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[🇸🇾] Rebels Oust Assad

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[🇸🇾] Rebels Oust Assad
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Blinded to Syria
Patrick Lawrence 18 December, 2024, 00:00

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Israeli army infantry-fighting vehicles are deployed in the UN-patrolled buffer zone separates Israeli and Syrian forces in the Golan Heights on December 17. | Agence France-Presse/Jalaa Marey

I DO not know anyone who was not shocked by the lightning speed with which Damascus fell to expensively armed jihadist militias last weekend.

I know very few people who do not understand that another domino has just fallen in the ‘seven-front war’ Benjamin Netanyahu has boasted this year of waging across West Asia. I know very few people who do not recognise that terrorist Israel is well on the way to establishing itself as a dictatorial hegemon across the region.

I know very few people who do not understand that the longstanding project of the Zionist neoconservatives, who have more or less controlled US foreign policy for decades, ie, ‘remaking the Middle East,’ is the design behind all that has occurred since the Israelis launched their attack on Gaza on October 7, 2023.

I do not know anyone who has achieved the age of reason who does not recognize the US hand in the stunning sweep through Syria of Hay`at Tahrir al-Sham, long-recognised as a terrorist organisation. All one needs to grasp this is a little history.

But I know of no corporate or state-funded medium on either side of the Atlantic — the major dailies, the broadcast networks, NPR, PBS, the BBC — where you can read or hear about any of this.

Blinding us

MAINSTREAM media are doing exactly what they did as the US-led ‘regime change’ operation in Syria began in early 2012 at the latest and probably in the final months of 2011: They are making sure the events now unfolding in Syria are not quite illegible but nearly.

It is again a question of knowing the history. In the case of Hay`at Tahrir al-Sham and the other jihadists who knocked over the Assad regime as if it were made of Lego blocks, it is another exercise in dressing up a monster in a suit and tie.

The corporate press and broadcasters are now resolutely recasting the murderous fanatics who have seized control of Syria as legitimate ‘rebels.’ Rebels, rebels, rebels: This is the approved terminology.

I see they have left off describing these Sunni zealots as the ‘moderate rebels’ of yesteryear, that phrase having been hopelessly discredited last time around, but the drift is the same: These are civilised people out there trying to do the right thing.

My favourite in this line appeared in The Daily Telegraph several days before the Assad government collapsed: ‘How Syria’s “diversity-friendly” jihadists plan on building a state.’ I had to read this one twice, too.

Nowhere but nowhere in the west’s mass media can you find even a mention of the US-Turkish-and-probably-Israeli support that made possible the swift sweep of Hay`at Tahrir al-Sham and its ever-bickering allies from its seat in the Idlib governorate through Hama and other cities to the centre of Damascus.

This is, like the earlier years of the western-backed terrorist attacks on the Assad regime, and like the proxy war in Ukraine, and like the Saudis’ US–supported war against Yemen, and like the Israeli genocide against the Palestinians of Gaza, and like the Israelis’ attacks in Lebanon, sponsored military aggression we are not permitted to see without considerable effort to transcend official representations of reality.

Understanding who the Americans are

WHAT happened, what is happening, what will happen: I do not know anyone who is not asking these questions, too.

We must go back and back and back further to understand what has just occurred in Syria and to understand why, and finally to understand who Americans are and who they have been for all the decades since the 1945 victories.

It is logical to begin this pencil-sketch of the past with the famous coups of the 1950s. These occurred in Iran, where the CIA, working with MI6, deposed Mohammed Mossadegh as Iran’s prime minister in August 1953, and in Guatemala, where an agency operation forced Jacobo Árbenz from the presidency a year later.

It is striking today to consider a few of the features of these operations. Stimulating various social and economic antagonisms to foment public unrest and an appearance of political disorder was key in both cases. Both coups removed popularly elected leaders and installed repressive puppets.

There was violence in both cases, but by later standards these operations were something close to surgical. Mossadegh withdrew to his farm in the Iranian countryside; Árbenz, a Swiss pharmacist by background, spent his last years wandering dejectedly through Europe.

An appearance of propriety was important back then. Most Americans were unaware that the CIA had engineered the events in Tehran and Guatemala City. And in the Iranian case, something to note: Removing Iran’s first elected prime minister set in motion a wave of blowback that continues to break over US–Iranian relations; in Guatemala it led to a civil war that endured for 36 years.

The CIA considered the coup in Iran a useful model — Guatemala its next application. But in 1965 the agency began to do things very differently when it organised the coup that brought down Sukarno, independent Indonesia’s charismatic founding father and its first president.

The Jakarta model

VINCENT Bevins, a seasoned foreign correspondent, got this down better than anyone in The Jakarta Method: Washington’s Anticommunist Crusade and the Mass Murder Program that Shaped Our World. With the Cold War approaching its worst years, the Indonesian coup was the first, as Blevins’s subtitle indicates, to submerge an entire nation in prolonged violence.

There are various figures for the number of deaths that resulted as the agency installed the dictatorial, bottomlessly corrupt Suharto in the presidential palace in 1967. Blevins puts it at a million or more. Along with the deaths, the nation’s previously lively political culture was extinguished until Suharto fell 32 years later.

The Jakarta method was subsequently applied in various other circumstances, notably but not only in the 1973 coup that deposed Salvador Allende in Chile and installed Augusto Pinochet, a vicious dictator in the Suharto mould. Nine years later Zbigniew Brzezinski put a modified version to use in Afghanistan.

Blind to US support for jihadism

AS JIMMY Carter’s relentlessly anti-Soviet national security adviser, Brzezinski persuaded Carter to back the mujahideen then fighting the Moscow-backed regime in Kabul. The result was the well-armed, well-financed force named al-Qaeda, led by Osama bin Laden.

And so we come, via the campaigns of mass violence in Iraq and Libya and the proxy war in Ukraine, to the Syrian operation. People who rely on mainstream media still have a hard time accepting that the US and its trans-Atlantic allies backed al-Qaeda’s Syrian forces, the Islamic State, and their heinous offshoots in their war against the Assad regime.

There are no grounds whatsoever for this disbelief. The US operation in Syria is a straight readout of Brzezinski’s Afghanistan strategy. Sharmine Narwani, the tenacious Beirut-based correspondent and the founding editor of The Cradle, reported the American op first-hand as it unfolded. She recounted what she saw in an impressively detailed interview I published in 2019.

It wasn’t over

BY 2018-19, it was obvious that the CIA’s Syrian operation, in my judgment its largest since the Cold War’s end, had failed after several years of Russia’s bombing campaign against the Islamic State. Everyone making this judgment, myself included, forgot to add four essential words: It had failed for the time being.

Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham was founded at the start of the covert US intervention, in 2011-12. Its name translates as Organisation for the Liberation of the Levant.

Liberating the Levant is a very good idea, but HTS does not mean this the way anyone opposed to the western powers’ long and violent domination of West Asia would mean it. HTS shared with the Islamic State an ambition to establish a caliphate ruled by radical interpretations of Islamic law.

