The violence in Syria is “spinning out of control,” U.S. Defense Sec. Leon Panetta said Wednesday after a bomber killed three senior Syria military officials earlier, including the brother-in-law of President Bashar al-Assad.
While much of the international community, including the United States, is calling on Assad to step aside in order to quell the fighting with the now 16-month-old opposition, Chris Matthews asked NBC News’ Richard Engel what’s in store for the man once beloved in Western circles but now accused of orchestrating the killing of unarmed civilians.
Assad has run Syria for the last 12 years, and his father ruled with an iron fist for the 29 years prior.
“When pushed and cornered…this regime started behaving like Saddam Hussein’s regime in the worst days and there’s really no way to go back from there,” Engel said during Hardball Wednesday.
Rebels want the Assad-regime gone and fighting in the capital city of Damascus continues to escalate, according to reports.








