Under Assad rule we do have much corruption in the judicial
system, as is the case in other sectors, but the legal code itself is not all that
bad. An upgrade is surely needed, but a return to Sharia rule, as so many are advocating
today, sounds more like a downgrade to my secular ears. But if that’s what Islamists
want, that’s what they should get. There is absolutely no problem in their
desire to apply sharia law to themselves. The problem lies in their burning desire
to apply it even to those who reject it, under the faulty understanding of
democracy as majority rule, individual rights notwithstanding. Irrespective of
how and why our revolution started two years ago, the issue of identity,
individual, communal, regional, is now at stake, and while it is quite obvious that
the common identity we thought we had, Syrian, and the one we do indeed have,
human, is not enough to inspire mutual confidence and trust and prevent our
internecine strife, geography tells us that our destinies will remain
interlinked for the rest of time whether we liked or not. Sooner or later we
have to work things out, none of us will be moving to the stars anytime soon.
Special Reports
Thursday March
14, 2013
Today’s
Death Toll: 132 martyrs,
including 6 women, 13 children, and 1 martyr who died under torture: 37 martyrs
in Damascus and Suburbs, 35 in the massacre committed by the regime’s army in
the area of Tal Barak in Hasakeh, 18 in Daraa, 11 in Aleppo, 6 in Raqqa, 6 in
Hama, 5 in Idlib, 1 in Quneitra, 1 in Deir Ezzor, and 1 in Jableh (LCCs).
Points
of Random Shelling: 358. 27 locations
were bombed by warplanes; 3 sites were subjected to Scud missile attacks; and 4
locations were hit by surface-to-surface missiles. 5 locations were subjected
to cluster bombing: Najiyeh, Kafr Zeta, Marjeh, Saraqeb, and Taftanaz. 106
locations were shelled using mortars; 124 locations were artillery-shelled; and
90 locations were subjected to rocket attacks (LCCs).
Clashes: 145. Successful operations
include downing two warplanes: in southern Homs and in Hama. FSA rebels also
sealed off the road linking Hassakeh and Qamishly, and established multiple
checkpoints along the road (LCCs).
News
Seeking
to Aid Rebels in Syria, France Urges End to Arms Embargo “We
want Europeans to lift the arms embargo,” President François Hollande of France
told reporters as he arrived in Brussels for a European Union summit meeting.
Echoing earlier comments by his foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, Mr. Hollande
said: “We are ready to support the rebellion, so we are ready to go this far.
We must take our responsibilities.”
Syria’s
historic treasure trove in ‘unpublicized’ danger Over 12 museums
have been looted; all six of the UNESCO World Heritage sites have been damaged;
historical sites, including Bosra, Krak des Chevaliers, Palmyra, Apamea, have
been destroyed while surrounding areas have become a stage for war. Aleppo’s
medieval Citadel, Great Mosque and the Ottoman Souq have all become a
battlefield.
Watch:
Damascus synagogue in ruins Syrian opposition releases further
documentation of synagogue damaged in early March, allegedly by mortar shells
fired by Assad's army; former chief rabbi of Syria 'chilled' at the damage
Two
years later, Syrian revolutionaries reflect on their cause, the costs The
popular unrest following the first protests in March 2011 has challenged the
dynastic dictatorship that has ruled Syria for years. Today, Syria is being
torn apart by a civil war that has killed more than 70,000 people and forced
more than one million Syrians to flee the country. The conflict threatens to
spill across borders to destabilize neighbors in an already turbulent Middle
East. The opposition says Friday (March 15) marks the second anniversary of the
beginning of the uprising.
Special Reports
Three items on Syria from Foreign
Policy Research Institute: In
this essay, Gary Gambill, an analyst of Syrian and Lebanese politics,
provides an in-depth look at Syria’s Druze and ponders whether they will turn
to the rebels or back the regime. In this
essay, Adam Garfinkle, editor of The American Interest magazine,
suggests it may be best – at this point -- for the US to stay out of Syria,
having earlier supported a more activist policy to help oust the regime. In
this audio file of a recent session of Geopolitics with Granieri,
"Syria: Where Do We Go from Here?", FPRI Senior Fellow Barak
Mendelsohn takes questions on the latest developments in Syria. There is no good solution in sight, he says,
but he does help to clarify the policy dilemmas.