In May 2018 the State Department added HTS to its list of foreign terrorist organisations, FTOs in the parlance of the apparatchiks. It is a direct descendent of Jabhat al-Nusra, which was the worst of the worst among al-Qaeda’s shape-shifting affiliates operating in Syria.

By the time HTS made the list, Jabhat al-Nusra was already on it. They both remain on it as we speak.

HTS was founded by Abu Mohammad al-Jolani, a nom de guerre now all over the news: He has long led HTS and appears now to have plans to make himself Syria’s next president. When he spoke at a celebrated mosque in Damascus last week, he shed the public alias in favour of his real name, Ahmed al-Shara.

Jolani’s background is not to be missed. He was once an Islamic State commander who went on to found Jabhat al-Nusra and, after a violent split, HTS.

As the HTS leader, he was implicated in numerous cases of torture, violence, sexual abuse, arbitrary arrests, disappearances, and so on. Reflecting his singular malignity, the State Department had declared Jolani a ‘specially designated global terrorist’ as far back as 2013.

That designation still stood in 2021. Then something odd, and in hindsight very revealing, occurred.

Rehabilitating Jolani

IN APRIL of that year PBS broadcast the first interview with Jolani ever to appear in any western medium. It was conducted by Martin Smith, a longtime broadcast correspondent with a good reputation.

And there on camera was the specially designated terrorist in a blue blazer and a buttoned-down shirt, telling Smith he planned to build a ‘salvation government’ in Syria.

Smith was not shy, to his credit, in his review of Jolani’s horrific record. But he gave his interview subject ample airtime to make his that-was-then-this-is-now argument.

There was no talk of a caliphate, despite how HTS still named itself. It was about sound local governance. Yes, this would be according to Sharia law, but it would be a kind-and-gentle Sharia law.

The Martin Smith interview, it is now evident, was highly significant for its timing and its implications for US policy. It is almost certain that it signalled an already-in-train revival of the Syrian operation; certainly it marked the start of the preposterous reinvention of Jolani that is now ubiquitous in western media.

It is a long way from those first postwar coups — large in ambition and implications but small in scale as they look to us now. Since the Jakarta method was devised in the mid-1960s, mass murder programs have shaped our world just as Vincent Blevins insightfully put it.

Committed to mass violence

THE questions noted at the start of this commentary remain those we must ask: What happened, what is happening, what will happen. Clarity on these matters arrives by degrees — not by way of official accounts or the corporate press, but in independent media. For now, two conclusions.

One, the US and its trans-Atlantic allies are now thoroughly committed to mass violence. This means it is difficult to avoid concluding that the western powers and Israel will turn to Iran once Syria as a functioning polity has been thoroughly disabled.

What has prompted the US and Israel to exercise caution to date has been the risk of what would without doubt be a cataclysmic conflict that could tip into another world war.

With a six-decade history of mass violence behind them, these powers now appear willing to take this risk. There is little ground left to continue questioning this.

Two, we now witness the reinvention of a viciously intolerant terrorist given to waging holy wars as an acceptable presence at the head of what was a secular nation until earlier this month.

We must read this as the outcome — the successful outcome — of an eight-decade campaign to render the citizens of the western powers grotesquely ignorant of the world in which they live.

The New York Times and other major dailies continue to lie by omission about US support for Jolani and the organisation he leads, even as both are officially designated terrorists. But something worth considering here: These media ran interesting photographs with their initial stories on the militias’ sudden offensive, showing rocket launchers and armoured personnel carriers of obvious western manufacture. Here is one such picture and here is another.

I see these pictures and the accompanying stories as mirrors. They show us exactly who we are, what we have become — and also the extent to which we are encouraged not to see either.

There are no true surprises in what we witness now in Syria. It is an old story. We have been blinded to it, along with many other things to which we have been blinded. Most fundamentally we have been rendered blind to ourselves.

Patrick Lawrence, a correspondent abroad for many years, chiefly for the International Herald Tribune, is a media critic, essayist, author and lecturer. His new book, Journalists and Their Shadows, is out now from Clarity Press.​
 

Syria’s new rulers step up engagement with the world
Agence France-Presse . Damascus 18 December, 2024, 00:15

Syria’s new rulers stepped up engagement on Tuesday with countries that deemed ousted president Bashar al-Assad a pariah, with the French flag raised at the embassy for the first time in over a decade.

Assad fled Syria just over a week ago, as his forces abandoned tanks and other equipment in the face of a lightning offensive spearheaded by the Islamist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham.

The collapse of Assad’s rule on December 8 stunned the world and sparked celebrations around Syria and beyond, after his crackdown on democracy protests in 2011 led to one of the deadliest wars of the century.

Rooted in Syria’s branch of al-Qaeda, HTS is proscribed by several Western governments as a terrorist organisation, though it has sought to moderate its rhetoric and pledged to protect the country’s religious minorities.

The EU will reopen its mission in Syria following ‘constructive’ talks with its new leadership, the bloc’s foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said, describing it as a ‘very important step’.

Turkey and Qatar, which backed the anti-Assad opposition, have reopened embassies in Damascus, while US and British officials have launched communications with Syria’s new leaders.

France, an early backer of the uprising, sent a delegation to Damascus on Tuesday, with special envoy Jean-Francois Guillaume saying his country was preparing to stand with Syrians during the transitional period.

An AFP journalist saw the French flag raised in the embassy’s entrance hall for the first time since the mission was shuttered in 2012.

After meeting Syria’s new leaders, the United Nations humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher said on Tuesday he was ‘encouraged’, and that there was a ‘basis for ambitious scaling-up of vital humanitarian support’.

German diplomats were also in Damascus on Tuesday, while Italian prime minister Georgia Meloni said her country was ready to engage with the new leadership.

Syria came under international sanctions over Assad’s crackdown on protests, which sparked a war that killed more than 5,00,000 people and forced half of the population to flee their homes.

Assad left behind a country scarred by decades of torture, disappearances and summary executions, as well as economic mismanagement that has left 70 per cent of the population in need of aid.

Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, who heads HTS, stressed the need in a meeting with a delegation of British diplomats to end ‘all sanctions imposed on Syria so that Syrian refugees can return to their country’.

He also said Syria’s rebel factions will be ‘disbanded and the fighters trained to join the ranks of the defence ministry’.

‘Syria must remain united,’ he said, according to posts on the group’s Telegram channel. ‘There must be a social contract between the state and all religions to guarantee social justice’.

The EU’s Kallas said the lifting of sanctions and removing HTS from its blacklist would depend on ‘when we see positive steps, not the words, but actual steps and deeds from the new leadership’.

The United Nations expects one million people to return to Syria in the first half of 2025, after the war pushed six million people to seek refuge abroad.

In Damascus’s old souk, many shops had reopened more than a week since Assad’s ouster, according to an AFP journalist.

Some shopkeepers were painting their store facades white, erasing the colours of the old Syrian flag that under Assad’s rule had become ubiquitous.

