Your source there says nothing about "advanced weapons" (it's all small arms type stuff), and is also explicit that it's not the USA giving them out but Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. The story is that those guys are consulting with the CIA on exactly which rebels they are going to fund and arm.
In collusion with the USA, arming the rebels. That's what I've demonstrated.
Apparently you didn't even read the NYTimes link you provided above, then. It explicitly describes Assad's forces targeting civilians with military weapons.
Or you could read any number of other reports from the last couple of years.
I could, if they existed. However, as I've pointed out, neither side is innocent of harming civilians. I don't understand your focus on the Assad government.
Or you could refer to the regime's long history of doing that sort of thing - like the elder Assad's infamous assault on Hama.
That was not unsolicited. There was an "uprising" by Islamic extremists in Hama. I don't think Syria has a capable force of doing precision strikes, so unfortunately, they resort to broad bombing tactics; just like the Allies did with Dresden.
Targeting civilians is not "collateral damage." It is murder. The Assad regime is engaged in a systematic campaign of war crimes - which is to say, crimes against humanity.
No more than the American targeting of Japanese civilians in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, or the Allied targeting of civilians in Dresden, or the American murder of civilians in Pakistan, Yugoslavia, Iraq, and Afghanistan. I'm not bringing up these examples to justify what Assad is allegedly doing, but to insist that you have no leg to stand on.
On the one hand, the US ended up getting burned in the long run on various of those misadventures and now calculates differently. This has - again - been abundantly evident throughout the Arab Spring.
How do we know for sure that it calculates differently? The same interests are in play.
On the other hand, Carter declined to support the Shah when he ran into trouble with protest movements and this is widely thought to have been instrumental in his fall. Carter made a deliberate effort to distance the USA from the Shah and reach out to the Iranian people as his regime collapsed. It was only later, in the internecine battles in the aftermath of the Shah's overthrow, that the Ayatollah managed to sour relations with the USA as part of his consolidation of power. People forget that the hostage crisis didn't occur until well after the Shah was gone.
That seems to me like Carter deciding the shit was hitting the fan and conveniently changing his position regarding the Shah. As it is, when the oppressive governments are strong (e.g. Saudi Arabia and Metaxas), the USA has no problem being allied with them.
They're already having a civil war. You're simply rooting for the side that is in bed with Russia.
Yes, I am. And you are rooting for the side in bed with the USA.
Those would be the regime and regime supporters - the very same people who will be shut out of a post-Assad government.
Unless, of course, they are a substantially large group of Syrians, as I've demonstrated.