The U.S. is secretly “feeding” us, while Russia and Iran are
“secretly” arming Assad, now he has a “second wind,” and we are doubly screwed.
For fear of “mission creep,” the U.S. has so far been indulging in mission crap.
By refraining from doing what should be done, that is, supporting moderate
rebels and imposing a no-fly zone, and by keeping secret its humanitarian aid
to the Syrian population, thus allowing extremist to claim credit for it, the
U.S. has weakened moderate forces, strengthened the hand of extremists, and
gave Assad all the leeway he needed to plunge the country, and perhaps the
region, into chaos and mayhem. Had this been by design it wouldn’t have worked
so perfectly.
In Daraya, Damascus Suburbs, tanks keep trying to pound their
way in http://youtu.be/iicNhOJLsWg
Monday April
15, 2013
Death
Toll: 75 martyrs, including 7 women,
4 children and 1 martyr under torture: 47 reported in Damascus and Suburbs,
most in Douma; 9 in Aleppo; 7 in Daraa; 5 in Idlib; 3 in Deir Ezzor; 3 in Homs;
and 1 in Hama (LCC).
News
U.S.
feeds Syrians, but secretly So secretive is the operation, however,
that almost none of the Syrians who receive the help are aware of its American
origins. Out of concern for the safety of the recipients and the delivery
staff, who could be targeted by the government if their affiliation to the
United States were known, the Obama administration and the aid workers have
chosen not to advertise the assistance… The bakery is fully supplied with flour
paid for by the United States. But Waisi credited Jabhat al-Nusra — a rebel
group the United States has designated a terrorist organization because of its
ties to al-Qaeda — with providing flour to the region, though he admitted he
wasn’t sure where it comes from.
Assad's
forces break rebel blockade in north Syria Rebels had kept the army
bottled up in the Wadi al-Deif and Hamidiya military bases in Idlib province.
But on Sunday, President Bashar al-Assad's forces outflanked the rebels and
broke through, the pro-government al-Baath newspaper said. The insurgents
counter-attacked on Monday but their front has been weakened in recent weeks
due to infighting and the deployment of forces to other battles, activists
said. The break-out from the bases, located outside Maarat al-Nuaman town, may
enable the army to recapture the main route into Aleppo, Syria's largest city,
and bolster their fragile supply lines in the heart of the rebel-held north.
Are
we seeing Bashar al-Assad’s second wind? Mr. Assad has mostly delivered
on the promises and threats he has made over the duration of the uprising.
Early on he spoke of “ten Afghanistans” in Syria should outside forces
intervene, or fundamentalist takfiris and Islamic extremists dominating the
opposition. Though clearly propaganda at the time, today it is difficult to
dismiss his argument, a perspective that resonates with the millions of Syrians
exhausted by two years of conflict and instability… Though he is undoubtedly
losing the long-term war, Mr. al-Assad is being proved more correct as each day
passes. The result? An increasingly divided Syrian population and a country
that much harder to put back together.
Leader
of Syria’s Muslim Brotherhood denies accusations group seeks to control
opposition “Our aim is not to tear apart but to unite the (Syrian)
opposition,” al-Shaqfa told reporters in Istanbul, where he is based. He blamed
accusations against his group on “lies and fabrications” that he said were
spread by President Bashar Assad’s regime. Some rebels say the Brotherhood is
trying to control the uprising through the political opposition’s exiled groups,
such as the Western-backed Syrian National Coalition umbrella bloc,
marginalizing fighters inside the country from non-Islamist groups. They say
the movement is positioning itself to take power once the war against Assad is
won. Tensions within the opposition rose last month with the election of
Ghassan Hitto as interim prime minister for the opposition. Some of his critics
claimed the Muslim Brotherhood orchestrated the choice of Hitto, a Syrian-born
U.S. citizen and a little-known figure prior to his election.
U.N.
aid groups say world must act now to save Syria If the international
community continues to dither the crisis could turn into a humanitarian
catastrophe that could scar the region for a generation, one of the leaders
said.
Swedish Islamists in
Syria leave Säpo 'worried' Around 30 Islamists have travelled from
Sweden recently to fight or to be trained to fight in Syria, Swedish security
service Säpo revealed on Monday, expressing its concerns over the development.