‘We have been working non-stop for a week to paint everything white,’ Omar Bashur, a 61-year-old artisan said.

‘White is the colour of peace,’ he added.

Abu Imad, another vendor, was selling vegetables from his car at a square in central Damascus.

‘Everything happened at once: the regime fell, prices dropped, life got better. We hope it isn’t temporary,’ he said.

With Assad gone, the Syrian pound started to recover against the dollar, moneychangers and traders said, as foreign currencies again became available on the local market.

Iran, which backed Assad throughout the civil war, said its embassy in Syria — abandoned and vandalised in the wake of Assad’s fall — would reopen once the ‘necessary conditions’ are met.

Russia was the other main backer of Assad’s rule.

On Monday, the ousted president broke his silence with a statement on Telegram saying that he only left to Russia once Damascus had fallen, and denounced the country’s new leaders as ‘terrorists’.

‘My departure from Syria was neither planned nor did it occur during the final hours of the battles,’ said the statement.

Several former officials had said that Assad was already out of the country hours before the rebels seized Damascus.

Around the country, Syrians deprived for years of news of missing loved ones searched desperately for clues that might help them find closure.

In a war-ravaged Palestinian refugee camp near Damascus, Radwan Adwan was stacking stones to rebuild his father’s grave, finally able to return to the cemetery.

‘Without the fall of the regime, it would have been impossible to see my father’s grave again,’ said 45-year-old Adwan.

Yarmuk camp was bombed and besieged by Assad’s forces, emptied of most of its residents and reduced to ruins before its recapture in 2018, when access to the cemetery was officially banned.

‘When we arrived, there was no trace of the grave,’ said Adwan.

His mother Zeina sat on a small metal chair in front of her husband’s gravesite.

She was ‘finally’ able to weep for him, she said. ‘Before, my tears were dry.’​
 

Syria conflict not over yet, warns UN envoy

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An Israeli military vehicle operates in Syria, near the ceasefire line between the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights and Syria, as seen from Majdal Shams in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights yesterday. PHOTO: REUTERS

A UN envoy has warned that Syria's protracted conflict "has not ended yet", even as victorious rebels stepped up contacts with governments that deemed ousted president Bashar al-Assad a pariah.

Assad fled Syria just over a week ago following a lightning offensive spearheaded by the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), more than 13 years after his crackdown on democracy protests precipitated one of the deadliest wars of the century.

However, the United Nations' special envoy for Syria, Geir Pedersen, said on Tuesday "there have been significant hostilities in the last two weeks, before a ceasefire was brokered".

"I am seriously concerned about reports of military escalation. Such an escalation could be catastrophic," said Pedersen, referring to fighting between the US-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and Turkish-backed groups who have captured several Kurdish towns in recent weeks.

"A new Syria that... will adopt a new constitution... and that we will have free and fair elections when that time comes, after a transitional period," he said. Washington said it had brokered an extension to the ceasefire in the flashpoint town of Manbij and was seeking a broader understanding with Ankara.

The Manbij truce "is extended through the end of the week and we will, obviously, look to see that ceasefire extended as far as possible into the future", State Department spokesman Matthew Miller told reporters.

That came amid fears of an assault by Turkey on Kurdish-held border town of Kobane. SDF leader Mazloum Abdi proposed in a post on social media platform X the establishment of a "demilitarised zone" in Kobane under US supervision.​
 

Syria’s first flight since Assad’s fall takes off
Agence France-Presse . Damascus 19 December, 2024, 00:16

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A family stands at the destroyed cemetery in the Syrian town of Jobar in Eastern Ghouta on the outskirts of Damascus on Wednesday. Islamist-led rebels took Damascus in a lightning offensive on December 8, ousting president Bashar al-Assad and ending five decades of Baath rule in Syria. | AFP photo

The first commercial flight since the ouster of president Bashar al-Assad took off from Damascus airport on Wednesday, offering Syrians a glimmer of hope after years of war and decades of oppression.

Assad fled Syria following a lightning offensive spearheaded by the Islamist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, more than 13 years after his crackdown on democracy protests precipitated one of the deadliest wars of the century.

He left behind a country scarred by decades of torture, disappearances and summary executions, and the collapse of his rule on December 8 stunned the world and sparked celebrations around Syria and beyond.

The country’s new rulers have sought to keep its institutions going and, on Wednesday, 43 people were aboard the flight from Damascus to Aleppo, the first since Assad was toppled and fled to Russia.

Earlier this week, airport staff painted the three-star independence flag on planes, a symbol of the 2011 uprising now adopted by the transitional authorities.

In the terminal, the new flag also replaced the one linked to Assad’s era.

The joy sparked by Assad’s departure has not put an end to the woes of a country wracked by years of civil war and which has become heavily dependent on aid.

Rooted in Syria’s branch of al-Qaeda and proscribed as a terrorist organisation by several Western governments, HTS has sought to moderate its rhetoric by assuring protection for the country’s many religious and ethnic minorities.

The military chief of the victorious HTS said it would be ‘the first’ to dissolve its armed wing and integrate into the armed forces, after the leader of the group ordered the disbanding of rebel organisations.

‘In any state, all military units must be integrated into this institution,’ Murhaf Abu Qasra, known by his nom de guerre Abu Hassan al-Hamawi, said in an interview with AFP.

‘We will be, God willing, among the first to take the initiative (to dissolve our armed wing),’ he said.

HTS has also vowed justice for the crimes committed under Assad’s rule, including the disappearance of tens of thousands of people into the complex web of detention centres and prisons that was used for decades to silence dissent.

‘We want to know where our children are, our brothers,’ said 55-year-old Ziad Alaywi, standing by a ditch near the town of Najha, southeast of Damascus.

It is one of the locations where Syrians believe the bodies of prisoners tortured to death were buried — acts that international organisations say could constitute crimes against humanity.

‘Were they killed? Are they buried here?’ he asked.

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor, more than 1,00,000 people died or were killed in custody from 2011.

The country’s new rulers have stepped up engagement with countries that had long seen Assad as a pariah, and with international institutions.

EU chief Ursula Von der Leyen said the bloc would intensify its ‘direct engagement’ with the new administration.

Britain, France and Germany have sent delegations to Damascus, while Italy’s prime minister Giorgia Meloni said Rome was ‘ready to engage with the new Syrian leadership’, but urged ‘maximum caution’.

Members of the UN Security Council, which includes Assad ally Russia as well as the United States, called on Tuesday for an ‘inclusive and Syrian-led’ political process.

‘This political process should meet the legitimate aspirations of all Syrians, protect all of them and enable them to peacefully, independently and democratically determine their own futures,’ a statement said.

It also ‘underlined the need for Syria and its neighbours to mutually refrain from any action... that could undermine each other’s security’.

Israel has carried out hundreds of strikes on Syrian military assets since Assad’s overthrow in what it says is a bid to prevent them falling into hostile hands.

Israeli troops also occupied strategic positions in a UN-patrolled buffer zone in a move UN chief Antonio Guterres described as a breach of the 1974 armistice.

