Isolationism might be the popular
choice for Americans today, but what’s popular and what’s right are not exactly
the same, which is why American culture has often embraced the maverick. It’s
time to do so again today. Intervention in Syria may not be popular, but it’s
the right thing to do. It’s even the American thing to do, even if most
Americans may fail to see it at this stage. We cannot blame the weary, but we
can surely blame their leaders for hiding behind their peoples’ weariness and
for failing to explain to them the consequences of inaction.
Tuesday April
30, 2013
Death Toll: 173 martyrs, including 6 women, 9
children and 14 martyrs under torture: 53 reported in Hama; 49 in Damascus and Suburbs
including 13 in the Marjeh can bombing; 19 in Aleppo; 17 in Idlib; 13 in Homs;
11 in Daraa; 8 in Deir Ezzor; 2 in Raqqa; and 1 in Lattakia (LCC).
News
Obama
moving toward sending lethal arms to Syrian rebels, officials say Yet
even as Obama voiced caution in responding to what he has called the “red line”
on chemical weapons use, officials described him as ready to move on what one
described as the “left-hand side” of a broad spectrum that ranged from “arming
the opposition to boots on the ground.” “We’re clearly on an upward
trajectory,” the senior official said. “We’ve moved over to assistance that has
a direct military purpose.” Officials did not specify what U.S. equipment is
under consideration, although the rebels have specifically requested antitank
weapons and surface-to-air missiles.
Leader
of Hezbollah Warns It Is Ready to Come to Syria’s Aid The leader,
Hassan Nasrallah, declared in a televised speech that Hezbollah could become
more deeply involved in the future, and warned that Syria had “real friends”
who would not allow it “to fall into the hands” of America, Israel and Islamic
extremists, the forces that the Syrian government routinely blames for the
two-year uprising against it. He appeared to be referring to Iran, a patron of
both Hezbollah and the Syrian government, as well as Hezbollah itself, whose
well-organized guerrilla fighting force, honed by past battles with the Israeli
military in southern Lebanon, is widely considered more effective than
Lebanon’s army. Hezbollah relies on Iran and Syria to supply its arms. “You
won’t be able to bring down Damascus and you cannot bring down the regime,
militarily,” Mr. Nasrallah said. “The battle will be long.”
Obama
balks on Syria chemical arms threat With the U.S. disengaging from the
unpopular war in Afghanistan and still smarting from the difficult conflict in
Iraq, Obama has been reticent to unleash American military power in the Syrian
fighting, a civil war that has killed tens of thousands of people. The
president said the conflict is a “blemish on the international community
generally.” But he added that he was not prepared to rush to respond to growing
evidence that chemical weapons had been used in Syria, something he had termed
would mark the crossing of a “red line” and a game-changer. “I meant that we
would have to rethink the range of options open to us,” Obama said. But when
measuring additional action, Obama said, “I’ve got to know I’ve got the facts.”
“We don’t know who used them. We don’t have a chain of custody that
establishes” exactly what happened. Obama further declared that the
international community had to be completely confident in the assessment that
chemical weapons have been used. Syria urged the United Nations to send
scientists to investigate its claim of a chemical attack by rebels in Aleppo,
but said it does not trust U.S. accusations that such arms were used elsewhere
in the country.
Bombings
Hit Syria as Obama Urges Caution on U.S. Role The blasts in Syria,
which killed at least 13 people in Damascus and at least five at the Bab
al-Hawa crossing in northern Syria, came a day after an attempted assassination
of Syria’s prime minister in central Damascus from a bomb aimed at his
motorcade. The prime minister, Wael Nader al-Halqi, survived the attack but at
least five others including a bodyguard were killed, Syria’s state news media
reported. In a news conference in Washington, Mr. Obama said that despite an
American intelligence assessment last week that there was evidence that
chemical weapons had been used in Syria, the evidence had not yet surpassed his
“red line” for a change of American strategy regarding the conflict, in which
President Bashar al-Assad is fighting an increasingly violent insurgency.
Rebel
advocate: Obama's call for Syria probe 'a bluff' "Obama will never
get the concrete evidence he wants unless there's a full U.N. investigation, to
which Assad will not agree," said Abdulwahab Omar, a Syrian anti-Assad
activist based in London. "That means Obama will never be obliged to do
anything," he said. "You can call it a bluff. He tried to show that
the United States would be prepared to intervene when things get serious, when
in reality, the U.S. is not prepared to intervene unless its own interests are
directly affected."
