It does not affect Australia directly. There is however one danger that Australia shares with a number of other countries: Syria's civil war attracts a quite considerable number of young Muslims living elsewhere, who want to join any of the rebel groups. There is a risk that fighting there will radicalize them, while at the same time they are learning to use bombs, guns and maybe even chemical weapons. If they return to their country of origin, Australia or elsewhere, that country may have a number of battle-hardened radical Muslim fighters on its hands.
Lebanon and Syria have not been in direct conflict since the Syrian army ended the Syrian Occupation of Lebanon in April 2005. There have been some border skirmishes, especially because some of the Syrian Civil War spills over into Lebanon, but there is no declared war between the Syrian Regime or any of the other Syrian Civil War parties and Lebanon.
The Arab Spring in Syria led to the Syrian Civil War as government crackdowns on unrest escalated into armed conflict. ISIS took advantage of the chaos in Syria to establish a presence, eventually expanding its control into Iraq as well. The group exploited sectarian tensions, power vacuums, and disenfranchisement to establish a self-proclaimed caliphate in parts of Iraq and Syria.
They Farted
it is 100% civil war the governmental Syrian troops are attacking the revolution area, the residents in this way are defending themselves.
Australia mirrored the US; the draft, riots, protests, casualties, discontent.
Well obviously there was a bigger death toll
The same as with the US; enemies then, friends now.
Australia was the foot hole for the allied troops to mount an attack on Japanese forces. The battle of Guadalcanal was the deciding battle in preventing the Japanese invasion of Australia.
The Syrian Civil War is still going on at present.
The war of the Hasmoneans (Maccabees) against the Syrian-Greeks (Seleucids).
The Romans won this war. The Syrian War or Roman-Syrian War or War of Antiochus (192-180 BC) was between the Romans and Antiochus the Great, the ruler of what was left of the Seleucid Empire. The Romans were backed by allied Greek states: the Achaean League, Macedon, Pergamum and Rhodes. The Seleucids had allies as well: Cappadocia and the Greek Athamanians and the Aetolian league.
warren hasting