They ignored his threats. They defied his authority. They
crossed his red line. Now he is on a mission to find a new subterfuge to keep justifying
his do-nothing policy. He is the 44th President of the United States,
Guardian of the (Dis) Order of R2P, Leader of the Flee World, and he is out for…
an exit strategy, and, generally speaking, anything that can keep him from having
to adopt a meaningful policy on Syria. But will he succeed? You can follow this
new series on Lifetime, following Project Runway, because CNN and other major
news outlets have safer stories and their own made-up controversies to cover.
Thursday April
18, 2013
Death
Toll: 111 martyrs, including 6 women,
9 children and 2 martyrs under torture: 53 in Damascus and Suburbs; 19 in
Aleppo; 13 in Homs 7 in Raqqa ; 5 in Daraa; ; 5 in Idlib; 5 in Deir Ezzor; and
4 in Hama (LCC).
News
Britain,
France claim Syria used chemical weapons In letters to U.N. Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon, the two European powers said soil samples, witness
interviews and opposition sources support charges that nerve agents were used
in and around the cities of Aleppo, Homs and possibly Damascus, the officials
said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the
matter. The European accounts are in part aimed at countering accusations by
the Syrian government that opposition forces had fired chemical weapons during
fighting in the town of Khan al-Asal near Aleppo on March 19, killing 26
people, including Syrian troops. European diplomats acknowledge that Syrian
forces may have been exposed to chemical agents during the attack, but they say
it was a “friendly fire” incident in which the troops were hit when a
government shell missed its opposition target.
U.S.
looks into possible chemical weapons use in Syria U.S. intelligence
officials are looking into the possibility that chemical weapons may have been
used in Syria in a limited form, although there is no consensus yet and
additional analysis is required, a senior U.S. official said on Thursday. "More
review is needed," the senior U.S. official told Reuters, speaking on
condition of anonymity. The disclosure came as the U.S. Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper said at a Senate hearing that the Syrian regime of
President Bashar al-Assad "appears quite willing to use chemical weapons
against its own people." "We receive many claims of chemical warfare
use in Syria each day and we take them all seriously, and we do all we can to
investigate them," Clapper said.
Step
toward possible military intervention in Syria: The Pentagon is sending about
200 troops to Jordan to help deliver aid to refugees and to plan for possible
military action, including a rapid buildup of forces. The Pentagon is
sending about 200 troops to Jordan, the vanguard of a potential U.S. military
force of 20,000 or more that could be deployed if the Obama administration
decides to intervene in Syria to secure chemical weapons arsenals or to prevent
the 2-year-old civil war from spilling into neighboring nations. Troops from
the 1st Armored Division will establish a small headquarters near Jordan's
border with Syria to help deliver humanitarian supplies for a growing flood of
refugees and to plan for possible military operations, including a rapid
buildup of American forces if the White House decides intervention is
necessary, senior U.S. officials said.
Pentagon Chief
Warns That War in Syria Could Be ‘Lengthy and Uncertain’ Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel warned a Senate panel that intervening in Syria’s
grinding, brutal civil war risked plunging the U.S. into another bloody
conflict. Even as Hagel did so, however, he announced a contingent of soldiers
have deployed to neighboring Jordan as a hedge. “We have an obligation and
responsibility to think through the consequences of any direct U.S. military
action in Syria,” Hagel told the Senate Armed Services Committee this
afternoon. “A military intervention could have the unintended consequence of
bringing the United States into a broader regional conflict or proxy war.” Yet
Hagel said that to prevent spillover violence, last week he ordered an “Army
headquarters element” to go to Jordan to help coordinate contingency planning,
particularly over a potential chemical-weapons attack. CNN reports that up to
200 soldiers from the 1st Armored Division at Fort Bliss, Tex. will form a
potential “joint task force for military operations.”
UN
Asks Sec. Council for Cross-Border Syria Aid OK U.N. agency chiefs for
humanitarian affairs, refugees, women in conflict, and children in conflict
used the Security Council briefing to speak over the heads of the deadlocked
council nations to appeal to the world for support. The agency chiefs launched
their campaign Monday with an op-ed in The New York Times that said,
"There still seems to be an insufficient sense of urgency among the
governments and parties that could put a stop to the cruelty and carnage in
Syria."
Syrian
Rebels Capture Parts of Army Base in Homs The base is located near
Qusair, a contested Syrian town near a key highway between Damascus and the
coast. Dabaa is a former air force base and includes an airfield, which hasn’t
been used in the two-year conflict. The army has based ground troops in the
facility to fight rebels trying to topple President Bashar Assad’s regime.
Israel
ready to act on Syria weapons, warns Netanyahu Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu has told the BBC that Israel has a right to prevent weapons
from falling into the wrong hands in Syria. He said that if terrorists seized
anti-aircraft and chemical weapons they could be "game changers" in
the region. There have been growing calls for the international community to
arm rebels fighting President Bashar al-Assad. But there is increasing concern
that Islamist militants could use such weapons to further their own causes. Israel
has said its policy is not to get involved in the Syrian conflict. But in
recent months it has retaliated following Syrian firing into Israeli-controlled
areas in the Golan Heights.
