“…An impressive earlier body of research, which focused on Western public opinion on international intervention (Clements, 2012(Clements, , 2014Davies and Johns, 2016;Falomir-Pichastor et al, 2012;Reifler et al, 2014), has already shown how attitudinal profiles can explain support for various types of foreign interventions. In the context of the burgeoning research on pro-democracy attitudes among Arab publics (Berger, 2019a;Tessler et al, 2012), there are only few examinations of how and whether this might correlate with views on international politics (Berger, 2019b;Ciftci and Tezcür, 2016;Spierings, 2014;Tessler and Nachtwey, 1998). We are thus left with looking at published opinion and (social) media discourses as a first gauge of how views of democracy might affect support for different forms of intervention in Syria.…”