Just another “regulation” massacre took place in Syria on Thursday. No
chemical weapons were used. No red lines were crossed. The whole episode was
written in blood using only guns and knives, as was the case in most previous
massacres. In a sense, the whole thing was too mundane an occurrence to merit any
notice really – just a brief interlude in an ongoing ethnic cleansing campaign,
an ongoing act of folly, observed by all, making us all complicit to varying degrees
of shame.
Friday May
3, 2013
Death Toll: 139 martyrs, including several women and children as well
as 2 martyrs under torture: 37 were reported in Damascus and its Suburb; 35 in
Banyas (in Al-Bayda Massacre); 22 in Aleppo;15 in Homs; 13 in Hama; 7 in Daraa;
3 in Deir Ezzor; 4 in Idlib; 2 in Lattakia and 1 martyr in Hasaka. Pro-Asasd
militias perpetrated a massacre in the village of Bayda in Banyas killing more
than 200 residents as per latest counts. Victims, including many women and
children, were butchered and burnt (LCC).
News
Images
of Sabra and Shatila in Banias Activists say fighting broke out in
Bayda early Thursday and that at least six government troops were killed.
Syrian forces backed by Alawite gunmen known as shabbiha from the surrounding
area returned in the afternoon and stormed the village, according to the
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. The gunmen torched homes and
used knives, guns and blunt objects to kill people in the streets, the group
said. It added that it had documented the names of at least 50 dead in Bayda,
but that dozens of villagers were still missing and the death toll could rise
up to 100. Amateur video showed the bodies of at least seven men and boys lying
in pools of blood on the pavement in front of a house as women wept around
them.
Administration
Includes Military Strikes in Possible Syrian Options …by attacking Mr.
Assad’s main delivery systems, the officials say, they would curtail his
ability to transport those weapons any significant distance. “This wouldn’t
stop him from using it on a village, or just releasing it on the ground, or
handing something to Hezbollah,” said one European official who has been
involved in the conversations. “But it would limit the damage greatly.” The
topic was alluded to on Thursday, when Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel met
with his British counterpart and talked about “the need for new options” if Mr.
Assad uses his chemical arsenal, the officials said. But while the military has
been developing and refining options for the White House for months, the
discussion appears to have taken a new turn, officials say, as they struggle to
determine whether the suspected use of sarin gas near Aleppo and Damascus last
month was a prelude to greater use of such weapons.
Obama
foresees no US troops in Syria Mr Obama told reporters in Costa Rica on
Friday that as a commander-in-chief he could rule nothing out "because
circumstances change". But he added he did not foresee a scenario in which
"American boots on the ground in Syria" would be good for either
America or Syria. He also said he had already consulted with Middle Eastern
leaders and they agreed with him. Mr Obama reiterated that there was evidence
that chemical weapons had been used in Syria, but that "we don't know
when, where or how". He stressed that if strong evidence was found it
would be "a game changer for us" because "there is a possibility
that it (weapons) lands in the hands of organisations like Hezbollah" in
neighbouring Lebanon.
Sources:
U.S. believes Israel has conducted an airstrike into Syria U.S. and
Western intelligence agencies are reviewing classified data showing Israel most
likely conducted a strike in the Thursday-Friday time frame, according to both
officials. This is the same time frame that the U.S. collected additional data
showing Israel was flying a high number of warplanes over Lebanon. One official
said the United States had limited information so far and could not yet confirm
those are the specific warplanes that conducted a strike. Based on initial
indications, the U.S. does not believe Israeli warplanes entered Syrian
airspace to conduct the strikes. Both officials said there is no reason to
believe Israel struck at a chemical weapons storage facilities. The Israelis
have long said they would strike at any targets that prove to be the transfer
of any kinds of weapons to Hezbollah or other terrorist groups, as well as at
any effort to smuggle Syrian weapons into Lebanon that could threaten Israel.
American
journalist held in Syria believed to be in detention center The family
and employer of James Foley, a U.S. journalist missing in Syria since November,
say they now believe he is being held by the Syrian government in a detention
center near the capital, Damascus. That conclusion follows a five-month
investigation by Foley's family and his employer, GlobalPost, and was announced
on Friday in an article posted on the news organization's website. "With a
very high degree of confidence, we now believe that Jim was most likely
abducted by a pro-regime militia group and subsequently turned over to Syrian
government forces," GlobalPost CEO and President Philip Balboni said,
according to the article.
