You let a man get away with murder once and he might think that
you didn’t notice, twice, and he might think that you are infirm of purpose,
but letting him get away with it, shall we say, 100,000 times, and he might
just mistake you for an ally, your rhetoric notwithstanding. This is how Assad
thinks about America. But don’t take my word for it, take his:
“The Americans have been pragmatic from the very beginning and never pursued
any course to its [logical] conclusion. They would eventually side with the
victor."
Monday April
22, 2013
Death
Toll: 106 martyrs, including 3 women,
5 children, and 8 under torture: 47 in Damascus and Suburbs; 24 in Aleppo; 12
in Idlib; 10 in Homs; 4 in Daraa; 4 in Deir Ezzor; 2 in Hama; 1 in Raqqa; and 1
in Lattakia (LCC).
News
Up
to 500 feared dead in Damascus suburb: activistsAt least 109 people
have been documented as killed and up to 400 more are likely to have died in an
almost week-long offensive by forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
on a rebellious Damascus suburb, opposition activists said. If the accounts are
confirmed, the killings in the mainly Sunni Muslim suburb of Jdeidet al-Fadel
would amount to one of bloodiest episodes of the two-year-old uprising against
Assad. Many of the dead were civilians, the activists said.
Lebanese
Salafists call for jihad in Syria The calls by Sidon’s Sheikh Ahmad
Assir and Tripoli’s Sheikh Salem alRifai, staunch supporters of the Syrian
uprising, came as the newly appointed head of Syria’s opposition National
Coalition warned that Hezbollah’s role in fighting in the central Syrian
province of Homs amounted to a “declaration of war.” “What is happening in Homs
is a declaration of war against the Syrian people and the Arab League should
deal with it on this basis,” George Sabra said in Istanbul shortly after the
opposition bloc announced his appointment as interim chief. “The Lebanese
president and the Lebanese government should realize the danger that it poses
to the lives of Syrians and the future relations between the two peoples and
countries.” His statement follows reports that fighters from Hezbollah were
taking the lead in the Syrian regime’s battle against rebel groups the
Al-Qusair area of Homs.
Syria
says two bishops kidnapped by rebels SANA news agency said the Syriac
Orthodox and Greek Orthodox Archbishops of Aleppo, Yohanna Ibrahim and Paul
Yazigi, were seized by "a terrorist group" in the village of Kfar
Dael as they were "carrying out humanitarian work". A Syriac member
of the opposition Syrian National Coalition, Abdulahad Steifo, said the men had
been kidnapped on the road to Aleppo from the rebel-held Bab al Hawa crossing
with Turkey. Several prominent Muslim clerics have been killed in Syria's
uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, but the two bishops are the most
senior church leaders caught up in the conflict which has killed more than
70,000 people across Syria.
EU lifts Syria oil embargo to bolster rebels he decision will allow for crude exports from rebel-held territory, the import of oil and gas production technology, and investments in the Syrian oil industry, the EU said in a statement. Any export or investment initiatives will be taken in close coordination with the leaders of the Syrian opposition, the bloc's 27 foreign ministers decided at a meeting in Luxembourg. The move marks the first relaxing of EU sanctions on Syria in two years as governments try to help ease shortages of vital supplies in areas held by the opposition in the civil war-struck Arab state.
EU lifts Syria oil embargo to bolster rebels he decision will allow for crude exports from rebel-held territory, the import of oil and gas production technology, and investments in the Syrian oil industry, the EU said in a statement. Any export or investment initiatives will be taken in close coordination with the leaders of the Syrian opposition, the bloc's 27 foreign ministers decided at a meeting in Luxembourg. The move marks the first relaxing of EU sanctions on Syria in two years as governments try to help ease shortages of vital supplies in areas held by the opposition in the civil war-struck Arab state.
Rebels
warn Hezbollah to stay out of Syria Syrian National Coalition urges the
Lebanese government to 'adopt the necessary measures to stop the aggression' of
the pro-Assad Shi'ite group.
