
Originally Posted by
Post-purge-Paya
I doubt that international observers could have been secured in time for this referendum, but there is still time (90 or so days) for them to oversee the coming presidential elections. But for that to happen Assad would have to compromise with the UN, and the West would have to make a 180 and call for at least a temporary end of the rebellion and encourage the Syrians opposing Assad to take part in the democratic (and internationally observed) process.
Damn, only now have I realized you're from Slovakia. Sorry for the lecturing tone.
Assad strikes me as an intelligent man (whatever else he might be). One might assume he has learned something from the Yemeni revolution. Among other things, the leaders of Syria and Yemen have one thing in common: their international backers, Russia and the US respectively, on whom they depend for their very survival, have more or less flat-out told them that political reforms have to happen. That's what made Saleh back down, and that is the road I assume Assad will follow as well.
As for Algeria, I must admit I'm not very well versed in their political system and how it operates, but it seems to me that Algeria (or, rather, Bouteflika) is a lot more independent in it's foreign and domestic policies than either Yemen or Syria. It has made concessions to the protesters, regardless. Also, it does not face protests on a scale that other Arab countries do, and they are nowhere near as violent.