Our friends want guarantees, our enemies want guarantees, our
people want guarantees, because everybody is afraid of something, everybody has
something to lose. Well, the rebels have nothing left to lose, and as such they
cannot offer guarantees. They have to be given something first. Shall we say: greater
logistical support and a no-fly zone so they can actually control the territories
that they liberate? Once that happens, rebels will have something that they are
afraid of losing, meaning that they could now venture into the business of
providing guarantees.
Saturday April
20, 2013
Death
Toll: 82 martyrs, including 2 women
and 8 children: 28 in Damascus and Suburbs; 17 in Aleppo; 13 in Homs; 10 in
Deir Ezzor; 8 in Hama; 4 in Daraa; 1 in Idlib; and 1 in Raqqa (LCC).
News
Heavy
clashes in Syria near Lebanese border The clashes around the contested
town of Qusair, close to the Syria-Lebanon boundary, had intensified over the
past two weeks amid a fresh offensive by the Syrian army and a pro-government
militia known as Popular Committees, backed by the Lebanese militant Hezbollah
group. The border region near the provincial capital of Homs is strategic
because it links Damascus with the coastal enclave that is the heartland of
Syria's Alawites, a sect from which Assad hails, and is also home to the
country's two main seaports, Latakia and Tartus.
Syria
opposition voices frustration with international backers One senior
opposition figure said arms were already being sent from some countries but
acknowledging this at the meeting would provide cover for countries like Saudi
Arabia and Qatar to openly help the rebels. "The world must know if they
don't agree on our right to receive weapons this will be the last meeting the
opposition attend. We will not attend any meetings after this," he told
Reuters.
Kerry
Says U.S. Will Double Aid to Rebels in Syria Mr. Kerry made the
announcement at a meeting with foreign ministers from 10 European and Middle
Eastern nations that was convened here to decide how to help the opposition in
the bitter civil war in Syria, which has killed more than 70,000 people. A
portion of the new American aid, the State Department said, will help provide
additional “nonlethal” supplies to the military wing of the National Coalition
of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, an umbrella organization formed
in November to unite the various rebel groups that have been trying to
overthrow President Bashar al-Assad for two years.
Syria
opposition must distance itself from "terrorists:" Germany "We
expect from the opposition that they clearly distance themselves in Syria from
terrorist and extremist forces," Westerwelle told reporters in Istanbul at
a meeting of Syrian opposition leaders and their international backers. "We
are skeptical as the German government when it comes to delivering weapons
because we are concerned that weapons could fall into the wrong, namely
extremist, hands, but it is a matter that must now be discussed in the European
Union."
Friends
of Syria call on Damascus for a solution based on Geneva communiqué U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry told reporters during a press conference that
Syria’s main opposition National Coalition (SNC) had issued a declaration that
focused on a political solution ‘in parallel’ of the communiqué signed June 30,
2012 under the chairmanship of former U.N.-Arab League special envoy to Syria,
Kofi Annan. The only way for the Damascus regime is to come to the table and
agree the international agreement, Kerry said. Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu also
echoed the words of his American counterpart. “We are calling for an immediate
solution based on Geneva communiqué,” Davutoğlu said. SNC’s declaration
announced April 21 firmly rejected "all forms of terrorism’" and
vowed that weapons it attains would not fall into the wrong hands, as a move to
appease Western countries’ worries over the gaining influence of al-Qaeda
affiliated al-Nusra Front. The coalition added that it would not allow acts of
revenge against any group in Syria, vowing protection of different ethnicities
and confessions of the country. Kerry also insisted that the declaration was
foreseeing a “plural” Syria. Meanwhile,
the group also agreed that future aid would be channeled through the rebels'
supreme military command as General Idris, Chief of Staff of the rebel forces,
also briefed the foreign ministers during the meetings.
FBI:
Aurora man wanted to join al-Qaida in Syria Abdella Ahmad Tounisi, 18,
appeared in U.S. District Court after being arrested Friday at O'Hare
International Airport as he was to get on an airplane to Istanbul, Turkey, FBI
officials said in a press release. Tounisi, a U.S. citizen, was charged with
knowingly attempting to provide material support and resources, namely
personnel, to a foreign terrorist organization, a felony.
Special
Reports
Rebels
battle with tribesmen over oil in Syria's east One dispute over a
stolen oil truck in the town of Masrib in the province of Deir al-Zor, which
borders Iraq, set off a battle between tribesmen and fighters from the Nusra
Front, an al-Qaeda linked rebel group, which left 37 killed, according to the
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. The fighting, which started in late March
and lasted 10 days, was part of a new pattern of conflict between tribal groups
and the Nusra Front, said a report from the Observatory, a British-based group
which opposes Syria's government and draws information from a network of
activists in the country.
Damascus: The
changing face of Syria's capital President Assad was on TV this week.
He denied there was any such thing as a liberated area controlled by the rebels
in Syria, but the fact is that the only contact the President's men have with
large parts of the country is through the sights of a weapons system. That even
applies to districts of Damascus. The regime controls the core of the city. But
much of the sprawling, impoverished ring of suburbs around it is in the hands
of the rebels. That is why all day, and sometimes all night, there is the crump
of artillery fire from the Syrian army's positions directed into the concrete
jungles on the edge of town. The bangs are not constant. But they are regular
and steady and sometimes intense.
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 pounding of rebel strongholds in and around Damascus City continues:
Zamalka http://youtu.be/eFq8BmZlDfY
, http://youtu.be/hpAxlHiwqLw , http://youtu.be/UlKxhl5Pz7o Daraya
http://youtu.be/yjf8bc5lhmM , http://youtu.be/2hSX-fPkh0M , http://youtu.be/7TFdWchxEyU Nearby Moadamiyah
was also targeted http://youtu.be/oVhVS3yvuCk
, http://youtu.be/PtKAnQ2_1iA
Buildings catch fire in Al-Qaboun neighborhood due to continues shelling
by mortars http://youtu.be/-G4T6GkrKVY
Barzeh http://youtu.be/T2i-0tDamDE
This leaked video shows a fighter jet attacking the Alawite village of Al-Sifsafiyeh,
we can hear someone in the background near the end of the clip saying “He’s
bombing us, he is a defector, son of a dog.” However, the clip, even though, it
was recently uploaded on this count, and is gaining new rounds on social media
sites, is actually old, and the incident was actually a pilot error http://youtu.be/XdbwD7GVGiw
Home-made device used by rebels in their siege of the Kuweiris
Airport in Aleppo http://youtu.be/I5XDmmphLek
Rebels in Deir Ezzor City destroy an army tank http://youtu.be/214zsqjb75Y
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