Syria
rebel Coalition says Assad 'isolated from reality' The opposition
Coalition said Assad's interview with Syrian state television "revealed
his isolation from reality and blindness to the corruption and devastation and
bloodshed that he has wreaked." Assad's "approach is like that of
tyrants before him," it said, pointing to "his claims of control and
denial of the other and the absence of reality and proposal of solutions that
bear no relation to the crises."
Special
Reports
Syria's
Christian Minority Lives in Fear of Kidnapping and Street Battles: War-weary
from months of fighting, one community attempts to co-exist with rebel
militias. Ras al-Ayn, located along the border with Turkey, is a city
of 50,000 with a diverse population of Kurds, Arabs, Assyrians, Turkmen,
Armenians, and Chechens, and it's home to three Christian churches. Christians
make up an estimated 10 percent of Syria's 23 million citizens. Issam Bishara,
regional director of the Catholic Near East Welfare Association, recently told
Asia News that approximately 300,000 Syrian Christians have fled the country.
The increased sectarianism in the conflict, especially the growing influence of
Jihadi forces, has left many fearful of what's to come. Prior to the conflict, many
saw Ras al-Ayn as a beacon of tolerance between Muslims and Christians.
Residents say that they there is still a camaraderie among the citizens that
live there, but that problems arise from those fighting who don't live in the
city, be they FSA, YPG, or Islamists.
Syria’s
forgotten casualties: The chronically ill According to the World Health
Organization , there are 168 medicines that will be “urgently needed” over the
next 12 months, including 92 essential drugs and 33 cancer treatments. Insulin,
oxygen, anesthetics, serums and intravenous fluids are no longer available in
many parts of the country. Before the crisis, more than 90 per cent of
medicines consumed in Syria were locally produced. Today, the national
production has been reduced by 90 per cent, aid organizations say.
Surreal
Damascus, shellfire and lattes in a city under siege So keen is the
besieged government of Bashar al-Assad to show that city life remains normal
that it trucks civil servants to the ministry of agriculture on the edge of
rebel-held Jobar in armoured vehicles… And in its way, Damascus still lives.
Its markets are crowded; its high-class hotels — the Sheraton and Four Seasons
— are open for business, albeit on a skeleton staff… Assad's armed opponents in
this civil war — most of them from the country's Sunni majority — have almost
surrounded his capital, and are close enough to fire mortars at ministry
buildings, even at the Sheraton hotel, when they have the time or inclination… Like
most cities under siege, the wounds of Damascus quickly become familiar. No one
any longer casts a glance at the ruined façade of the defense ministry, blasted
away by a car bomb last year. The outdoor restaurant of the city university,
where 15 students were killed by a mortar shell in March, has been cleaned up.
The fire-blackened wall of the military base above the Barada River, scene of a
truck bombing last August, has been repainted. But no paintbrush is likely to
whitewash the human damage of this war.
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
This leaked video purportedly shows Alawite officers being
tortured by their comrades. They are accused of having helped rebels in Baba
Amr Neighborhood in Homs City, and of desertion http://youtu.be/7oBEzt_AkKA
This video purportedly shows a Hezbollah fighter killed in the fighting
with rebels in the town of Qusair, Homs Province http://youtu.be/DIUu12bOZew
Rebels take control of the military air base of Al-Dab’ah in
Homs Province after a long siege http://youtu.be/VPZzHsCzB4M
, http://youtu.be/bwDhFsKkiGA The
liberation took place at night http://youtu.be/H-JQsedtqaA
Soon after, MiG fighters begin pounding the liberated base http://youtu.be/_zE0QpuvNOs Removing the
statue of Hafiz Al-Assad http://youtu.be/kaugZ3AgwUc
Rebels in Homs liberate the checkpoint at Qarayatein http://youtu.be/HIIEnfafnJ4
A mortar round falls on a group of rebels in the town of Sheikh Sa’eed,
Aleppo Province http://youtu.be/tCEWEzq-m0U
An aerial raid on a different part of town leaves several dead http://youtu.be/cismgz1i8fQ
In Deir Ezzor City, rebels quietly dig a tunnel under a building
known to house pro-Assad militias, then, they fill it with explosives and blow
it up from a distance killing an estimated 30 loyalists, as local activists
claim http://youtu.be/qkeEk04wENE
Elsewhere in Deir Ezzpr Province, rebels pound the military airport
with homemade rockets http://youtu.be/TrzM50XCFoc
In Raqqah Province, rebels target the military airport near Tabqa
with homemade rockets as well http://youtu.be/MHAkELsoFdQ
, http://youtu.be/2L8mMdFwj2Q
Locals in Aleppo City, come to identity the bodies that were collected
from the streets by rebels during the brief ceasefire brokered by the Red Crescent
two days ago http://youtu.be/2BvpPA80iBk
Tanks keep trying to pound their way into rebel strongholds in the town
of Daraya, Damascus Suburbs http://youtu.be/vXaAyQ58IYw
, http://youtu.be/BVwq2rNMK0Q , http://youtu.be/jznZfCGAKMc
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