Between hasty American decisions and opposition angst and
confusion, we have allowed Jabhat Al-Nusra to draw too much attention to itself
in international media appearing much larger than it actually is on the ground.
Most other rebel groups have recently come together under one command for the
first time since the beginning of the armed phase of the Revolution, that’s
where the real story lies. But no one is covering it – it’s not sensational enough
it seems, albeit this is exactly the kind of plot-twist that can actually help
seal the fate of the regime, down the road. Meanwhile, careful not to cross any
red lines, the regime is now using scuds and incendiary bombs against his opponents.
Tuesday December
12, 2012
Today’s
Death Toll: 113 (including 15 children and
7 women): 41 in Aleppo (20 in Safirah Massacre), 31 in Damascus and Suburbs (10
in Daraya), 17 in Deir Ezzor (including 4 rebels in Mouhassan), 7 in Daraa, 7
in Idlib, 3 in Homs, 3 in Hassaka, 2 in Hama, 1 in Raqqa and 1 in Lattakia. Points of Random Shelling: 242. Clashes: 115. Rebels downed a jet in Eastern Ghoutah,
Damascus, making the total of planes brought down by rebels to 94. In Damascus,
rebels attacked and destroyed a loyalist convoy on the Airport Highway, as well
as 2 tanks and 3 armored vehicles in the suburb of Daraya (LCC).
News
Scores
reportedly killed in Syria's Hama Activist group says bomb attacks in
village of Aqrab have left at least 125 mainly Alawite civilians wounded or killed.
Jordan
Feels Pressure to Take Sides on Syria With growing political and
economic unrest at home, the last thing many Jordanians want is conflict with
neighbor Syria… Hassan Barari, a professor of International Studies at Jordan
University, says it is important to have the Americans on board. “The
international community wants Jordan to play a role in Syria," he said.
"Jordan can't do it on its own and there should be some support, in
particular from the Americans."
Syria:
Sick and wounded trapped in Deir Azzour Tens of thousands of people,
many of them wounded, are trapped in the city of Deir Azzour, eastern Syria,
due to intense fighting and aerial bombardments. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)
calls for the sick and wounded to be evacuated to safer locations and for
international medical teams to be given official authorisation to provide
impartial assistance to all those who need it.
Syria:
Incendiary Weapons Used in Populated Areas The Syrian military has used
air-delivered incendiary bombs in at least four locations across Syria since
mid-November 2012. The conclusion is based on interviews with four witnesses
and multiple videos analyzed by Human Rights Watch.
Young Syrian
refugees who have risked everything While things are deteriorating
inside Syria, the situation for refugees is getting worse with thousands
continuing to cross into neighbouring countries.
Special
Reports
Aleppo
Today TV becomes vital news source amid Syria's chaos
It doesn't look like much. Aleppo Today TV, with it photographic slideshow of Aleppo in happier times accompanied by Syrian music, is not what many would expect from a 24-hour news channel. But two rolling news bars at the bottom of the screen have become a vital news source for residents navigating the shifting violence in Syria's largest city.
It doesn't look like much. Aleppo Today TV, with it photographic slideshow of Aleppo in happier times accompanied by Syrian music, is not what many would expect from a 24-hour news channel. But two rolling news bars at the bottom of the screen have become a vital news source for residents navigating the shifting violence in Syria's largest city.
Nearly a year ago, the United Nations
gave up on keeping track of Syria's dead. Over the summer, the International
Committee of the Red Cross declared the conflict a civil war. That means
intentional attacks on civilians are now officially considered war crimes under
the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. The question then
becomes: How will we know what to prosecute when the fighting dies down if we
don't keep track of crimes against civilians, which are, in most cases, women
and children?
Syria's civil war has driven wedges
through many parts of society, with violence that has killed more than 40,000
people exacerbating differences in class, ideology and religion. Reflecting how
deep these divisions run is the near complete split of Syria's artists into
pro- and anti-regime camps. Although Syria's writers, musicians and filmmakers
fight with sharply worded statements instead of guns and tanks, their mutual
animosity bodes ill for reconciliation should Assad fall.
Assad is compounding violence against
Syrian civilians with starving them. They need humanitarian and military aid
The battle for Aleppo appears to have
eased over the last few weeks but the suffering of those who live in this
ancient city has not. Aleppo is facing a winter of misery and of dearth.
In a normal environment, not the
Alice-in-Wonderland of the Middle East, what’s happening right now in Syria
would be a textbook definition of “blowback.” And yet with Nusra’s growing
capability, as well its new blacklisting by the United States, will it be the
resistance or the regime with more soot on its face? I asked my friend Joe
Holliday at the Institute for the Study of War about the new terror
designation. “If it’s an attempt to clearly separate Nusra from the new
coalition and pave the way for real US support to the opposition, then this is
a good step,” he said. “But if we don't follow through with clear, quantifiable
support for the opposition, then this designation will probably alienate a
broader segment of the opposition, who will see this as pro-Assad policy.”
Arabic
Press (Steven Miller, FDD Research Assistant)
According to the Syrian state news
agency SANA, an explosion rocked the Kafar Souseh neighborhood near the
Interior Ministry in Damascus, and sources said that the explosion targeted
Interior Minister Mohamed al-Shaar's convoy. Furthermore, two explosive devices
attached to cars exploded near the Justice Palace in the Qanawat area of the
capital, injuring a bystander and damaging cars and shops nearby. In fighting
throughout the country today, Syrian forces killed 69 people in Damascus, its
outskirts, and Aleppo, according to the Syrian Network for Human Rights. In
Darya, the Cham network reported that 8 people were killed and several wounded
by regime bombing, and activists in eastern Ghouta said that the regime resumed
bombings there with white phosphorous bombs.
