, ready to sacrifice “the innocents.”        
 Mr. Assad remains in power in part because two years into the uprising, a  critical bloc of Syrians remains on the fence. Among them are business  owners who drive the economy, bankers who finance it, and the security  officials and government employees who hold the keys to the mundane but  crucial business of maintaining an authoritarian state. If they  abandoned the government or embraced the rebels en masse, they might  change the tide. Instead, their uncertainty contributes to the  stalemate.        
 The Egyptian and Tunisian rebellions that inspired Syria’s initially  peaceful uprising reached tipping points within weeks, with far less  bloodshed. In those cases, widespread desire for change overwhelmed the  fear of the unknown, and toppled governments — or rather, the  dictatorial cliques that headed them. But in Syria, each side has  bloodied the other while many stay on the sidelines, and a core  contingent of supporters feels obligated to stick with the government  even as their doubts grow. That is in part because the government’s  ruthless crackdown has made protest far more risky than in other  uprisings. But it is also because of doubts, among the urban elite and  others, about the direction of the revolution and how a rebel-ruled  Syria would look.        
 “Me and my neighbors, we were the first to go down to the street and  scream that we want a country, a real country, not a plantation,” said  Samar Haddad, who runs a Syrian publishing house. “But this armed  revolution, I refuse it as much as I refuse the regime.”        
Ms. Haddad, who is in her late 40s and now spends much of her time  outside Damascus, said that she and her circle of intellectuals and  professionals embrace unarmed Syrian protesters as heroes, but believe  that the armed rebellion is creating warlords and cycles of revenge that  will be hard to uproot.        
 The fence sitters include government employees, security forces,  intellectuals and wealthy Syrians. Some, including members of Mr.  Assad’s minority Alawite sect, say they fear the rule of Islamists, or  the calls for vengeance from some factions of the Sunni Muslim-dominated  uprising.        
Some are former soldiers who say they defected only to be disappointed  by rebels who lack discipline or obsess about religious ideology. One  young man, Nour, said he gave up on revolution when he tried to join an  Islamist brigade, Al Tawhid, but was rejected for wearing skinny jeans.         
Joshua Landis at Syria Comment has long  been putting out this kind  of analysis. 
 
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