Wounded
Syrians flown to Germany for medical care The injured, among them women
and children, were flown aboard a specially equipped air force plane and were
to be transferred to four German military hospitals in cities including Berlin
and Hamburg.
UK
concerns over chemical weapon use Foreign Minister William Hague said
the claims must be urgently investigated and perpetrators held to account.
Meanwhile, soil samples gathered from random sites in Syria, have been smuggled
to the UK for testing, British intelligence sources told the BBC. The evidence suggests
"some use of chemical weapons"' but it is not clear by which side,
the sources said. Syria is believed to have stockpiles of mustard gas and the
highly toxic nerve agent sarin.
Syrian
Man Arrested in Greece With Weapons Cache The official, who spoke to
The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to
speak to the media about the case, said he believed the weapons were headed for
Syria. There has been no official announcement by police. The arrest took place
Thursday when the man, who is a resident of Belgium, crossed the border with
Turkey in a tractor trailer, according to the official. Customs officials found
281 telescopic sights. The arrested man said he re-entered Greece after Turkish
customs authorities turned him back. He will appear in a Greek court Monday.
Special
Reports
Jabhat
al-Nusra, Ghassan Hitto Divide Syrian Opposition The National Coalition
and National Council, which are controlled by a liberal Islamic alliance, have
managed, on the other hand, to avoid until now any discussion about the true
nature of Jabhat al-Nusra and other Jihadist brigades, equally as Salafist and
jihadist as Jabhat al-Nusra. The time now is not for the discussion of any
trespasses, but for toppling the regime. Only afterward is the opposition
expected to discuss the conduct of Jabhat al-Nusra and other Jihadist factions,
their monopoly over the administration of cities, especially in al-Raqqah, and
the countryside of Aleppo and Idlib which, in some parts, has been transformed
into Islamic emirates.
Vali
Nasr: The Dangerous Price of Ignoring Syria t is time America takes the
lead in organizing international assistance to refugees. America should not
hide behind the Russian veto. It should pursue a concerted diplomatic strategy
in support of arming the rebels and imposing a no-flight zone over Syria. That
would not only hamper Assad’s ability to fight, it would allow refugees to
remain within Syria’s borders, thus reducing pressure on neighboring countries.
It is time the U.S. took over from Qatar and Saudi Arabia in organizing the
Syrian opposition into a credible political force — failure to do that accounts
for the chaos that has paralyzed the group. There are powerful economic
sanctions that the U.S. could use to cripple the Assad regime. Finally, America
should build ties with the Free Syrian Army with the goal of denying extremist
groups the ability to dominate the armed resistance and gaining influence with
groups that will dominate Syria’s future. It was failing to build those ties in
Afghanistan that allowed the resistance groups who opposed the Soviet Union to
disintegrate into the Taliban and Al Qaeda.
The
fatal mobilization of Hezbollah in Syria Truth is, the maliciousness
displayed by Hezbollah while managing its battle in Syria is met by chaos and
tension displayed in the rhetoric of other sectarian groups from among Sunni
extremists.
Another
reason for U.S. to act on Syria: Sending message to Iran “There is a
relationship between what’s happening in Syria and Iran,” Ross said. “We want
very much to convince the Iranians to change their behavior, not just on Syria
but on the nuclear issue. And one of the
problems we have at this point is [that] they don’t believe that we will
actually use force. “The irony here is, if you want diplomacy to succeed, they
actually have to believe we’re going to use force,” Ross said. “Our hesitancy
in Syria, I think, plays to their perception that we won’t. So the more we’re
prepared to do in Syria, the more I think we actually may affect the Iranian
calculus in terms of the nuclear issues as well.”
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.”