Syria
War Draws Caution From U.S. Joint Chiefs The chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin Dempsey, said Tuesday he is "cautious"
about U.S. military intervention in Syria because of doubts that it would halt
the violence or achieve political reconciliation. He cast doubt on the
effectiveness of establishing a no-fly zone, saying that only about 10 percent
of the casualties suffered by anti-regime forces are caused by air strikes. He
said 90 percent are caused by small arms and artillery, which would be
unaffected by a no-fly zone. Dempsey, an Army officer who is the nation's most
senior military commander and chief military adviser to the president, also
said the Joint Chiefs have "not yet" been asked to look at options
for putting American ground forces inside Syria.
Russia
bans passenger flights over Syria The federal agency Rosaviation said
the ban on flights over Syria went into force on Monday and will remain until
further notice. "The federal air transport agency believes that in this
situation commercial interests cannot prevail over the safety of people who use
the services of Russian airlines," it said in a statement. The ban comes
after the crew of a charter plane flying from the Egyptian resort of
Sharm-el-Sheikh to the Russian city of Kazan on Monday said it had come under
threat when it flew over Syria.
Activists:
15 Syrian rebels die in battle for base The Britain-based Observatory
for Human Rights said the rebels tried to storm the Mannagh base in the
northern province of Aleppo late Monday but the regime deployed fighter jets to
the area. The jets pounded rebel positions around the helicopter base, which is
located near Syria's border with Turkey, said Rami Abdul-Rahman, the
Observatory's director. On Tuesday, 15 rebels were killed in a hit on the base,
said Abdul-Rahman, whose group relies on a network of activists on the ground.
Investigative
Reports
Running
the gauntlet: delivering food in Syria Matthew Hollingworth said in an
interview last week that WFP is trying to feed 2.5 million people every month
inside Syria - a tenth of the population - and a million outside, in a conflict
that has left 70,000 dead. He says his organization will need to almost double
the number of people it reaches by the end of the year. "It's no secret
that the conflict is intensifying, or has been intensifying over the last
month," said the WFP's deputy regional emergency coordinator. "The
two parties of the conflict are digging in." "We are trying to keep
up with the enormity of the crisis and the impact of the brutality," he
said.
At
least 500 Europeans fighting with Syria rebels, study finds, stoking
radicalization fears The EU's Gilles de Kerchove told the BBC there
were at least 500 Europeans taking part in Syria's civil war, and it was
"likely many of them will be radicalized" fighting alongside some of
the known Muslim extremist militias in the country, and that the returning EU
nationals would pose, "a serious threat" to security in European
nations. Peter Neumann, Director of the International Centre for the Study of
Radicalization (ICSR) at London's King's College, was led the report. He
believes the number of fighters from countries including the United Kingdom,
France, Germany, Sweden and Belgium to be "at least in the mid-hundreds to
high-hundreds."
Already
unable to cope with refugees, Syria’s neighbors brace for more The
United Nations says about 1.5 million Syrians have fled to the countries that
border Syria, and just as on the Lebanese border, more are waiting to enter
Jordan and Turkey as well. Aid agencies already have said they cannot cope with
the problem in its current state, let alone the arrival of more Syrians, a
trend that appears inevitable as Syrian government troops push to regain
territory lost to rebels along the Lebanese and Jordanian borders. Many of
those fleeing now have been displaced inside Syria multiple times, and
officials in Aarsal, which lies on a longtime smuggling route between the
countries, say they’re expecting the biggest influx yet.
Syrians
deserting the FSA: Faust wants his soul back In the midst of this harsh
war, Syrians have found themselves at a crossroads: obliged to choose between
either their personal interest and life or the country's freedom. A question
occurs to me here – Is it possible for fighters who quit the FSA to go back to
their old lives? It seems highly improbable, given that Syria has been ripped
into so many different pieces with different authorities holding sway over
particular areas – here the regime, there such and such battalion. The country
is now a hotchpotch of hot and cool areas. Families have been displaced across
the country in their millions. Most fighters are wanted by intelligence forces
and they can't go back to their original villages and towns, nor can they meet
their families who were forced to flee. This is how our lives – and not just
that of FSA fighters – have been trapped, in the eye of a tornado that is
hurtling at breakneck speed. Where and how we get off is anyone’s guess. One
thing is for sure – it won’t be an emerald city.
Did
someone fire missiles at a Russian jetliner flying over Syria? R ussia's
foreign ministry said in a statement that it will "take the necessary
emergency measures to clear up the details of the story and work in cooperation
with the Syrian authorities." But some aviation experts say they are
skeptical that anything of the kind could have happened, and suspect the event
may have been "staged," perhaps for political reasons. "This is
a fairy tale. Nothing like that could have happened, it's just been
staged," says Magomed Tolboyev, one of Russia's most famous test pilots.
