When Paul Danahar took over as the BBC's bureau chief for the Middle East region in 2010, he had no inkling of the historic upheaval that was about to kick off on his watch.
For the next three years, Danahar had a front row seat for the events in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Syria and elsewhere that came to be known by the imperfect cachphrase, "the Arab Spring."
Now, he has written a book about those events, "The New Middle East: The World After the Arab Spring."
The World's host, Marco Werman talks to Danahar about Syria, US policy in the Middle East and the prospects for democracy in the region.
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