Investigative
Reports
Outwitting
Sanctions, Syria Buys Dell PCs The disclosure of the computer sales is
the latest example of how the Syrian government has managed to acquire
technology, some of which is used to censor Internet activity and track
opponents of the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad. According to internal
company e-mails, cash transfer statements, sales receipts and shipping
documents, the computer equipment was sold by BDL Gulf, which is based in Saudi
Arabia and is a large distributor of computer equipment in the Middle East. It
is an authorized dealer for Dell in the Middle East and Africa, and is also a
reseller for other computer brands, including Samsung and Acer. BDL sold the
equipment to Anas Hasoon Trading, a Damascus-based company with contracts to
provide computers to the Syrian government, according to billings records and
e-mail exchanges between the companies.
Syria’s
War Has Once-Quiet Border Area in Israel on Alert Many increasingly see
no possible positive outcome of their neighbor’s bloody conflict, no clear
solution for securing their interests in the meanwhile. Israel’s military
leadership now views southern Syria as an “ungoverned area” that poses imminent
danger. “This is the new reality of the Golan Heights,” Brig. Gen. Gal Hirsch,
an active reservist who is deputy commander of a unit focused on long-range
operations in enemy territory, said as he stood near the Merkava tank
positioned here. “Inside the bush, we have units that are ready to jump and
open fire. You can see here tanks, you can see forces — and there are many
things you cannot see.”
Taking
sides in Syria is hard choice for Israel The state is prosecuting an
Arab Israeli who briefly joined the rebel forces fighting to topple President
Bashar al-Assad. Arrested after his return to Israel, Hikmat Massarwa, a
29-year-old baker, is accused of unlawful military training, having contacts
with foreign agents and traveling to a hostile state. The trial hinges on the
unanswered question of who, if anyone, Israel favors in the war and if the
rebels will turn out to be friends or enemies. The prosecutor in Lod is trying
to depict Massarwa as having aligned himself with foes of Israel, but Judge
Avraham Yaakov is struggling for clarity. "There's no legal guidance regarding
the rebel groups fighting in Syria," he told a recent hearing. Matters
were simpler during the decades of unchallenged Assad family rule.
Fleeing
Syria, Refugees Arrive to a Different Kind of Hell in Greece Thousands
of Syrians are seeking refuge in Greece, but the country's economic and asylum
problems make for an unwelcome new home… Most refugees don't have a
government-issued pink card - the document they need to stay in the country
legally for a few months. Without it, many are arrested and thrown into
detention centers where they are given little food, no clean clothing, or bed
linen. They have no soap to wash themselves, no opportunity to call family or
friends. They are beaten. When released after six to 18 months, they must leave
the country; but having fled their own, most don't have authorization, and
trying to leave Greece without papers is also illegal. They can't stay in
Greece; they can't leave.
Analyses
& Op-Eds
DANIEL
C. KURTZER: Obama Can’t Go It Alone in Syria Constructing an
international coalition of willing states — especially Russia, Egypt, Saudi
Arabia and Qatar — is the only strategically wise option for the United States.
Without such a coalition, intervention won’t work. And without such a
coalition, America must reject unilateral military intervention in Syria.
Slouching
Toward Damascus In Syria's implosion, Secretary of State John Kerry
already faces a defining task. How hard is he prepared to push against Obama's
weary realism?
Is Assad
Winning? The Syrian regime’s information campaign is part of a larger war
against Western interests. Assad knows that keeping the White House on
the sidelines and preventing it from tipping the balance of power against him
on the battlefield with money, arms, and the coherent command structure that
would follow cash and weapons, is a large part of his struggle. Assad’s
information operations then are largely keyed to American sensibilities,
playing not only on the Obama administration’s misgivings, but also the fears
and concerns of the American public. In this instance, Assad’s intended
takeaway is simply this: why would Americans want to support in Syria the same
people who bombed an American city? Don’t Americans recognize that since I’m
fighting the same people, I’m essentially an American ally.