The United Nations’ special envoy to Syria, Geir Pedersen, warned Tuesday that the country’s protracted conflict ‘has not ended yet’.

He said he was concerned about reports of escalation between US-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces and Turkish-backed groups who have captured several Kurdish towns in recent weeks.

The United States later announced it had brokered an extension to the ceasefire in the flashpoint town of Manbij and was seeking a broader understanding with Turkey.

The leader of the SDF proposed a ‘demilitarised zone’ in the northern town of Kobane, also known as Ain al-Arab.

Speaking to AFP, Abu Qasra, the HTS military chief, said Kurdish-held areas would be integrated under the country’s new leadership, adding that the group rejects federalism.

Kurdish-held areas of Syria would be integrated under the country’s new leadership, adding that the group rejects federalism and that ‘Syria will not be divided’.

‘The Kurdish people are one of the components of the Syrian people Syria will not be divided and there will be no federal entities,’ he said.​
 
This is all propaganda news no?

Iran's pushed out, Hezb isolated now. Palestinian resistance with even more difficulty getting any assistance.

What's there to celebrate now? unless yous a Zionist?
Syria, Lebanon, and Gaza (to an extent) was always about Iran.. bhai Tehran.. ghar m ghus k Haniyeh, Sinwar, Nasrallah ...

and they been bombing Yemen now.. je dekho, ekdum latest newj

 
‘Syria is ours and not Assad family's’
Celebrations across Syria as rebels oust Assad; president ‘flees country’; nations urge stability

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Photo: AFP Syrians celebrate the taking over of the capital Damascus by Syrian rebel fighters in Beirut's Triq al Jdideh neighbourhood on December 8, 2024.

Celebrations erupted around Syria and crowds ransacked President Bashar al-Assad's luxurious home yesterday after Islamist-led rebels swept into Damascus and declared he had fled the country, in a spectacular end to five decades of Baath party rule.

Assad's whereabouts were not immediately clear, but his key backer Russia said he had resigned from the presidency and left Syria.

Residents in the capital were seen cheering in the streets as the rebel factions heralded the departure of "tyrant" Assad, saying: "We declare the city of Damascus free."

AFPTV footage showed a column of smoke rising from central Damascus, and AFP correspondents in the city saw dozens of men, women and children wandering through Assad's luxurious home after it had been looted.

The rooms of the residence had been left completely empty, save some furniture and a portrait of Assad discarded on the floor, while an entrance hall at the presidential palace not far away had been torched.

"I can't believe I'm living this moment," tearful Damascus resident Amer Batha told AFP by phone.

"We've been waiting a long time for this day," he said, adding: "We are starting a new history for Syria."

Assad's reported departure comes less than two weeks after the Islamist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) group challenged more than five decades of Assad family rule with a lightning offensive.

"After 50 years of oppression under Baath rule, and 13 years of crimes and tyranny and (forced) displacement... we announce today the end of this dark period and the start of a new era for Syria," the rebel factions said on Telegram.

While there has been no communication from Assad or his entourage on his whereabouts, Prime Minister Mohammed al-Jalali said he was ready to cooperate with "any leadership chosen by the Syrian people".

The head of war monitor the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Rami Abdel Rahman, told AFP: "Assad left Syria via Damascus international airport before the army security forces left" the facility.

AFP has been unable to independently verify some of the information provided by the different parties, including the reported departure.

Around the country, people toppled statues of Hafez al-Assad, Bashar al-Assad's father and the founder of the system of government that he inherited.

For the past 50 years in Syria, even the slightest suspicion of dissent could land one in prison or get one killed.

As rebels entered the capital, HTS said its fighters broke into a jail on the outskirts of Damascus, announcing an "end of the era of tyranny in the prison of Sednaya", which has become a by-word for the darkest abuses of Assad's era.

The rapid developments came just hours after HTS said it had captured the strategic city of Homs, where prisoners were also released.

Homs was the third major city seized by the rebels, who began their advance on November 27, reigniting a years-long war that had become largely dormant.

US President Joe Biden was keeping a close eye on the "extraordinary events" unfolding in Syria, the White House said. He was scheduled to meet with his national security advisors over Syria.

US president-elect Donald Trump said that Assad had "fled his country" after losing Russia's backing.

Assad's rule had for years also been supported by Lebanese group Hezbollah, whose forces "vacated their positions around Damascus", a source close to it said yesterday.

Rebel factions aired a statement on Syrian state television, saying they had toppled the "tyrant" Assad and urged fighters and citizens to safeguard the "property of the free Syrian state".

State TV later broadcast a message proclaiming the "victory of the great Syrian revolution".

According to the rebels, the Islamist leader of HTS, Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, arrived in Damascus yesterday.

HTS, which has roots in the Syrian branch of al-Qaeda, yesterday announced a curfew in Damascus until the following morning.

Proscribed as a terrorist organisation by Western governments, it has sought to soften its image in recent years, and has told minority groups living in areas it now controls not to worry.

Before yesterday's announcements, Damascus residents had described to AFP a state of panic as traffic jams clogged the city centre, with people seeking supplies and queueing to withdraw money.

But morning saw chants and cheering, with celebratory gunfire and shouts of "Syria is ours and not the Assad family's".

Before Damascus, a string of towns and cities, including the northern city of Aleppo, had fallen from Assad's hands.

In a sign of the complexity of Syria's war, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday said he had ordered the Israeli military to "seize" a demilitarised buffer zone on the border with Syria after the overthrow of Bashar al-Assad in Damascus.

The Israeli premier said a 50-year-old "disengagement agreement" between the two countries had collapsed and "Syrian forces have abandoned their positions".

Israel yesterday struck Syrian army weapons depots on the outskirts of Damascus, according to the Observatory, which relies on a network of sources around the country.

Israeli strikes also targeted government security buildings in Damascus yesterday.

"Israeli strikes targeted a security complex in Damascus near the former regime's buildings" including intelligence, customs and a military headquarters, said the Observatory. An AFP photographer saw buildings ablaze in the security complex, which includes military intelligence.

Netanyahu said the overthrow of Assad was a "historic day in the... Middle East" and the fall of a "central link in Iran's axis of evil".

The rebel offensive began the very day a ceasefire took effect in Lebanon after nearly a year of war between Israel and Hezbollah.

The UN envoy for Syria said Syria was at "a watershed moment", while Turkey, which has historically backed the opposition, called for a "smooth transition".

Iran, a key backer of Assad throughout the civil war years, said it expected "friendly" ties with Syria to continue, even as its embassy in Damascus was vandalised.

Jordan urged its citizens to leave neighbouring Syria "as soon as possible", as have the United States and Russia, which both keep troops in Syria.

Since the rebels' offensive began, at least 826 people, mostly combatants but also including 111 civilians, have been killed, the Observatory said.

The United Nations said the violence has displaced 370,000 people.​

US plot. This everything was in US agenda. Syria done, BD done, Iraq Done.
 
