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 Topic: News From Syria

 (Read 18973 times)
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  • News From Syria
     Reply #30 - August 28, 2016, 08:46 PM

    url=http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-37208941]Turkey kills 25 people in latest round of air strikes  says BBC news [/url]

    Quote
    At least 25 people have been killed as Turkey continues to target Kurdish-held areas in Syria, near the border city of Jarablus. The Turkish military said those killed in Sunday's air strikes were Kurdish militants.

    Separately, a monitoring group said at least 35 civilians and four militants were killed by a wave of Turkish strikes in the same area. It is not yet clear whether the two reports relate to the same incident.

    The strikes came on the fifth day of Turkey's military operation to target so-called Islamic State (IS) militants and Kurdish militia inside Syria, dubbed Operation Euphrates Shield

    that is the news ..   

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w7wEEUyWfGQ

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w7wEEUyWfGQ

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • News From Syria
     Reply #31 - August 29, 2016, 07:09 AM

    Fuck American politics and fuck Obama administration.
    They have stabbed YPG in the back, their most trusted ally on the ground.
  • News From Syria
     Reply #32 - August 29, 2016, 04:07 PM

    Fuck American politics and fuck Obama administration.
    They have stabbed YPG in the back, their most trusted ally on the ground.

    Everyone better learn how to clean THEIR OWN ASSES THEIR OWN SHIT  instead of looking for AMRIKA to clean., now saying that AMRIKA should just learn not to throw shit and not to stir shit in foreign countries ..they have their own shit to clean nbhb..

    anyways there is a viral news from Syria and the picture of this unfortunate boy is everywhere


    Quote
    A Syrian child covered in dust and blood sits in an orange ambulance chair, gray and alone. His stunned, mute face has been hailed a "symbol" of his country's devastation and suffering. His huddled frame was Photoshopped into pictures with world leaders, the latest emblem of the international community's failure to bring to an end one of the ghastliest civil wars in modern history.

    The good news is that Omran Daqneesh, the young boy pulled from the rubble of an airstrike in the Qaterji neighborhood of Aleppo, is alive. So too, according to reports, are his parents and siblings.

    The bad news is that the conflict that has hollowed out his home town, once Syria's most populous urban center, shows little sign of flagging. And that, beyond Omran's heart-rending rescue, there are too many stories of children who could not sit in that ambulance chair, looking back at the world's cameras.

    well that si the news and here is the tube of that tragedy

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7cfBmRW3isc

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • News From Syria
     Reply #33 - August 30, 2016, 08:20 AM

    Yeeeze you know what, behind the tragedy of this child's brother is a story about the journalist/media activist/... who made this photo:

    http://www.geopolmonitor.com/aleppo-boy-photographer-responds-to-allegations-of-beheading-involvment/
    https://off-guardian.org/2016/08/19/an-id-for-mahmoud-raslan/

    Well Mr Mahmoud Raslan (who has no issue taking selfies with people beheading enemies children) is selling stories to Al Jazeera which is owned by Al Thani family who are notorious supporters of extremists and terrorists everywhere around the world and especially in Syria. Coincidence?
  • News From Syria
     Reply #34 - August 30, 2016, 12:07 PM

    Yeeeze you know what, behind the tragedy of this child's brother is a story ..................... who made this photo:

    http://www.geopolmonitor.com/aleppo-boy-photographer-responds-to-allegations-of-beheading-involvment/
    https://off-guardian.org/2016/08/19/an-id-for-mahmoud-raslan/

    Well Mr Mahmoud Raslan (who has no issue taking selfies with people beheading enemies children) is selling stories to Al Jazeera which is owned by Al Thani family .....................

    please get bit more details on that 5 years old  Omran Daqneesh and on that Islamic idiot  Mr.  Mahmoud Raslan dear   nbhb.,   These propagandist idiots in Islam have to be exposed, but we needmore details ..
    Quote

    well I am glad there is plenty of publicity on that bloody  Syrian war for nothing  .. SYRIA HAS NO OIL  NO NUCLEAR FUEL AND NO GOLD  anyways   that last link from timesofisrael.com  shows  the picture of that 5 years old  Omran Daqneeshad his elder brother



    well we all know a picture is worth a thousand words.  that is true but for the past 10 years or so I have seen some 1000 of images or so  of little boys and girls dead and alive similar to   Omran Daqneeshad and his brother. Well  Omran Daqneesh is indeed a miracle that world at least is reading as nearly half a million  have lost their lives  anonymously in n unmarked graves   in Syria itself.