Syria’s
pro-Assad hackers are hijacking high-profile Twitter feeds On Saturday,
hackers identifying as members of the Syrian Electronic Army defaced four
Twitter accounts owned by CBS News, including the “60 Minutes” account, which
had 320,000 followers until it was disabled by Twitter in apparent response to
the hacks. The messages were among some of the pro-Assad hackers’ most
elaborate, a long string of messages that accused the United States of
supporting terrorism in Syria as part of a larger plot to impose a one-world
government.
Health
Experts: Leishmaniasis on the Rise in War-Torn Syria Health workers in
northern Syria have reported a dramatic rise in cases of Leishmaniasis--locally
dubbed “Aleppo Button Disease” for the sores it produces--and are calling on
the World Health Organization and other international agencies for help.
Car
bombs on the rise in Syria, report shows The introduction to the VDC
report notes that both the regime and the rebels have accused each other for
bearing responsibility for all those unclaimed car bombs and explosions, which
thus far have killed 1,156 civilians and rebels – including 120 children and 93
women, and only 106 opposition fighters – and 389 regime soldiers. The Daily
Star could not independently verify the contents of the report.
Syrian
opposition to establish moderate form of Islamic law he legal code was
drawn up by Muslim scholars, judges and top anti-Assad politicians in advance
of meetings this week in Istanbul convened by the Syrian National Council
(SNC), where transitional justice arrangements are being discussed. The
opposition hopes that an interim government, as yet unformed, will apply a
version of the new legal system nationwide, after it goes into effect in areas
currently controlled by the insurgents.
Investigative
Reports
No
Exit: Syria’s War Through the Eyes of a Fighter on Both Sides Rebel
fighter Siraj, who only uses one name to protect his family still in Damascus,
understands that reluctance. Something has happened over the course of the war
that corrupted even the most upright of leaders, he says. Once he defected from
the Syrian Army in early 2012, he quickly climbed the ranks of a well-regarded
rebel brigade fighting near Homs. But he was blinded in one eye in the battle
of Baba Amr and escaped to Lebanon for surgery. When he returned to Syria a few
months later, he was shocked by the levels of corruption and thievery within
the ranks of his own brigade. The weapons he arranged to have smuggled over the
border from Lebanon had been sold off for cash, and comrades who once winced at
firing a gun now relished in the kill. Acts of battlefield barbarity had become
commonplace. He saw corpses mutilated and watched opposition fighters steal
from the populations they were supposed to be defending. “I started thinking,
‘Why am I in this fight?’ I sacrificed my life, my sight, my education because
I thought I was on the right side. But the way they were behaving, they made me
think this side isn’t so good either.” Disillusioned, Siraj joined a Salafist
brigade near Damascus similar to Jabhat al-Nusra. Al-Nusra stands out for its
designation as a terrorist group, but there are many fighting brigades in Syria
that share its jihadi ethics and prowess on the battlefield. They may not have
formally joined al-Qaeda, but they do not disguise their admiration for the
global terrorist organization. Siraj’s experience with the jihadis gave him
pause. He appreciated their discipline and ironclad rules — no stealing, no
killing of women and children, and no raping. But he soon realized that the
group, largely made up of foreign fighters, had a different vision for his
country. “They saw another Syria,” says Siraj. “A land for fighters, a place
for guns, for training, where there is no law and no government. They wanted to
make Syria a land of jihad. And I thought, ‘What about our revolution?’” So he
left, eventually ending up in an apartment where he lives with other refugees
of the Syrian war.