Iraq 🗡️✅

Libya🗡️✅

Lubnaan🗡️✅

Syria🗡️✅

Forget BD?

All these countries were progressive and doing very well in totalitarian regime. Iraq was peaceful under Saddam, Libya was doing very well under Gaddafi. Education upto P. Hd. was free in Libya under Gaddafi. They would have become very nice nation under those so-called dictators.

Our BD friends Like @Saif and @Bilal9 have no idea of what they are supporting when they support the illegitimate regime change in BD. They are heading towards an Iraq and Syria like situation. As soon as Deep states interest is served, they will be abandoned into the anarchy. People say that Hasina was dictator, but they do not realize that in a country like BD where cue can happen at any time, what she did was best. Now BD should be ready to pay the price.
 
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Forget BD?

All these countries were progressive and doing very well in totalitarian regime. Iraq was peaceful under Saddam, Libya was doing very well under Gaddafi. Education upto P. Hd. was free in Libya under Gaddafi. They would have become very nice nation under those so-called dictators.

Our BD friends Like @Saif and @Bilal9 have no idea of what they are supporting when they support the illegitimate regime change in BD. They are heading towards an Iraq and Syria like situation. As soon as Deep states interest is served, they will be abandoned into the anarchy. People say that Hasina was dictator, but they do not realize that in a country like BD where cue can happen at any time, what she did was best. Now BD should be ready to pay the price.
Whatever happened in Bangladesh is called student revolution. It was not a mere regime change. There were no freedom of speech and human rights in Bangladesh during Sheikh Hasina's rule. I don't know why you are supporting a brutal autocrat like Sheikh Hasina.
 
Forget BD?

All these countries were progressive and doing very well in totalitarian regime. Iraq was peaceful under Saddam, Libya was doing very well under Gaddafi. Education upto P. Hd. was free in Libya under Gaddafi. They would have become very nice nation under those so-called dictators.

Our BD friends Like @Saif and @Bilal9 have no idea of what they are supporting when they support the illegitimate regime change in BD. They are heading towards an Iraq and Syria like situation. As soon as Deep states interest is served, they will be abandoned into the anarchy. People say that Hasina was dictator, but they do not realize that in a country like BD where cue can happen at any time, what she did was best. Now BD should be ready to pay the price.
They didn't figure in Wesley Clark's list.
 
Forget BD?

All these countries were progressive and doing very well in totalitarian regime. Iraq was peaceful under Saddam, Libya was doing very well under Gaddafi. Education upto P. Hd. was free in Libya under Gaddafi. They would have become very nice nation under those so-called dictators.

Our BD friends Like @Saif and @Bilal9 have no idea of what they are supporting when they support the illegitimate regime change in BD. They are heading towards an Iraq and Syria like situation. As soon as Deep states interest is served, they will be abandoned into the anarchy. People say that Hasina was dictator, but they do not realize that in a country like BD where cue can happen at any time, what she did was best. Now BD should be ready to pay the price.

This is the internet.

How do you know the two gents in question are not US shills?
 
Gents this Syria drama goin backfire on Al-Turkiya very badly. The US has got Al-Turkiya in its sights and will clip its wings sooner or later. Just like how they clipped our wings in Afgandistan.

I mean this is a no brainer.

Iran's just stepped aside, letting the chips fall where they may.......lol. Kuchh bhee nahi huwa Iran ko, thus far......nothing!
 
Gents this Syria drama goin backfire on Al-Turkiya very badly. The US has got Al-Turkiya in its sights and will clip its wings sooner or later. Just like how they clipped our wings in Afgandistan.

I mean this is a no brainer.

Iran's just stepped aside, letting the chips fall where they may.......lol. Kuchh bhee nahi huwa Iran ko, thus far......nothing!

I'm getting the same feedback and pit of gut feelz bro.

They want Erdogan Turkey out of NATO. And they don't know how without wholesale deconstruction and charter changes.
 
I'm getting the same feedback and pit of gut feelz bro.

They want Erdogan Turkey out of NATO. And they don't know how without wholesale deconstruction and charter changes.
I believe you are correct. If Turkey is not bright, they're going to be in a world of hurt soon.

This fukking Syria is worse than Afgandistan. Actually far worse! over in Afgandistan there's basically Persian vs Pashto.......udher Syria main bhai you got ten warring factions!

Good luck to anybody trying their hand at controlling that nonsense, specially with that unstable western Iraq and northern Sawdi and Jordan constantly pumping in Al-Qaeda jihadists.

It's a shiit-hole that whole region doc.......Khamenei is not stupid. He's made a calculated decision here.
 
Whatever happened in Bangladesh is called student revolution. It was not a mere regime change. There were no freedom of speech and human rights in Bangladesh during Sheikh Hasina's rule. I don't know why you are supporting a brutal autocrat like Sheikh Hasina.

Now you have freedom to attack oppositions, attack Hindus, burn temples, freedom of freeing Terrorist from jail randomly. It was not there in Hasina's Regime. I agree with you.
 
Now you have freedom to attack oppositions, attack Hindus, burn temples, freedom of freeing Terrorist from jail randomly. It was not there in Hasina's Regime. I agree with you.
During Sheikh Hasina's time the opposition parties were not allowed to criticize the government...........they were subjected to enforced disappearance/murder. Sheikh Hasina kicked out the chief justice just because he refused to give verdicts as per her wish. Many News papers/private TV channels were shut down for not following Hasina's dictate. $200 billion of tax payers money were siphoned off by Hasina and her family. The total election process was destroyed to perpetuate her rules in Bangladesh. She destroyed all democratic institutions e.g judiciary/administration/media during her time as the Prime minister. During her 15 years rule she killed 16 thousand people by using police and her student wing (Chatra league).
 
Syria is finished guys. The day Assad sahb told Khamenei that his army's defected to the IDF and Al-Turkiya, is the day Khamenei decided to cut him loose. This happened a month ago!

Syria will balkanize soon.

Iran can't hemorrhage millions every week on a failed venture like Syria anymore.
Nonsense.

HTS leadership is making all the right moves to unite Syria no doubt under guidance of Turkey. It's going much more smoothly than I anticipated.
 
I'm getting the same feedback and pit of gut feelz bro.

They want Erdogan Turkey out of NATO. And they don't know how without wholesale deconstruction and charter changes.
Trump is coming my man. Good luck kicking Turkey out in 25 days.

As soon as he takes power he'll pull troops out of Syria and SDF will die. How Turkey handles the next few days will be critical but things are going very well so far.
 
Trump is coming my man. Good luck kicking Turkey out in 25 days.

As soon as he takes power he'll pull troops out of Syria and SDF will die. How Turkey handles the next few days will be critical but things are going very well so far.

Trump was the one who stopped Erdogan from entering to deal with "PKK" and got Erdogan to leave Syria before. I think Trump can easily get Erdogan out of Syria again.
 
Turkey's signed up a new $30 billion annual trade volume deal with Iran as compensation for Syria, most of that will favor Iran and put money into Iranian pockets. Turkey and Iran have good politics with each other and both are mature actors.