    So anyway nbhb even those Islamic Idiots are using this boy for their propaganda  still I am glad the news  is getting press.. what do you say??

    The other thing i must add here is..

    Where allah/god of Muslim fools ?
    Where is god  pagan fools?
    Where is Jesus god , God of Jesus of Christian fools ?
    Where  is go goo god Yahweh??  the god of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob yadi yadi juice ?
    and where is god of hindus?   the  deities of  ramkishan  Vishnu Rama, Krishna,
    Narayana, Vithoba,Venkateswara, Jagannath Varaha  Naraenten Shiva   Mahadeva, Pashupati, Tripurantaka, Dakshinamurthy, Acalanatha Fudō Myōō (Japan)  yadi yadi yadi yadi yadi yadi . of hindus??

    these allah/god/gods have no mercy on these children?  has/have no power to save these children? JUST BUSY DOING NOTHING and fucking around human brains?  The thick skulls  that is filled with shit?

    FOOLS TALK NONSENSE IN THE NAME SOME OTHER NONSENSE  .. mock them and move on..

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • News From Syria
     Reply #35 - August 30, 2016, 05:07 PM

    Quote from: yeezevee
    So anyway nbhb even those Islamic Idiots are using this boy for their propaganda  still I am glad the news  is getting press.. what do you say?? 

    Agree.
  • News From Syria
     Reply #36 - April 14, 2018, 04:39 PM

    Syria air strikes: US and allies attack 'chemical weapons sites'  says BBC

    Quote
    The US, UK and France have bombed three government sites in Syria in an early morning operation targeting chemical weapons facilities, they say.

    The move is a response to a suspected chemical attack on the town of Douma last week which killed dozens.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin said he condemned the Western strikes "in the most serious way".

    Russia, Syria's main ally, had threatened military retaliation if any Russian forces had been hit.

    "The nations of Britain, France, and the United States of America have marshalled their righteous power against barbarism and brutality," US President Donald Trump said in an address from the White House at about 21:00 local time (01:00 GMT).

    "The purpose of our actions tonight is to establish a strong deterrent against the production, spread, and use of chemical weapons," he said.

    The wave of strikes is the most significant attack against President Bashar al-Assad's government by Western powers in seven years of Syria's civil war.

    well  that is the news and here are the tubes..

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pXlt4YTUwqo

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=opKJaWd97aw


    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • News From Syria
     Reply #37 - April 14, 2018, 04:42 PM

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-l44KUQHoVY 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lW0HP7Xd2rs

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8eSvCWdEoTo

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • News From Syria
     Reply #38 - April 14, 2018, 08:38 PM

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V-yba3R6IBY

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cSGf2ZpDENU

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_HLjC53emUM

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • News From Syria
     Reply #39 - April 14, 2018, 09:01 PM

       Saudi Prince’s U.S. Tour

    Saudi Arabia's Mohammed bin Salman to meet Emmanuel Macron in France

    Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman toured Hollywood, Harvard and Silicon Valley on US visit

    US, UK and France launch Syria strikes targeting Assad's chemical weapons  
     
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=scRSbQRVRVQ

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5S7FnVCrHeM  

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SOaOMYP-aAc

    PRINCE VISITS .... OIL MONEY TALKS ... FREEDOM LOVING WESTERN NATIONS  ATTACK  SYRIA ..YEMEN..  and  other countries  

    Story Parallels  Origins of Islam  and who controls Islam 

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • News From Syria
     Reply #40 - April 14, 2018, 09:11 PM

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g4EieDfF-34
     
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gZES_cCO62E


    more than 1/5th  population in countries  like Russia ,  China    are Muslims.....  we could use Islam  and Indians and others    to break the  countries... And we can control that oil wealth of rich that lives ...lies on yachts  and floating around the globe  another 15  years or so..

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • News From Syria
     Reply #41 - April 14, 2018, 09:12 PM

    The ‘anti-imperialism’ of idiots
    Quote from: Leila Al Shami
    Once more the western ‘anti-war’ movement has awoken to mobilise around Syria. This is the third time since 2011. The first was when Obama contemplated striking the Syrian regime’s military capability (but didn’t) following chemical attacks on the Ghouta in 2013, considered a ‘red line’. The second time was when Donald Trump ordered a strike which hit an empty regime military base in response to chemical attacks on Khan Sheikhoun in 2017. And today, as the US, UK and France take limited military action (targeted strikes on regime military assets and chemical weapons facilities) following a chemical weapons attack in Douma which killed at least 34 people, including many children who were sheltering in basements from bombing.