The Living Martyr
In a conference in Istanbul on Islam and Transitional Justice, Syrian Opposition
Coalition leader, Moaz Al-Khatib, whose retirement is still in limbo, delivered
a powerful speech condemning Jabhat Al-Nusra and Al-Qaeda ideology. After
spending the first part of his speech addressing the issue of transitional
justice, Al-Khatib turned his attention to the issue of Al-Nusra and the recent
admission by her leader to ties to Al-Qaeda. Al-Khatib reminded people of
Al-Qaeda’s beginning in Afghanistan and said that Al-Qaeda has been infiltrated
by myriad intelligence organizations and were carrying out agendas that have
nothing to do with Islam. In Iraq, he said, Al-Qaeda was controlled by Iran and
was responsible for deaths than the American invasion. He also reminded people
of the role that the Syrian security apparatuses played in supporting Al-Qaeda
and of the role of the late Al-Qaqa, the enigmatic preacher from Aleppo who was
responsible for recruiting Syrians then betraying them to the security
apparatuses, until he was killed in mysterious circumstances. He, then, called
on JAN members in Syria to leave the organization and establish a new group
with a new identity and a new vision to put the taint of al-Qaeda affiliation
behind them and serve a national Syrian agenda, rather than an external agenda.
Throughout his speech, he repeatedly kept saying that he was only providing
advice and that he is in no position to prevail on any group to do what it does
not want. The conference was boycotted by the Muslim Brotherhood at the last
minute, and Al-Khatib’s words received a lukewarm response as we can see at the
end of the video. For all practical purposes, Al-Khatib is a walking martyr
now, he is challenging the regime, the rebels, the traditional opposition and
the international community with its different camps into doing the right thing
on Syria. He has made formidable enemies, while his friends are few and fickle http://youtu.be/aeL0nJ415gc
Video Highlights
Rebels take control of another border along the Syrian Jordanian border
http://youtu.be/8x1R9U5W9m4 Meanwhile,
on the Turkish-Syrian border, thousands of refugees rush through Bab Al-Hawa
crossing in order to evade the constant bombardment http://youtu.be/NG6q7je4R48 Syrian MiGs
have in fact violated the Turkish airspace in their pursuit of people (see
around 2:25 and after). The Clip was taking on the Turkish side of the border http://youtu.be/wsQGYeQggII
400 new defectors form a new rebel unit in areas south of
Damascus http://youtu.be/09Qsgf7fd3g
The battle for the control of loyalist headquarters in Shouqaif,
Aleppo, left dozens of loyalists dead http://youtu.be/gFOvoksZkPs
Rebels in Damascus Suburbs use home-made missile launchers to pound
security headquarters inside Damascus City http://youtu.be/RJ1WNQ_lLY4 Meanwhile,
the pounding of Jobar Neighborhood by pro-regime forces continues http://youtu.be/j_nxtVQeOzI , http://youtu.be/ZsveG8bHLkM The nearby
suburb of Zamalka is also hit http://youtu.be/ew9GyWi-e8Y
An aerial raid on the town of Douma, Eastern Ghoutah, Damascus
Suburbs http://youtu.be/4UzOKNO1hnU
Send people scurrying in all directions http://youtu.be/phyNwKoEZew
and leave many dead http://youtu.be/SsehG4KYTCc
, http://youtu.be/tRwcWSZ5O38 , http://youtu.be/8L89s5ictrg , http://youtu.be/wEbjVaHNtII , http://youtu.be/rg8VowGy4LU The havoc http://youtu.be/gq-H6vUg8cs , http://youtu.be/0uWnYkCFKug Sifting
through the rubble http://youtu.be/k6gIyOH0Wpc
Other towns in Eastern Ghoutah were also targeted, including Hamouriyeh
http://youtu.be/dVT7JPfIVzQ
The pounding of the nearby suburb of Qaboun http://youtu.be/u8clI7mpqlI , http://youtu.be/2tdYQWPDLoo leaves these
children dead
Clashes in Khirbet Ghazaleh, Daraa Province, continues http://youtu.be/6R3LBt2-Elc , http://youtu.be/YhHZSKcZd0I , http://youtu.be/odCWqyIyvQ4
In the historic city of Palmyra, Homs Province, loyalist
militias pound the surrounding farm areas http://youtu.be/B_WJKF9oecc
, http://youtu.be/Va1tUTkYWZk
Clashes in Deir Ezzor City continue http://youtu.be/tNvnhFSiJA0
The pounding of the resort town of Salma in the Lattakia
mountains continues http://youtu.be/6rD-3IxTD0Y
, http://youtu.be/j3k5NSN5LPQ
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