Iran's already cleared Turkey from this mess.

Assad sahb refused Iran's help. He wanted Iran out of Syria because the GCC wouldn't give him reconstruction money if Iran kept its forces in Syria. Iran had substantially decreased its forces in Syria over the last many years, as per his wishes.

When these jihadist animals rolled in, Assad didn't know what to do. He didn't know what he wanted.

Iran's not an occupying power guys. Occupations don't work!
 

Won’t halt Syria military activity until Kurd fighters ‘disarm’
Says Turkish defence ministry source

Ankara will push ahead with its military preparations until Kurdish fighters "disarm", a defence ministry source said yesterday, stressing Turkey faces an ongoing threat along its border with northern Syria.

The comments came as concerns grew over a possible Turkish assault on the Kurdish-held Syrian border town of Kobane, also known as Ain al-Arab, some 50 kilometres (30 miles) northeast of Manbij.

Turkey has thousands of troops in northern Syria and also backs a proxy force there which has engaged in ongoing clashes with the SDF, a US-backed Kurdish-led force that Ankara sees as an extension of its domestic nemesis, the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

Turkey backs a proxy force in northern Syria which has engaged in ongoing clashes with US-backed SDF

"The threat posed by the terrorist organisation to our borders and our operation areas in Syria continues," the source said.

"Until the PKK/YPG terrorist organisation disarms and its foreign fighters leave Syria, our preparations and measures will continue within the scope of the fight against terrorism."

Turkey accuses the YPG (the People's Protection Units) -- which makes up the bulk of the SDF -- of being affiliated with the PKK which both Washington and Ankara consider a "terrorist" group.

Since 2016, Ankara has carried out several major operations against the SDF.

But Turkey believes Syria's new rulers and Ankara-backed rebels "will liberate the regions occupied by the terrorist organisation PKK/YPG," the ministry source said.

The fighting between Turkish-backed factions and Syrian Kurdish fighers comes more than a week after rebels toppled Syria's longtime strongman Bashar al-Assad.​
 

Won’t halt Syria military activity until Kurd fighters ‘disarm’
Says Turkish defence ministry source

Ankara will push ahead with its military preparations until Kurdish fighters "disarm", a defence ministry source said yesterday, stressing Turkey faces an ongoing threat along its border with northern Syria.

The comments came as concerns grew over a possible Turkish assault on the Kurdish-held Syrian border town of Kobane, also known as Ain al-Arab, some 50 kilometres (30 miles) northeast of Manbij.

Turkey has thousands of troops in northern Syria and also backs a proxy force there which has engaged in ongoing clashes with the SDF, a US-backed Kurdish-led force that Ankara sees as an extension of its domestic nemesis, the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

Turkey backs a proxy force in northern Syria which has engaged in ongoing clashes with US-backed SDF

"The threat posed by the terrorist organisation to our borders and our operation areas in Syria continues," the source said.

"Until the PKK/YPG terrorist organisation disarms and its foreign fighters leave Syria, our preparations and measures will continue within the scope of the fight against terrorism."

Turkey accuses the YPG (the People's Protection Units) -- which makes up the bulk of the SDF -- of being affiliated with the PKK which both Washington and Ankara consider a "terrorist" group.

Since 2016, Ankara has carried out several major operations against the SDF.

But Turkey believes Syria's new rulers and Ankara-backed rebels "will liberate the regions occupied by the terrorist organisation PKK/YPG," the ministry source said.

The fighting between Turkish-backed factions and Syrian Kurdish fighers comes more than a week after rebels toppled Syria's longtime strongman Bashar al-Assad.​
These Al-Gurdish are to Turkey what the Pashto/ Balochi/ Afghani are to us in Pakistan.

Good luck to Turkey bhai.

All I see on the horizon is just grief, blood, sweat n tears.
 
Exactly what I said a few posts back.
They already independent in Iraq bhai. They got their KRG in Iraq long ago. Arabs can't go to their KRG without visa.

They want a chunk of Syria too now in NE Syria bordering them.

This is 100% a possibility now.

Iran won't participate in dismantling a poor neighboring country nor part take in this despicable Zionist sectarian/ ethnic agenda. Let the Israeli's and their US bosses dismantle the ME.
 
They already independent in Iraq bhai. They got their KRG in Iraq long ago. Arabs can't go to their KRG without visa.

They want a chunk of Syria too now in NE Syria bordering them.

This is 100% a possibility now.

Iran won't participate in dismantling a poor neighboring country nor part take in this despicable Zionist sectarian/ ethnic agenda. Let the Israeli's and their US bosses dismantle the ME.

Somewhere in this fassad the fire from the depth of Mount Damavand will burst forth again.

Tended for millennia by the ancient Magii priests.

As Ahriman remains chained.

Plotting.

Always plotting.
 
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Somewhere in this fassad the fire from the depth of Mount Damavand will burst forth again.

Tended for millennia by the ancient Magii priests.

As Ahriman remains chained.

Plotting.

Always plotting.
These friends of mine on fb Khoshnood and Geve said the same thing to me more than two decades ago, when the US was viciously dismantling Iraq.

Deep underneath the Koh-e Damavand was the chained up Deev, aka Ahriman.......

The US has unchained him.......he's out now causing death n destruction.

Its near impossible to put him back down there and chain him up....... down in the depths again. The last ones who did this were the Sassanids when they purified the faith and removed all foreign Hellenistic elements brought in by the Ashkanian/ Parthians more than 2,000 years ago.

Many Zartoshti have been patiently waiting.....its been a long mofo time coming.

I don't even think the current Irani's are as interested in reclaiming their country as the Parsi bawa. Any god damn day the Parsi bawa beat the Irani's hands down!....:p....the only thing the Irani's can respond with is......

Why did yous leave?
 

Syria won’t negatively interfere in Lebanon
HTS leader Julani tells visiting Druze chiefs

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Syria's new leader Ahmed al-Sharaa, also known as Abu Mohammed al-Julani, told Lebanese Druze leaders yesterday that his country would not negatively interfere in Lebanon and would respect its neighbour's sovereignty.

Syria will no longer exert "negative interference in Lebanon at all -- it respects Lebanon's sovereignty, the unity of its territories, the independence of its decisions and its security stability," Sharaa told visiting Druze chiefs Walid and Taymur Jumblatt.

Walid Jumblatt is the first Lebanese figure to meet Sharaa since his group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) and allied rebel factions launched a lightning offensive last month, seizing Damascus on December 8 and ousting longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad.

Syria "will stay at equal distance from all" in Lebanon, Sharaa added, acknowledging that Syria has been a "source of fear and anxiety" for the country.

Walid Jumblatt, long a fierce critic of Assad and his father Hafez who ruled Syria before him, arrived in Damascus Sunday at the head of a delegation of lawmakers from his parliamentary bloc and religious figures from Lebanon's Druze minority.​
 

Syria rescuers say site outside Damascus believed to be mass grave
Agence France-Presse . Damascus 26 December, 2024, 00:42

A key Syrian rescue group and an activist said on Wednesday a burial site outside Damascus was likely a mass grave for detainees held under former president Bashar al-Assad and fighters killed in the civil war.