    The first thing to note from the three major mobilisations of the western ‘anti-war’ left is that they have little to do with ending the war. More than half a million Syrians have been killed since 2011. The vast majority of civilian deaths have been through the use of conventional weapons and 94 per cent of these victims were killed by the Syrian-Russian-Iranian alliance. There is no outrage or concern feigned for this war, which followed the regime’s brutal crackdown on peaceful, pro-democracy demonstrators. There’s no outrage when barrel bombs, chemical weapons and napalm are dropped on democratically self-organized communities or target hospitals and rescue workers. Civilians are expendable; the military capabilities of a genocidal, fascist regime are not. In fact the slogan ‘Hands off Syria’ really means ‘Hands off Assad’ and support is often given for Russia’s military intervention. This was evident yesterday at a demonstration organized by Stop the War UK where a number of regime and Russian flags were shamefully on display.

    This left exhibits deeply authoritarian tendencies, one that places states themselves at the centre of political analysis. Solidarity is therefore extended to states (seen as the main actor in a struggle for liberation) rather than oppressed or underprivileged groups in any given society, no matter that state’s tyranny. Blind to the social war occurring within Syria itself, the Syrian people (where they exist) are viewed as mere pawns in a geo-political chess game. They repeat the mantra ‘Assad is the legitimate ruler of a sovereign country’. Assad – who inherited a dictatorship from his father and has never held, let alone won, a free and fair election. Assad – whose ‘Syrian Arab Army’ can only regain the territory it lost with the backing of a hotchpotch of foreign mercenaries and supported by foreign bombs, and who are fighting, by and large, Syrian-born rebels and civilians. How many would consider their own elected government legitimate if it began carrying out mass rape campaigns against dissidents? It’s only the complete dehumanization of Syrians that makes such a position even possible. It’s a racism that sees Syrians as incapable of achieving, let alone deserving, anything better than one of the most brutal dictatorships of our time.

    For this authoritarian left, support is extended to the Assad regime in the name of ‘anti-imperialism’. Assad is seen as part of the ‘axis of resistance’ against both US Empire and Zionism.  It matters little that the Assad regime itself supported the first Gulf war, or participated in the US illegal rendition programme where suspected terrorists were tortured in Syria on the CIA’s behalf. The fact that this regime probably holds the dubious distinction of slaughtering more Palestinians than the Israeli state is constantly overlooked, as is the fact that it’s more intent on using its armed forces to suppress internal dissent than to liberate the Israeli-occupied Golan.

    This ‘anti-imperialism’ of idiots is one which equates imperialism with the actions of the US alone. They seem unaware that the US has been bombing Syria since 2014. In its campaign to liberate Raqqa from Daesh all international norms of war and considerations of proportionality were abandoned. Over 1,000 civilians were killed and the UN estimates that 80 per cent of the city is now uninhabitable. There were no protests organized by leading ‘anti-war’ organizations against this intervention, no calls to ensure that civilians and civilian infrastructure were protected. Instead they adopted the ‘War on Terror’ discourse, once the preserve of neo-cons, now promulgated by the regime, that all opposition to Assad are jihadi terrorists. They turned a blind eye to Assad filling his gulag with thousands of secular, peaceful, pro-democracy demonstrators for death by torture, whilst releasing militant-Islamists from prison. Similarly, the continuing protests held in liberated areas in opposition to extremist and authoritarian groups such as Daesh, Nusra and Ahrar Al Sham have been ignored. Syrians are not seen as possessing the sophistication to hold a diverse range of views. Civil society activists (including many amazing women), citizen journalists, humanitarian workers are irrelevant. The entire opposition is reduced to its most authoritarian elements or seen as mere conduits for foreign interests.