Saudis
Try to Quell Jihadists … the Syria conflict is exposing rifts and
contradictions within the kingdom over its tradition of aiding beleaguered
foreign Muslims. "There are tensions…between some elite decision makers over
how best to deal with the Syrian issue," said Michael Stephens, a regional
researcher at the British Royal United Services Institute think tank in Qatar.
"It is clear some princes favor an activist approach that involves
increased support for Islamist groups in Syria, while other princes remain
concerned over the…undermining of Saudi's internal security." Syrian
rebels and Arab officials say Saudi Arabia has shipped arms and aid to the
Syrian opposition, though the Saudi government hasn't confirmed or denied such
reports. But top Saudi government officials and religious leaders are ordering
its citizens to stay home, telling them instead to send money and prayers to
Syria's rebels.
Samar
Yazbek: The Syrian revolution has changed me as a writer I left Syria
in mid-June 2011, having been discredited, persecuted, threatened and arrested.
A year would pass before my return. I travelled between various towns and
cities, speaking about the revolution, conscious of the regime's prowess in
manipulating the media, and its success in duping the world into believing that
this was a war brought about by Sunni Islamists. I met with intellectuals,
politicians and diplomats. They had little idea of what was going on. Most
wanted to believe the story that it was a Salafist revolt. Their response was
always that the minority groups in Syria were under threat – that the
Christians and the Alawites would be in danger from the Sunni jihadis. This was
not true; it was a monster they had created to scare themselves. What I saw on
the ground told a very different story.
Widespread
Middle East Fears that Syrian Violence Will Spread - No Love for Assad, Yet No
Support for Arming the Rebels … a new survey by the Pew Research
Center, conducted before news emerged of alleged use of chemical agents by the
regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, found little regional support for
Western or Arab countries sending arms and military supplies to anti-government
groups in Syria. And there is even greater opposition among American and European
publics to such indirect Syrian involvement by their governments.
Firas
Maksad: The abduction of Bishop Bob And the uncertain fate of Syria’s
minorities Syria’s rebels, and those who support them, also have an
important role to play in promoting communal coexistence. It is difficult for a
Druze from southern Syria, or an Alawite from the coastal mountains, to join
rebel ranks when the uprising is morphing from a national struggle for freedom,
to one increasingly dominated by radical Islamists espousing sharia law. In
such a conflict, there is no space for diverse religious groups or moderate
Muslims. Instead, they will remain beholden to the relative safety of Assad
rule.
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.”
Quickly Noted
“The United States
should act in Syria in the way that it believes will best serve American
interests and most effectively respond to Syria's horrific violence, not
because it feels it must enforce an ill-advised red line.”
When you read the above advice
just bear in mind that the one giving it was up until the beginning of the revolution
was advocating engaging Assad because he believed he was a reformer, and that
he was popular and beloved by his people. It’s indeed bewildering how the same set
of scholars and experts who, at one point, advocated engagement are now
advocating caution. In both instances Assad had more to gain than the United
States, and notions of human rights went by the wayside.
If the “Syrian nightmare” has indeed destroyed the “the spirit of fun,
hope, and positive change of the early Arab uprisings,” such
experts and their precious advice bear much of the blame.
Video Highlights
The Bayda Massacre
This gruesome video was taken and leaked by the perpetrators of the
Bayda massacre as part of their campaign to terrorize the local population. It
was initially posted on a variety of loyalist sites http://youtu.be/MgWsyS0aT5Q
The following videos were made by local activists and residents.
This teenage girl was killed in her own bedroom, crouching near her bed
to hid herself. Her mother and younger sibling can be seen in a different
corner http://youtu.be/a0MfawjizLA Entire
families were wiped out http://youtu.be/ygeTLIgY_2U
A local lawyer and her 5 children were killed http://youtu.be/1zaAOWdoC58 People were
killed in their homes http://youtu.be/y1jmmJD6bP0
Some corpses were torched http://youtu.be/V5hC7U3LIc4
, http://youtu.be/3Z9AxECO3RE
Other videos
Food aid delivered by the SOC to the people of Hama Province http://youtu.be/pALbsYzHrVo
The aerial pounding of Eastern Ghoutah, Damascus, continues http://youtu.be/rldOdvMz6e0 And the pounding by heavy artillery and tanks
from the top of Mount Qasayoun http://youtu.be/TXcDr0Kg_98
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