Syria
Deeply
Sneak
Peak: Syria Statement on Self-Defense A diplomatic source sent us a
draft of the Friends of Syria conclusion, what would be the end result of this
meeting in Marrakech.
It has long been noted that Arab officials have a tendency to say one
thing when addressing Arab media and another when addressing western media. A
friend of mine finally noticed that I tend to do the same thing, with a twist.
For while Arab officials tell both audiences what they want to hear, I tell
them what they don’t.
Indeed, when I write in Arabic (mostly on Facebook), or appear in Arab
media (a rare occurrence these days), I explain, justify and often defend U.S.
positions on a variety of issues, simply because I hate the conspiratorial way
in which these positions are perceived. When I address western media, though,
be it through this blog or my articles and interviews, I wax as critical of
western, especially American, dithering and indecisiveness, albeit I often
understand the concerns expressed by western officials, and often share them.
Lately, I have been explaining and defending America’s thinking on
Al-Nusra to my Arab audience, even as I was criticizing the timing of the
decision on this blog. Indeed, it is not the decision to classify Al-Nusra as a
terrorist group that was wrong, it was the timing. Quite communications with opposition
and rebel groups could have helped get the message across while avoiding the current
public circus, which gives Al-Nusra more attention and weight than it deserves.
The awkwardness involved here can be seen in how National Coalition
leader, Moaz Al-Khatib, was forced to call
on America to “re-examine” her decision in this regard, even as his group was
getting the recognition it needed from the Friends of Syria. Failure to fall in
line with America’s policy in this matter, which might soon become a European
policy as well, will co0mplicate efforts to fund and arm the opposition.
More importantly though, between hasty American decisions and
opposition angst and confusion, we have allowed Al-Nusra to draw too much attention
to itself in international media appearing much larger than it actually is on
the ground. Most other rebel groups have recently come together under one
command for the first time since the beginning of the armed phase of the
Revolution, that’s where the real story is. We have managed to make important
headway in creating the nucleus for a professional army that could hold the
country together in the not-so-distant future. We need to do all we can at this
stage to make sure that this fledgling structure is well-supported and
professionally managed in order to ensure the future stability and wellbeing of
the country.
This task is already complicated by the fact that Al-Nusra is not the
only armed group out there calling for the establishment of an Islamic state.
We have already witnessed the establishment of the Islamic Front for the
Liberation of Syria almost three months ago. But new groups adopting this
agenda are appearing everyday with Ansar Al-Khilafah (Supporters of the
Caliphate), based in West Aleppo Province, being the newest comer http://youtu.be/wY8G-Jusw1M.
At the heart of all these developments is the argument over the nature
and shape of future Syria. Is it going to be an Islamist Jihadist state, or a
civil democratic state? But considering the current level of structural fragmentation,
political and communal divisions, and regional dislocations, the real question confronting
at this stage is whether Syria will survive as a unified state, or if it can be
put back together somehow in the near future.
So far, things do not augur well in this regard.
Video Highlights
This is a gruesome video currently being circulated by pro-regime
sites. It shows a child taking part in beheading captured pro-Assad militiamen
somewhere in Homs or Hama Provinces. Albeit most atrocities continue to be
perpetrated by pro-Assad militias, their cruelty is beginning to inspire
retributions and copycatting in certain rebel circles. The trend seems
unstoppable at this stage http://youtu.be/dOaJQSMmqa4
The bodies of the dead and wounded line the streets of Al-Qadam
Neighborhood in Damascus City as a result of random shelling by regime forces http://youtu.be/uNVTJOJSi58
Meanwhile, jets keep pounding Eastern Ghoutah: Hamouriyeh http://youtu.be/DK1o96GEAiA Kafar
Batna cluster bombs are used sending people scurrying n all directions http://youtu.be/7UvKtCC-zsk , http://youtu.be/m-W6q0WMb90 Harasta
http://youtu.be/7LBb0NTAZ7k
MiGs continue to pound restive communities in Aleppo Province: Marei
pounding leaves a headless corpse http://youtu.be/3z9dxIWQtMU
Clashes between rebels and loyalists intensify in Deir Ezzor City
http://youtu.be/2TM95ig-xQ4 So does
the pounding of the city MiGs and rockets http://youtu.be/44tNqXPHDOw
, http://youtu.be/5tmPSfb9fCE
MiGs pound the town of Tal Abyad, Raqqah, on the border with
Turkey http://youtu.be/X8FrKeh6sRY
This video just surfaces showing MiGs pounding the old town in Homs
City back on December 9 http://youtu.be/9jE7AtaiagY
Leaked video shows the interrogation and torture of a prisoner
by pro-Assad militias http://youtu.be/Ng5h62nkqnY
Akhi Ammar,
ReplyDeleteWhere in the beheading video you posted above is there proof that this monstrous act is being perpetrated by the rebels? Because they are shouting AllahuAkbar? (yes of course, Assad's Shabbiha can't speak Arabic!) Because one of them has a beard?
As far as I am concerned this nothing but regime thugs doing this to blacken the revolutions name. Yes there have been horrid acts by J.Al-Nusra, but I am convinced this video is definitely not their doing. It has the stink of regime shabbiha all over it.
#GhiathMatar
Could be, of course. I heard that there are longer versions of the video that have been removed from YouTube that reveal more details. But I haven't seen them myself. I'll keep looking for more information.
ReplyDelete