    This pro-fascist left seems blind to any form of imperialism that is non-western in origin. It combines identity politics with egoism. Everything that happens is viewed through the prism of what it means for westerners – only white men have the power to make history. According to the Pentagon there are currently around 2000 American troops in Syria. The US has established a number of military bases in the Kurdish-controlled north for the first time in Syria’s history. This should concern anyone who supports Syrian self-determination yet pales in comparison to the tens of thousands of Iranian troops and Iranian backed Shia militias which are now occupying large parts of the country, or the murderous bombing raids carried out by the Russian air force in support of the fascist dictatorship. Russia has now established permanent military bases in the country, and has been handed exclusive rights over Syria’s oil and gas as a reward for its support. Noam Chomsky once argued that Russia’s intervention could not be considered imperialism because it was invited to bomb the country by the Syrian regime. By that analysis, the US’s intervention in Vietnam was not imperialism either, invited as it was by the South-Vietnamese government.

    A number of anti-war organizations have justified their silence on Russian and Iranian interventions by arguing that ‘the main enemy is at home’. This excuses them from undertaking any serious power analysis to determine who the main actors driving the war actually are. For Syrians the main enemy is indeed at home – it’s Assad who is engaging in what the UN has termed ‘the crime of extermination’. Without being aware of their own contradictions many of the same voices have been vocally opposed (and rightly so) to Israel’s current assault on peaceful demonstrators in Gaza. Of course, one of the main ways imperialism works is to deny native voices. In this vein, leading western anti-war organizations hold conferences on Syria without inviting any Syrian speakers.

    The other major political trend to have thrown its weight behind the Assad regime and organize against US, UK and French strikes on Syria is the far right. Today, the discourse of fascists and these ‘anti-imperialist leftists’ is virtually indistinguishable. In the US, white supremacist Richard Spencer, alt right podcaster Mike Enoch and anti-immigration activist Ann Coulter are all opposing US strikes. In the UK former BNP leader Nick Griffin and Islamophobe Katie Hopkins join the calls. The place where the alt-right and alt-left frequently converge is around promoting various conspiracy theories to absolve the regime of its crimes. They claim chemical massacres are false flags or that rescue workers are Al Qaeda and therefore legitimate targets for attack. Those spreading such reports are not on the ground in Syria and are unable to independently verify their claims. They are often dependent on Russian or Assad state propaganda outlets because they ‘don’t trust the MSM’ or Syrians directly affected. Sometimes the convergence of these two seemingly opposite strands of the political spectrum turns into outright collaboration. The ANSWER coalition, which is organizing many of the demonstrations against a strike on Assad in the US, has such a history. Both strands frequently promote Islamophobic and anti-Semitic narratives. Both share the same talking points and same memes.

    There are many valid reasons for opposing external military intervention in Syria, whether it be by the US, Russia, Iran or Turkey. None of these states are acting in the interests of the Syrian people, democracy or human rights. They act solely in their own interests. The US, UK and French intervention today is less about protecting Syrians from mass-atrocity and more about enforcing an international norm that chemical weapons use is unacceptable, lest one day they be used on westerners themselves. More foreign bombs will not bring about peace and stability. There’s little appetite to force Assad from power which would contribute to ending the worst of the atrocities.  Yet in opposing foreign intervention, one needs to come up with an alternative to protect Syrians from slaughter. It’s morally objectionable to say the least to expect Syrians to just shut up and die to protect the higher principle of ‘anti-imperialism’. Many alternatives to foreign military intervention have been proposed by Syrians time and again and have been ignored. And so the question remains, when diplomatic options have failed, when a genocidal regime is protected from censure by powerful international backers, when no progress is made in stopping daily bombing, ending starvation sieges or releasing prisoners who are being tortured on an industrial scale, what can be done.

    I no longer have an answer. I’ve consistently opposed all foreign military intervention in Syria, supported Syrian led process to rid their country of a tyrant and international processes grounded in efforts to protect civilians and human rights and ensure accountability for all actors responsible for war-crimes. A negotiated settlement is the only way to end this war – and still seems as distant as ever. Assad (and his backers) are determined to thwart any process, pursue a total military victory and crush any remaining democratic alternative. Hundreds of Syrians are being killed every week in the most barbaric ways imaginable. Extremist groups and ideologies are thriving in the chaos wrought by the state. Civilians continue to flee in their thousands as legal processes – such as Law No.10 – are implemented to ensure they will never return to their homes. The international system itself is collapsing under the weight of its own impotence. The words ‘Never Again’ ring hollow. There’s no major people’s movement which stands in solidarity with the victims. They are instead slandered, their suffering is mocked or denied, and their voices either absent from discussions or questioned by people far away, who know nothing of Syria, revolution or war, and who arrogantly believe they know what is best. It is this desperate situation which causes many Syrians to welcome the US, UK and France’s action and who now see foreign intervention as their only hope, despite the risks they know it entails.

