By Peter Apps and Matt Spetalnick
An eruption of violent unrest across
the Middle East is confronting President Barack Obama with the most serious
challenge yet to his efforts to keep the Arab Spring from morphing into a new
wave of anti-Americanism - and he has few good options to prevent it.
Less than two months before the U.S.
presidential election, a spate of attacks on embassies in Libya, Egypt and Yemen poses a huge dilemma for a
U.S. leader who took office promising a "new beginning" with the
Muslim world but has struggled to manage the transformation that has swept away
many of the region's long-ruling dictators.
On
top of that, even as he tries to fend off foreign policy criticism from
Republican rival Mitt Romney, Obama is grappling with an escalating crisis in
U.S.-Israeli relations over Iran's nuclear program and increased bloodshed in Syria, where President Bashar al-Assad has
defied international calls to step aside.
Obama's
Middle East woes deepened this week with a series of mob attacks on U.S.
diplomatic compounds and the killing of America's ambassador to Libya. Demonstrators
were incensed by a U.S.-made film they consider blasphemous to Islam.













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