"It's too silly to discuss." But others say it could have happened
and, if so, it's a very serious warning for civilian aircraft to avoid flying
over Syria. "A passenger plane has no means of preventing a missile
attack, but it does have a system that warns of approaching objects and
automatically makes the plane go up or down in response," says Valery
Entanaltsev, executive director of the Fund for Developing Aviation
Infrastructure, an industry-supported public organization. "It's not clear
who was behind this shooting, but it needs to be thoroughly investigated. Maybe
it was a provocation. It's a very worrisome development," he says.
Analyses
& Op-Eds
Max
Boot: Red Line or Punch Line? Instead of doing something about Assad’s
war crimes, Obama prefers to ask for a full United Nations investigation, which
could take years–if ever–to reach a definitive finding. This is rapidly turning
the U.S. into a global joke: the superpower that issues ultimatums it has no
intention of enforcing. But the consequences of inaction are no joke because
they are, as former U.S. army officer Joseph Holliday argues, a virtual
invitation for Assad, now that he has seen the world will do nothing, to expand
his use of chemical weapons.
David
Ignatius: Frustrated by Obama’s caution on Syria Obama said in the
televised news conference that he wanted solid evidence of chemical weapons
that could prompt international action against Bashar al-Assad. “If we end up
rushing to judgment without hard, effective evidence, then we can find
ourselves in a position where we can’t mobilize the international community to
support what we do,” Obama said. But Idriss countered that his forces have
enough information now to answer Obama’s questions of how, where and when the
weapons were deployed on four separate occasions. He welcomed U.S. plans to
train his forces but said this strategy will be useless if Assad continues the
chemical attacks. Idriss claimed the regime could deliver the chemical weapons
with planes and Scud missiles, which he said must be destroyed.
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.”
An Appeal
A Kickstarter
project worthy of support: Black comedy movie from Syria 2013.
While the director was shot dead we want to continue with your help!
Quickly Noted
1.
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin Dempsey argues
“that only about 10 percent of the casualties suffered by anti-regime forces
are caused by air strikes” and that “90 percent are caused by small arms and
artillery, which would be unaffected by a no-fly zone.” The problem with this
logic is its failure to note the 10% of the casualties caused by air strikes
are happening in those liberated parts of Aleppo, Raqqah, Deir Ezzor and Idlib
where local elections can take place and local legitimate governing bodies can
truly emerge should there be a no-fly zone.
No one in the opposition has advanced the argument that a no-fly zone
will stop the killing everywhere in Syria. Our argument has and continues to be
focused on the need for allowing legitimate local governments to emerge and
actually govern in liberated areas, because it will be mostly up to these governments
to legitimize a political process meant to put an end to this crisis. A no-fly
zone will go a long way in allowing this to happen.
2.
Micah Zenco argues
that “Advocates of military intervention need to define their strategic
objectives in Syria and outline how the use of force can accomplish it. So far,
no one has done so.” Let’s assume he is correct, that o one has done so, but
let’s ask this as well: have people like him who advocate nonintervention outlined
the risks that this policy entails for the future of the region and the global
order, including potential impact on the national security? Have they tried to inform
the American people of these risks? Let Sunni and Shia extremists carve out
havens for themselves throughout the Middle East. Then let’s see if American and
Western officials try to keep their countries safe from the fallouts.
Video Highlights
Battles on the outskirts of Hama City continues http://youtu.be/c_w9H6TmVBM Locals dig through
the rubble in search of the dead and wounded http://youtu.be/c_w9H6TmVBM
Homes catch fire in Moadamiyeh Suburb in Damascus on account of
the continuous pounding http://youtu.be/UlA4-1eZSbQ
Shelling of neighborhoods inside Damascus City often takes place from
artillery positions on top of Mount Qasayoun http://youtu.be/U_KOwtSgH1g This leaked
video shows a sample of the soldiers taking part in the pounding, while
accusing rebels of using drugs, it’s regime soldiers who often do http://youtu.be/iSb4ol6PJtQ
Missile launchers are also used, especially in targeting rebel
strongholds in Eastern Ghoutah: Kafar Batna http://youtu.be/9A0ieqk_-uw
Clashes between loyalists and rebels in the town of Mta’iyeh,
Daraa Province http://youtu.be/YcLdVStar9M
Regime forces pound the border point of Bab E-Hawa on the border
between Aleppo and Turkey http://youtu.be/dXdV3NspPkE
, http://youtu.be/ZJ3p7S_Ywig cluster
bombs have been used, and people are scurrying in all directions http://youtu.be/ykWG1PSJlLY , http://youtu.be/nwmwAwtqbhk , http://youtu.be/5iVgeyWRdNk
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