    One thing is for sure – I won’t lose any sleep over targeted strikes aimed at regime military bases and chemical weapons plants which may provide Syrians with a short respite from the daily killing. And I will never see people who place grand narratives over lived realities, who support brutal regimes in far off countries, or who peddle racism, conspiracy theories and atrocity denial, as allies.

  • News From Syria
     Reply #42 - April 15, 2018, 01:31 PM

    Facts  About Chemical Weapons in Syria from both sides[/b]

    A history of chemical weapons in Syria  ABC news  By MORGAN WINSOR  Apr 6, 2017
     
    Syria air strikes   .. BBC  news   Boris Johnson  defense on the attack..

    Quote
    what's left    Syria Chemical Weapons Attack: The Facts   By Stephen Gowans  April 11, 2018

    1. The fundamental question of whether a chemical weapons (CW) attack took place last Saturday in the Syrian town of Douma has yet to be independently addressed. The Organization for the Prevention of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), the one neutral body that is qualified to investigate the use of chemical weapons, has yet to begin its investigation.

    #2. While the OPCW can determine whether a chemical attack has occurred, it is beyond its capability to assign responsibility. The allegation that the Syrian government perpetrated a CW attack is not verifiable in principle by a neutral body.

    #3. The sole evidence for the claim against the Syrian government consists of allegations from two partisan sources: the White Helmets and Syrian American Medical Society.

    #4. Both groups are allied with jihadists seeking to overthrow the Syrian government and both are funded by Western states which openly call for regime change in Damascus. These outfits are neither neutral nor independent.

    #5. As parties to the conflict, both groups have an interest in fabricating atrocity stories to defame their enemy and create a pretext for the continued and even escalated intervention of Western militaries in Syria.

    #6. As parties to the conflict, Western states have an interest in legitimating the atrocity stories to defame the government they seek to change and to furnish a pretext for their continued and even escalated intervention in Syria.

    #7. While early media reports referred to the White Helmets and Syrian American Medical Society as the sources of the allegations, explicit references to these partisan sources have now mostly disappeared from media coverage.

    #8. Instead, the White Helmets and Syrian American Medical Society are now referred to by more neutral-sounding terms, such as “medical professionals and human rights groups,” or “relief workers”* disguising their partisan character and creating the illusion that they are independent humanitarian organizations free from a vested interest in the outcome of the conflict.

    #9. Following the tenet cui prodest scelus, is fesit (he has committed the crime who has received the profit) suspicion falls more heavily on the White Helmets and Syrian American Medical Society, as perpetrators of a hoax, than on the Syrian government, as perpetrators of a crime. While it’s easy to attribute a motive to the White Helmets and Syrian American Medical Society to fabricate a story, no credible motive or benefit has been adduced to explain why the Syrian government would carry out the alleged CW attack. Those explanations that have been advanced fail on either of two grounds: they’re circular, or implausible and free from evidence.

    A favored circular explanation holds that Assad ordered an attack because he’s an “animal.” How do we know he’s an animal? Because he ordered an attack.

    Another line of argument attributes the alleged attack to a desire on the part of the Syrian government “to terrorize the population.”** Apart from the reality that no evidence for this claim is adduced, it is wholly unsatisfying as an explanation. Populations can be far more effectively terrorized by carpet bombing (also known, fittingly, as terror bombing.) If the Syrian government sought to terrorize the population, why use chemical weapons, when far more effective means are at hand, ones, morever, that don’t cross a red line?

    #10. The bottom line is that there is no independent verification that an attack even took place, let alone that the Syrian government is responsible for one. What’s more, the sources of the allegations are wholly untrustworthy, have an interest in perpetrating a hoax, and no credible motivation has been cited to explain why the Syrian government would undertake the alleged CW attack.

    The only reasonable conclusion in light of the above is that there’s not a speck of credible evidence that the Syrian government perpetrated a CW attack at Douma last Saturday, and that there are strong grounds to suspect the White Helmets and Syrian American Medical Society have created a deception.

    * See for example “The US presses allies to back military strike on Syria,” The Wall Street Journal, April 10, 2018 or “Russia warns it will shoot down US missiles fired at Syria, target launch sites,” Reuters, April 11, 2018. Two days earlier the Wall Street Journal’s reporting identified the Syrian American Medical Society and the White Helmets as the sources of the allegations, as did The Associated Press and the New York times.