In a vast walled area located near the Baghdad Bridge, some 35 kilometres from the capital, AFP journalists visiting the site saw a long row of graves more than one metre deep, mostly covered with cement slabs.

Several of the slabs had been moved and inside, white bags could be seen stacked over each other with names and numbers written on them. One of the bags contained a human skull and bones.

‘We think this is a mass grave — we found an open grave with seven bags filled with bones,’ said Abdel Rahman Mawas from the White Helmets rescue group, which visited the site several days earlier.

He said by telephone that the bags, six of which bore names, were ‘taken to a secure location’, adding that ‘necessary procedures were begun for DNA testing’.

He said if additional graves had been exposed it meant other people may have been searching the site, warning people to ‘stay away from graves and let the relevant authorities handle them’.

The site, near the Adra industrial area northeast of the capital, is less than 20 kilometres from the Saydnaya prison.

Diab Serriya, from the Association of Detainees and Missing Persons of Sednaya Prison, said the site was first identified in 2019 through ‘testimony of an intelligence personnel member who had deserted’.

Satellite imagery suggests the site was in use from 2014, he said.

‘Probably this grave contains detainees but also former regime or opposition fighters killed in battle,’ he said by telephone.

The notorious Saydnaya complex, the site of extrajudicial executions, torture and forced disappearances, epitomised the atrocities committed against Assad’s opponents.

Serriya said ‘the bags of bones were probably brought from other graves’, adding that ‘the road to discovering who is buried here will be long’.

The doors of Syria’s prisons were flung open after an Islamist-led rebel alliance ousted Assad this month, more than 13 years after his brutal repression of anti-government protests triggered a war that would kill more than 5,00,000 people.

The fate of tens of thousands of prisoners and missing people remains one of the most harrowing legacies of the conflict.

Mohammed Ali from the Adra municipal council denied residents were aware of the site, which is located near a Syrian army facility.

‘It was forbidden to approach it or take photos as it was a military zone,’ he said.​
 

Syria rescuers say site outside Damascus believed to be mass grave
Agence France-Presse . Damascus 26 December, 2024, 00:42

A key Syrian rescue group and an activist said on Wednesday a burial site outside Damascus was likely a mass grave for detainees held under former president Bashar al-Assad and fighters killed in the civil war.

In a vast walled area located near the Baghdad Bridge, some 35 kilometres from the capital, AFP journalists visiting the site saw a long row of graves more than one metre deep, mostly covered with cement slabs.

Several of the slabs had been moved and inside, white bags could be seen stacked over each other with names and numbers written on them. One of the bags contained a human skull and bones.

‘We think this is a mass grave — we found an open grave with seven bags filled with bones,’ said Abdel Rahman Mawas from the White Helmets rescue group, which visited the site several days earlier.

He said by telephone that the bags, six of which bore names, were ‘taken to a secure location’, adding that ‘necessary procedures were begun for DNA testing’.

He said if additional graves had been exposed it meant other people may have been searching the site, warning people to ‘stay away from graves and let the relevant authorities handle them’.

The site, near the Adra industrial area northeast of the capital, is less than 20 kilometres from the Saydnaya prison.

Diab Serriya, from the Association of Detainees and Missing Persons of Sednaya Prison, said the site was first identified in 2019 through ‘testimony of an intelligence personnel member who had deserted’.

Satellite imagery suggests the site was in use from 2014, he said.

‘Probably this grave contains detainees but also former regime or opposition fighters killed in battle,’ he said by telephone.

The notorious Saydnaya complex, the site of extrajudicial executions, torture and forced disappearances, epitomised the atrocities committed against Assad’s opponents.

Serriya said ‘the bags of bones were probably brought from other graves’, adding that ‘the road to discovering who is buried here will be long’.

The doors of Syria’s prisons were flung open after an Islamist-led rebel alliance ousted Assad this month, more than 13 years after his brutal repression of anti-government protests triggered a war that would kill more than 5,00,000 people.

The fate of tens of thousands of prisoners and missing people remains one of the most harrowing legacies of the conflict.

Mohammed Ali from the Adra municipal council denied residents were aware of the site, which is located near a Syrian army facility.

‘It was forbidden to approach it or take photos as it was a military zone,’ he said.​
Mass grave of international CIA volunteers of Al-Qaeda and Daesh no?

What else?
 

Syria authorities launch operation in Assad stronghold
Agence France-Presse . Damascus 27 December, 2024, 01:32

Syria’s new authorities launched an operation in a stronghold of ousted president Bashar al-Assad on Thursday, with a war monitor saying three gunmen affiliated with the former government were killed.

Assad fled Syria after an Islamist-led offensive wrested from his control city after city until Damascus fell on December 8, ending his clan’s five-decade rule.

After 13 years of civil war sparked by Assad’s crackdown on democracy protests, Syria’s new leaders from Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham face the monumental task of safeguarding the multi-sectarian, multi-ethnic country from further collapse.

Rooted in Syria’s branch of al-Qaeda, a Sunni Muslim jihadist group, HTS has moderated its rhetoric and vowed to ensure protection for minorities, including the Alawite community from which Assad hails.

With 5,00,000 dead in the war and more than 1,00,000 missing, the new authorities have also pledged justice for the victims of abuses under the deposed ruler.

On Thursday, state news agency SANA said security forces launched an operation against pro-Assad militias in the western province of Tartus, ‘neutralising a certain number’ of armed men.

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor, three gunmen linked with Assad’s government were killed in the operation.

It comes a day after 14 security personnel of the new authorities and three gunmen were killed in clashes in the same province when forces tried to arrest an Assad-era officer, according to the Observatory.

The Britain-based monitor said the wanted man, Mohammed Kanjo Hassan, was a military justice official who had ‘issued death sentences and arbitrary judgements against thousands’ of detainees at the notorious Saydnaya prison complex.

The Saydnaya complex, the site of extrajudicial executions, torture and forced disappearances, epitomised the atrocities committed against Assad’s opponents.

The fate of tens of thousands of prisoners and missing people remains one of the most harrowing legacies of his rule.

During the offensive that precipitated Assad’s ousting, rebels flung open the doors of prisons and detention centres around the country, letting out thousands of people.

In central Damascus, relatives of some of the missing have hung up posters of their loved ones, in the hope that with Assad’s ouster, they may one day learn what happened to them.

World powers and international organisations have called for the urgent establishment of mechanisms for accountability.

But some members of the Alawite community fear that with Assad gone, they may be at risk of attacks from groups hungry for revenge or driven by sectarian hate.

On Wednesday, angry protests erupted in several areas around Syria, including Assad’s hometown of Qardaha, over a video showing an attack on an Alawite shrine that circulated online.