Courts
Become A Battleground For Secularists, Islamists In Syria Powerful
Islamist brigades are competing with pro-democracy civilians to shape Syria's
future. One battlefront is in the courts. In many areas in northern Syria,
Islamists have set up religious courts that deliver rulings under Shariah, or
Islamic law — a fundamental change in Syria's civil legal system… There is also
a fear that Islamist radicals may kick out the old form of dictatorship but
replace it with an Islamist version. In the northern city of Raqqa, militants
posted leaflets announcing that anyone who supports democracy is an infidel, a
serious charge in any Islamic court.
Syria’s
bloody anniversary THE means to prevent this implosion are the
same that could have stopped the ignition of the civil war: aggressive
intervention by the United States and its allies to protect the opposition and
civilians. This would not require ground troops, only more training and the
supply of heavy weapons to the rebels, and airstrikes to eliminate the regime’s
warplanes, missiles and, if necessary, chemical weapons. The recognition of an
alternative government led by the civilian Syrian National Coalition would send
the message to wavering regime supporters that it was time to defect and would
help to isolate al-Qaeda before it is too late.
In
Syrian Clash Over ‘Death Highway,’ a Bitterly Personal War Since
late last spring, antigovernment fighters have wrested much of northern Syria
from Mr. Assad’s control, overrunning military checkpoints and several bases,
and pushing the army back. But the rebel tide, largely led in northwestern
Syria by Islamic groups, moves slowly, checked by weapon shortages and by a
lingering archipelago of government positions where the army and loyalist
militias have settled in with powerful weapons, equipped for a long fight. Each
of these military positions, and the roads between them, have become
minifronts, an almost uncountable set of bloody battlefields where rebels try
to silence government outposts, which are mostly arrayed around Syria’s main
cities.
The
tough lessons from an invasion a decade ago do not apply today The Syrian leader’s slaughter of his own
people carries dangerous messages for the region and imperils a civilised
international order. There comes a point where humanitarian imperatives must
trump hard-headed calculations of narrow interests… What is required now… is a
display of the energetic US diplomacy that has been woefully absent during most
of the fighting. Where was Hillary Clinton? Where is John Kerry? Or, indeed,
where is Mr Obama? Where is the high-level demarche that tests to destruction
Moscow’s declared desire to halt the bloodshed by backing a settlement? What
about gathering support at the UN for humanitarian corridors? If Vladimir Putin
needs to be flattered and bribed, so be it. And, yes, Mr Assad should be
offered dirty guarantees of safe passage. A big diplomatic push might fail. If
it does, the US and Europe will have to think hard about providing arms to the
rebels. But Mr Obama could at least make the effort. Iraq was a painful demonstration
of American hubris. Syria should not pay the price of US timidity.
Two
Years Later: What the Syrian War Looks Like What does the Syrian war
look like? It looks like shells that crash and thud and thump into residential
streets, sometimes with little warning. It looks like messy footprints in a
pool of blood on a hospital floor as armed local men, many in mismatched military
attire and civilian clothing, rush in their wounded colleagues, or their
neighbors… What does the Syrian war look like? Above all, it looks like the
names and faces of the seventy thousand people the United Nations says have
been killed in the two years since the uprising began. The real figure is
likely much higher. The U.N. number is of those whose names or faces are known,
and doesn’t include the countless others who are still missing, who may be in
mass graves. At least seventy thousand people dead. That means seventy thousand
individuals, each part of a family, each family part of a community, each
community part of a country. That is what the Syrian war looks like.
My
new paper, prepared for a briefing in Washington, D.C. that took place on
January 15, 2013, is now out and is titled “Syria
2013: Rise of the Warlords.” It should be read in conjunction with my
previous briefing “The
Shredded Tapestry,” and my recent essay “The
Creation of an Unbridgeable Divide.”
Video Highlights
The oldest synagogue in Damascus City is hit during regime shelling of Jobar
Neighborhood http://youtu.be/nqgWJSkzwSU
Rebels in Damascus Suburbs, take loyalists prisoners in the town of Khan
Shaikh http://youtu.be/Vv5vSe6QNfU
Islamist Rebels rig a car in preparation for an attack on a loyalist militia
position in Kneiseen http://youtu.be/F3EL1373wCw
The battle for Daraa City intensifies as rebels seek to liberate
the entire southern parts of Syria and complete their siege of Damascus http://youtu.be/_EmnYqbKgTY , http://youtu.be/hYZfjwsGwOw
The battles around the town of Heesh, Idlib intensify http://youtu.be/u-fNs9L39xs The pounding
of nearby Bsheiriyeh by regime forces intensifies as well http://youtu.be/LUyhogiHQk8 , http://youtu.be/O6P3NVQbw_E , http://youtu.be/9HW2-T9JSbU
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