    ** See for example “Syria gas attack echoes Assad’s gamble that gains outweigh risks,” Wall Street Journal, April 9, 2018.


    Stephen Gowans Vancouver Talk

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TUdvrs9u0kI 

    Quote
    Stephen Gowans author of Washington's Long War On Syria details the history of American attempts to bring down the independent Syrian government through sanctions, proxies and direct intervention. He explains the history of the extremist Muslim Brotherhood in Syria and the region and how they were the forerunners of ISIS and al Qaeda.


    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • News From Syria
     Reply #43 - April 15, 2018, 04:02 PM

    Quote from: yeezevee

    This is part of a line of conspiracy theory thinking that’s seeing a convergence between much of the ‘anti-imperialist’ left and the far right. See this thread for the reaction from fascists: https://mobile.twitter.com/P_Strickland_/status/985477488276131843
  • News From Syria
     Reply #44 - April 15, 2018, 04:26 PM

    This is part of a line of conspiracy theory thinking that’s seeing a convergence between much of the ‘anti-imperialist’ left and the far right. See this thread for the reaction from fascists: https://mobile.twitter.com/P_Strickland_/status/985477488276131843

     conspiracy theory or some other  theory  ..the attackers  must give details and what did they accomplish by doing it ?

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-43776291

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yxxkX3RhkEI  

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcXNbkHmzEE  
     
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GS8oXLazbSw

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • News From Syria
     Reply #45 - April 15, 2018, 04:38 PM

    Some discussion on the urban75 Syria thread: https://www.urban75.net/forums/threads/and-next-syria.269531/page-301#post-15520812
  • News From Syria
     Reply #46 - April 15, 2018, 04:56 PM

    See this thread on conspiraloons and the red-brown convergence: https://www.urban75.net/forums/threads/vanessa-beeley.350823/
  • News From Syria
     Reply #47 - April 15, 2018, 08:31 PM

    the attackers must give details

    Here’s the French government assessment of the Douma attack: https://www.diplomatie.gouv.fr/IMG/pdf/180414_-_syria_-fr_national_assessment-_english-version_cle0c76b5.pdf
  • News From Syria
     Reply #48 - April 16, 2018, 11:03 AM

    https://www.joshualandis.com/blog/creating-a-new-syria-property-dispossession-and-regime-survival-by-erwin-van-veen/
    Quote
    While all eyes were fixed on the US-led military response to the alleged chemical attack in East Ghouta, a little-noted event occurred that could potentially have a much greater impact on Syria’s future. About 10 days ago, President Assad’s regime passed Law no. 10. The law foresees the creation of local administrative units in each district of regime-held territory that will be in charge of reconstruction efforts. All Syrians will be required to register their private properties with these units by providing proof of ownership, in person or through legal representatives. This must be done within roughly the next two months. The risk of noncompliance is that the Syrian state will take possession of the unregistered properties.

    With half the Syrian population displaced and many property transfers prior to 2011 having been done informally, this will be a mission impossible for many. Depending on the implementation and enforcement of the law, its most likely consequence is that the Syrian state will acquire a substantial amount of property in the near future—land, buildings, and other immovable assets—within the territories it currently controls. The real implication here is twofold. Most importantly, President Assad’s regime will lay its hands on the assets it needs to finance the country’s reconstruction and reestablish its power base, preserving its long-term viability and independence. Moreover, it will dispossess hundreds of thousands of Syrians—possibly millions—who escaped the fighting or forced recruitment. Law no. 10 is a Faustian masterstroke—both in its injustice and its ingenuity.

    The background is this: The World Bank has estimated the tab for reconstructing Syria at upwards of USD $200 billion. The Syrian regime has been broke for some time, kept financially afloat by the Iranian Central Bank and assorted Lebanese banks. Russia and Iran have neither the will nor the funds to finance Syria’s reconstruction. The Gulf countries, United States, and European Union have made it clear that likewise they will not carry Syria’s reconstruction without a “meaningful political transition”—a reference to their desire for real political concessions in the future governance of Syria. Most who are familiar with the conflict expect such a transition to happen when hell freezes over.