The Observatory said that one demonstrator was killed and five others wounded ‘after security forces... opened fire to disperse’ a crowd in the central city of Homs.

The transitional authorities appointed by HTS said in a statement that the shrine attack took place early this month, with the interior ministry saying it was carried out by ‘unknown groups’ and that republishing the video served to ‘stir up strife’.

On Thursday, the information ministry introduced a ban on publishing or distributing ‘any content or information with a sectarian nature aimed at spreading division and discrimination’.

In one of Wednesday’s protests over the video, large crowds chanted slogans including ‘Alawite, Sunni, we want peace’.

Assad long presented himself as a protector of minority groups in Sunni-majority Syria, though critics said he played on sectarian divisions to stay in power.

In Homs, where the authorities imposed a night-time curfew, 42-year-old resident Hadi reported ‘a vast deployment of HTS men in areas where there were protests’.

‘There is a lot of fear,’ he said.

In coastal Latakia, protester Ghidak Mayya, 30, said that for now, Alawites were ‘listening to calls for calm’, but putting too much pressure on the community ‘risks an explosion’.

Noting the anxieties, Sam Heller of the Century Foundation think tank said Syria’s new rulers had to balance dealing with sectarian tensions while promising that those responsible for abuses under Assad would be held accountable.

‘But they’re obviously also contending with what seems like a real desire on the part of some of their constituents for what they would say is accountability, maybe also revenge, it depends on how you want to characterise it,’ he said.

Since HTS and its allies swept to power earlier this month, a bevy of delegations from the Middle East, Europe and the United States have visited Damascus seeking to establish ties with the country’s new rulers.

A delegation from Iraq met with the new authorities Thursday to discuss ‘security and stability needs on the two countries’ shared border’, Iraqi state media said, while Lebanon, which has a fraught history with Syria, said it hoped for better ties with its neighbour going forward.​
 
Chalk up yet another win for the rampaging Jew.

Greater Ijrael phase 1 chal ra hai, bhaijis

and many musalmands be cheering wildly, k ek heretic Alawi ko nikal dia Jews ne.. what utter idiots.

"moderate opposition" gonna cede land to the Jew now, Golan + will be officially handed over to them, all while they continue to depopulate the Gaja Istrip. Years, maybe decades of instability to come.. xutias are happy but.. that lot deserves it.

@Lulldapull
 
Chalk up yet another win for the rampaging Jew.

Greater Ijrael phase 1 chal ra hai, bhaijis

and many musalmands be cheering wildly, k ek heretic Alawi ko nikal dia Jews ne.. what utter idiots.

"moderate opposition" gonna cede land to the Jew now, Golan + will be officially handed over to them, all while they continue to depopulate the Gaja Istrip. Years, maybe decades of instability to come.. xutias are happy but.. that lot deserves it.

@Lulldapull
Araan have suffered a tactical defeat so far.......not a strategic one.

The cunning and wily Persiandzz have been playing this game a half a millennia before baby haysoos's birthday.

Iran knows exactly what its doing......

Sometimes you gotta regroup and rethink the strategy.
 
Araan have suffered a tactical defeat so far.......not a strategic one.

The cunning and wily Persiandzz have been playing this game a half a millennia before baby haysoos's birthday.

Iran knows exactly what its doing......

Sometimes you gotta regroup and rethink the strategy.
Iraand's strategic setback aside, actual proper Syrians/Lubnainees ka dekho na.. got played like a fiddle, as the goras would say.

Good thing Bashar and Begum Asma made it out alive.

Setback Russia ka bhi hua hai, only the Jews, the Jihadis, and their Gulfie masters are smiling.

Wtf are they even trying to do here ? madness, they'll get burnt too.
 
Iraand's strategic setback aside, actual proper Syrians/Lubnainees ka dekho na.. got played like a fiddle, as the goras would say.

Good thing Bashar and Begum Asma made it out alive.

Setback Russia ka bhi hua hai, only the Jews, the Jihadis, and their Gulfie masters are smiling.

Wtf are they even trying to do here ? madness, they'll get burnt too.
Araan's playing nice so far......their position is known to Al-Turkiya and Qatar.

As soon as Syria fell the Turks and Qatari's signed up $50 billion annual trade deals with Iran on the dime!

Iran's biting the bullet here.......

CIA running da show bhai, desperately trying to infiltrate Iran......Irani gubment don't even promote Islam anymore.
 
Araan's playing nice so far......their position is known to Al-Turkiya and Qatar.

As soon as Syria fell the Turks and Qatari's signed up $50 billion annual trade deals with Iran on the dime!

Iran's biting the bullet here.......

CIA running da show bhai, desperately trying to infiltrate Iran......Irani gubment don't even promote Islam anymore.
when, if ever, will they make their move, bhai ?

kis cheez ka intezaar hai Iraandion ko ? da fuq they waiting on ?
 
when, if ever, will they make their move, bhai ?

kis cheez ka intezaar hai Iraandion ko ? da fuq they waiting on ?
Avoid a big war......if a big war starts like how Imam Putin's involved in and hes lost a million of his troops/ mercenaries and over a trillion in treasure.

If a big war starts, then Iran will lose......that much we all know.

Last 40 years of progress/ development all will get burnt and destroyed!

Iran has to preserve itself but continue its policies and regional machinations.

P.S. assploding nukes tomorrow is not a silver bullet either......it's not goin save you! like its not saving Russia, and Chainda is a commonly known joker here.....lol
 
Avoid a big war......if a big war starts like how Imam Putin's involved in and hes lost a million of his troops/ mercenaries and over a trillion in treasure.

If a big war starts, then Iran will lose......that much we all know.

Last 40 years of progress/ development all will get burnt and destroyed!

Iran has to preserve itself but continue its policies and regional machinations.

P.S. assploding nukes tomorrow is not a silver bullet either......it's not goin save you! like its not saving Russia, and Chainda is a commonly known joker here.....lol
Entity to defeat karne ka ek hi solution hai.

Musalmaands must unite.

Jew full fayda utha raha hai is rift ka, Gulfies are addicted to patrol dolran

dolran that the Jew prints

very clever lot, gotta hand them that at least.
 
Entity to defeat karne ka ek hi solution hai.

Musalmaands must unite.

Jew full fayda utha raha hai is rift ka, Gulfies are addicted to patrol dolran

dolran that the Jew prints

very clever lot, gotta hand them that at least.
Iran can't unite with muslims because its a Shia country for the last 500 years. The muslims reject Iran as a kaafir/ fire worshipper entity. You need to consult @Vsdoc about this yuge contradiction and anomaly.

No muslim accepts Iran as a muslim and they call Iranians 'majoosi'......fire worshipers.
 
Iran can't unite with muslims because its a Shia country for the last 500 years. The muslims reject Iran as a kaafir/ fire worshipper entity. You need to consult @Vsdoc about this yuge contradiction and anomaly.

No muslim accepts Iran as a muslim and they call Iranians 'majoosi'......fire worshipers.

iran nor turkey have no say in Syria. It belongs to Israel's historical lands.
 

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