Peter Harling & Sarah Birke: The
Syrian Heartbreak The regime and its allies have lost any moral
standing in what they chose early on to frame as an existential struggle, in
which self-serving ends justify abominable means. Much of the opposition, in
response, has gradually adopted a similar worldview, brandishing its enemy’s
ruthlessness to excuse its own excesses, to the point of no longer recognizing
them as wrong. “I see the change in myself and in my men,” commented one rebel
commander with discomfort. He described moving from feeling sorry for his
opponents to summarily executing them. Several months later, he has stopped
worrying about it. More than ever, one side’s casualties erase any regret for
the other’s losses. Fighters see their predicament as a zero-sum game: Kill or
be killed. Even some of the smartest activists have started to say that
soldiers (and, in some cases, ‘Alawis) -- who they once described as “brothers”
-- deserve whatever they get for failing to desert the regime.
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.”
Assad’s American Bet
In his meeting with a Lebanese delegation from the pro-Hezbollah March
8 coalition on April 21st, Assad revealed
an important element in his thinking at this stage when he told his guests that
“The Americans have been pragmatic from the very beginning, and never pursued
any course to its [logical] conclusion. They
would eventually side with the victor."
Over the years, the Americans have given Assad plenty of reason to
think like this. Even under the Bush Administration, pressures on Assad were
lessened in order to allow for Syria’s participation in the Annapolis peace
conference. Under the Obama Administration, he was treated as a reformer for
reasons more closely linked to the Administration’s ideological stands than
Assad’s own record. Then, and ever since the beginning of the Revolution, and
despite calls on him to step down, Assad has been allowed by the Administration
to literally get away with murder, not once or twice, but 100,000 times by
conservative estimates, as red lines keep shifting and vanishing.
Assad has been given too many opportunities before, and has been allowed
to get away with too many things to think differently. His father’s own career,
especially, his relations with various American administrations would also go a
long way in reinforcing this.
At this stage, Assad’s entire strategy seems hedged on surviving long
enough for America to come around and hitch her regional wagons to him again.
Video Highlights
Leaked video from the village of Mukharram, Homs Province, shows
pro-Assad militias setting the corpses of several rebels on fire http://youtu.be/2IG3y5S9Qm4
An Alawite supporter of Assad in Tripoli Lebanon gets abused by local
rebel sympathizers, as sectarian tension keep escalating http://youtu.be/FPBPkrB9kS0
Rebels in Aleppo showcase their gains from a recent takeover of a loyalist
position, known as Al-Alkamiyah http://youtu.be/k8hvJGWztZs
, http://youtu.be/VNvZf51_uR0 Scenes
from the clashes http://youtu.be/h2KweUjprAY
The position of a strategic importance and its capture could facilitate the
takeover the military airport a Minnigh.
Loyalists take up positions around the town of Hraak, Daraa
Province http://youtu.be/YRPtm0jJj-w
Prepare their own tanks for the looming confrontation http://youtu.be/e5FRcJULDEI and their
anti-aircraft batteries http://youtu.be/oTtjqeayeVQ
Rebels and loyalists clash near Khirbet Ghazaleh http://youtu.be/lQbBUjFmlhw and around Basra
Al-Sham http://youtu.be/gCMwSsIk_xA
The intensive pounding of Jobar Neighborhood, Damascus City http://youtu.be/eCnia0HIY-g , http://youtu.be/TEkXMxdabkA leaves a
family of 5 dead http://youtu.be/NDNluhqKjRw
Aerial bombardment on rebel strongholds in Eastern Ghoutah, Damascus
Suburbs, continues: Saqba http://youtu.be/Cs42CzEZNH0
, http://youtu.be/voqIhyRFGXs , http://youtu.be/oNqedJTNYos Kafar
Batna http://youtu.be/ziZM6UaWSFI
, http://youtu.be/tM7WHjqiFWE Zamalka
http://youtu.be/pBQx6ICaEU8
To the West, the suburb of Moadamiyah continues to be pounded http://youtu.be/myC3GICbQoE Nearby Daraya
comes under aerial attack http://youtu.be/uvYXL-Um3Kk
, http://youtu.be/FksTL-Kaqio
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