    And yet, reconstructing Syria is essential to President Assad’s regime. This is not because it cares about restoring basic services like healthcare and housing to a decent level, or about the return of Syrian refugees. Figures like Syrian Major General Issam Zahreddin (since killed in battle) made it abundantly clear some time ago that returning refugees should not count on a warm welcome.

    No. Rather, reconstruction is essential to the regime’s survival because it must reward the networks of businessmen, military, and militia leaders that helped it win the war. Reconstruction is also vital to the regime’s autonomy because it must re-establish its powerbase and independence vis-à-vis its international backers who will expect the future loyalty of a faithful Syrian ally when this conflict is over. Iran, for example, is already working to establish a long-term social, religious, and military presence in the country.

    The imperatives of regime survival and autonomy mean that its reconstruction logic will echo its warfighting logic: indiscriminate punishment of disloyalty to impose fear, selective co-optation, and deal-making with opposition groups where this offers a low-cost solution on regime terms and safeguards core regime interests. Initial urban reconstruction efforts of the regime in Damascus, Homs, and Aleppo, on the basis of Decree 66 (2012), already show how the regime uses high-end property developments to generate funds and reward loyalists through forcible dispossession below market rates, as well as the use of regime-linked real estate and construction companies. The nationalization of property enabled by the closely-related Law no. 10 will take this approach to a new level.

    An additional consequence of Law no. 10 is that it will enable large-scale demographic engineering by reallocating appropriated property to new owners. This will not necessarily be sectarian in nature as the majority of both Syrians and regime-loyalists are Sunni. Rather, it will create large loyalist urban centers to underpin the regime’s power base and limit the return of refugees, who are largely not perceived as supporters of President Assad.

    In addition to remaking urban centers as areas of repopulated loyalist concentration, the strategy will probably also involve undoing the existence of impoverished Sunni-belts around Syria’s main cities from which so many rebels were recruited. Insofar as these poorer suburbs are currently depopulated due to rebel recruitment, casualties, and flight, the regime is likely to use Law No. 10 to appropriate the land (in many such areas, property rights were not well established even before the war) and to then prevent their resettlement if and when refugees return. Any Sunni populations that have not fled but are still living in such suburbs at present will also be at risk of forced displacement and dispossession commensurate with the extent of their perceived disloyalty to the regime. It is clear that the regime has no problem initiating displacement on a large scale when it suits regime interests. Dealing with the suburban belts in this fashion will remove a source of resistance against the regime once and for all.

    Though these are the primary aspects of the strategy, Law no. 10 may very well additionally facilitate small-scale sectarian demographic engineering in a few strategic areas. The “four-town deal” that swapped the population of two Sunni villages with two Shi’i ones west of Damascus suggests that the Syrian-Lebanese border could be such an area. Incidentally, this particular deal was enabled by Qatar as the price for release of their captured royal hunting party in Iraq.

    If the re-entrenchment of the Syrian regime was not already a sad enough finale, the emerging parallels with the plight of many Palestinians are uncanny and will constitute a further source of international concern. Not only is the relative size of the Syrian diaspora growing fast, but Law no. 10 may well have an effect similar to the Israeli Absentee Property Law, which effectively nationalized Palestinian lands whose owners had fled after November 1947. The Israeli/Palestinian problem still haunts the world’s conscience 70 years later, though apparently not enough to end its neglect and resolve the problem.

    In 2017, Pearlman quotes Talia—a fleeing TV correspondent in Aleppo—regarding a sad but remarkably poignant moment: “I waited for the driver outside. I kissed the walls on the street, because I knew that I was never coming back to them.”

    Law no. 10 just brought this scenario one step closer to reality.

  • News From Syria
     Reply #49 - April 16, 2018, 07:31 PM

    Douma, Syria the official start site of world war 3
    Who knew Syrian civil war will lead us into WW3
  • News From Syria
     Reply #50 - May 25, 2018, 07:52 AM

    Telling it like it isn't: John Pilger and the Syria truthers
  • News From Syria
     Reply #51 - August 12, 2018, 02:33 PM

    Now China plans to stick his nose in Syria
  • News From Syria
     Reply #52 - May 26, 2021, 11:16 AM

    presidential elections in syria.

    Quote from:
    Syria's polling stations have opened on Wednesday across government-held areas in a presidential election set to give President Bashar Assad a fourth seven-year term.


    https://m.dw.com/en/syria-elections-polls-open-as-western-countries-slam-illegitimate-vote/a-57663592

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=c4DKjktzhD4
  • News From Syria
     Reply #53 - May 26, 2021, 12:23 PM


    fucking shit elections.. that scoundrel ruled the country for the 21 years and before that his father ruled and ruined country Syria..   DICTITORIAL REGIMES in disguise as democracies are worst form of governments..

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • News From Syria
     Reply #54 - May 26, 2021, 08:58 PM

    i'd guess most ordinary iraqis and syrians would prefer the disappearances and occasional chemical-attacks of stable dictatorships over the unpredictable death and chaos of islamo democratic militias.

    https://www.strategypage.com/qnd/syria/articles/20210520.aspx
  • News From Syria
     Reply #55 - December 04, 2024, 05:00 PM

    Podcast: https://thefirethesetimes.com/2024/12/03/tftt-special-roundtable-on-syria/
    Quote
    For episode 178, From the Periphery collective members Leila Al-Shami, Elia Ayoub, Karena Avedissian, and Ayman Makarem gathered together for a roundtable to discuss the latest developments in Syria and to provide a historical and political background to help understand the current moment. We discuss a broad range of topics starting with an overview of the what’s happened in the last week or so, including: the origins of the Syrian revolution, the counter-revolutionary war, the abuses and crimes of the Assad regime, foreign interventions and regional factors, descriptions of groups such as HTS (Hayat Tahrir al Sham) and SNA (Syria National Army), Kurdish movements and the concerns of ethnic/religious minorities, the racist tankie ‘hot take’ industry, and the connections between liberatory movements for Palestine and Syria. We cover a lot, but of course we couldn’t do everything justice. We will provide links below for further resources, but also plan on doing more episodes in the near future on all of these topics as things develop and progress.

  • News From Syria
     Reply #56 - December 04, 2024, 05:06 PM

    I guess we'll see how this goes.

    https://nitter.poast.org/HassounMazen/status/1864345005621387401#m
    Quote
    It seems Jolani has finally decided to abandon his radical path. Today, he appeared at the historic Aleppo Citadel, confirming he is still alive, though we all assumed as much. Speaking to Crisis Group, he stated that Aleppo "will be governed by a transitional body" and that "HTS is considering dissolving itself to enable the full consolidation of civilian and military structures into new institutions reflecting the diversity of Syrian society."
    Additionally, there were three reassuring statements today directed toward Christians, Alawites, and the international community.
    The real test of his commitment to change will lie in the governance of Aleppo, Salamiyah (predominantly Isma'ilis), and Muhardah (predominantly Christians) and how his fighters will enter these two cities.

  • News From Syria
     Reply #57 - December 05, 2024, 12:54 PM

    Hama has just fallen.
  • News From Syria
     Reply #58 - December 05, 2024, 03:22 PM

    Release of prisoners in Hama

    https://nitter.poast.org/ThomasVLinge/status/1864685176984396147#m

    https://nitter.poast.org/RamiJarrah/status/1864671806864408895#m
  • News From Syria
     Reply #59 - December 05, 2024, 06:35 PM

    https://nitter.poast.org/tahabito/status/1864726573603053847#m
    Quote
    It is near-impossible to convey to non-Syrians the profound political and sentimental weight the liberation of Hama from Assad’s grip holds. The cataclysmic massacre that decimated the historic city in 1982 not only claimed untold thousands of lives but also buried the political life of an entire nation for decades to come. The very name "Hama" became synonymous with fear and horror so visceral it bordered on the mystical—a name akin to "Tiananmen" or "Rabaa," but unlike them, denoting an entire city.

    For those who grew up in Syria during the eighties and nineties, the word was practically taboo, whispered in private, its mere utterance in public fraught with danger and liable to being misconstrued as part of a seditious conversation by potential informants. Parents deliberately avoided speaking of the massacre in front of their children, fearing that an innocent repetition could bring catastrophic consequences.

    It must have been 1998, in pre-Internet Syria, when as a young teenager I got my first copy of Encarta, one of the illegally sold encyclopedias that were a rare source of uncensored information for my generation. One of the first things I searched for was "Hama Massacre," and I still remember a new word I learned that day: rubble.

    As more and more of Syria leaves the Assadist realm, Syrians surely harbor no illusions about the immense challenges that lie ahead. Yet, and irrespective of who ultimately assumes power, that visceral fear must be remembered, ensuring it is never part of future Syrians' lives. We owe them that much, to say the least.

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