Confusion to the enemy!

 

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The Bloody Streets of Syria

Posted By Ryan Mauro On April 25, 2011 

At least 120 civilians were killed
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/middle-east/In-Syria-120-killed-in
-2-days/articleshow/8077142.cms>  by the Syrian regime this weekend as the
anti-government protests become stronger each passing Friday. The gross
human rights violations have been decried by international human rights
groups and spectators in the West, leaving many to openly wonder why the
Obama administration will not undertake even non-military measures to
denounce the violence — especially against a nation that is one of Iran’s
closest allies and, likewise, a regional sponsor of terror.

The uprising that began in Daraa has now spread throughout Syria as
protesters are now explicitly demanding an end to President Bashar Assad’s
rule and even using the words, “regime change” in their chants. Over 120
protesters were killed by the security forces on Friday and Saturday who
used live ammunition. The funerals for the dead have become primary targets.
On Sunday, at least 9 people were killed
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/25/us-syria-idUSLDE73N02P20110425>
in Jabla alone and dozens of democratic activists were arrested in raids on
private residences by the secret police. This weekend’s events should put to
rest any naïve notion that Assad is a “reformer” as Secretary Clinton said
or that the lifting of the state of emergency is anything but an insincere
political trick.

Demonstrators bravely turned out en masse despite the casualties over the
previous week. In Deir al-Zour, a statue of Bashar Assad’s late brother was
set on fire and destroyed. <http://youtu.be/tyMtuszY7k4>  Protests took
place throughout the country, including Homs, Izzra, Latakia, Banias,
Qamishli and the capital of Damascus. On Saturday, four were killed as
demonstrators seized a headquarters for state and military security. The
protesters have vowed to continue their fight and some areas of Damascus are
organizing
<http://reformsyria.org/youth-revolution-2011/syrians-are-on-the-move-221>
a three-day period of civil disobedience when stores will close their doors.
After citizens were shot by snipers in Jableh on Sunday, residents blocked a
major highway going from Tartous to Latakia in retaliation.

“They [the protesters] say they cannot stop midway. Many of the activists we
speak to who take to the streets, they tell us if they stop now, they know
they’ll end up in jail…and they will not stop until there is a democratic
Syria,” Al-Jazeera’s correspondent in Damascus said.
<http://blogs.aljazeera.net/live/middle-east/syria-live-blog-april-24> 

As reported
<http://frontpagemag.com/2011/04/25/the-bloody-streets-of-syria/2011/04/20/t
urning-point-in-syria/>  in FrontPage Magazine last week, the regime is
looking at Homs, the country’s third largest city, as a severe threat. It
has reportedly warned the Sufi sheikhs that the city faces destruction if
the protests do not end. A massacre on the level of Hama in 1982 has not
taken place but the city is under siege. Eyewitnesses say
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-13175677>  that the gunfire has
resulted in empty streets as anyone seen outside is subject to arrest or
attack. Security personnel still surround the city and the food supply is
said to have been cut off.

Videos posted on the Internet show savage attacks by the security services
on unarmed protesters but it is very difficult to get detailed information
out of Syria since the regime has kicked out most foreign media. One
reporter from Al-Jazeera was forced to exit the country on Saturday when the
government would not renew his visa and threatened him with the “full force
of the law” if he stayed. There are frequent reports that the families of
those killed are being required to sign statements confirming their loved
ones were murdered by “terrorists” or “armed gangs” before being given the
bodies for burial. There are also accounts of burials being forced to happen
at night to prevent funerals during the day that could become a rallying
point for the opposition.

Two parliamentarians from Daraa and the city’s mufti have resigned to
protest the violence. There still isn’t a wave of defections as other
countries facing uprisings have experienced but stories of soldiers and
police refusing orders to kill civilians continue to come in.

The killing <http://pajamasmedia.com/tatler/2011/04/22/all-hell-in-syria/>
of the deputy commander of the 90th division outside Damascus, Jameel
al-Assad, is said to have come at the hands of a soldier after his forces
were told to open fire. In another incident, the body of an army officer was
delivered to his family who were told that he was murdered by the nefarious
elements behind the protests. His uncle, also an officer, reacted by blaming
the regime and causing a protest in Tadmur. A Kurdish soldier from Amouda
has also been executed for refusing orders. Notably, the regime has arrested
Mansour al-Ali, who the Jerusalem Post describes
<http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=217734>  as a “prominent
figure” in the Allawite community that the regime draws its ranks from.

The Assad regime continues to deny that its security services or military is
responsible for the murders and continues to blame unspecified “armed gangs”
and radical Islamic terrorists. In reaction to these accusations, protesters
in Homs chanted
<http://reformsyria.org/youth-revolution-2011/syrians-are-on-the-move-216> ,
“Brothers we want freedom, not Salafism.” Hamas and Hezbollah have not
endorsed the uprising and the Muslim Brotherhood has yet to put pressure on
the regime or mobilize its supporters to back the protests. Farid Ghadry of
the Reform Party of Syria wrote an article
<http://ghadry.com/2011/04/24/where-is-your-syrian-humanitarian-flotilla-erd
ogan/>  lambasting the hypocrisy of these groups and the Turkish government
and said, “When elections come, we will make the MB [Muslim Brotherhood] in
Syria pay for [their] silence.”

President Obama has joined other Western leaders in condemning the
“outrageous use of violence to quell protests” but no substantive action has
followed. The International Commission of Jurists and Human Rights Watch are
demanding that
<http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/middleeast/la-fg-syria-unrest
-20110425,0,3390653.story>  sanctions be placed on the Syrian officials
involved and for an international investigation
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42737474/ns/world_news-mideastn_africa>  into
the acts. Senator Joe Lieberman is suggesting
<http://www.newsmax.com/InsideCover/lieberman-syria-arms-embargo/2011/04/24/
id/393906>  the enforcement of an arms embargo and now, the Washington Post
is slamming the U.S. response in an editorial.

“As a moral matter, the stance of the United States is shameful. To stand by
passively while hundreds of people seeking freedom are gunned down by their
government makes a mockery of the U.S. commitment to human rights,” the
newspaper said.
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/shameful-us-inaction-on-syrias-massa
cres/2011/04/22/AFROWsQE_story.html> 

But the U.S. has only offered words to the anti-American dictatorship of
Bashar Assad. Even small measures like withdrawing the ambassador have yet
to be taken. Seemingly, the administration’s posture toward Syria is yet
another example of the curious “Obama Doctrine” apropos the Middle East:
Offering hostility and heavy-handedness to allies (Egypt, Israel) and
unimportant actors on the world stage (Gaddafi), while American enemies and
terrorist regimes are handled with extreme, bewildering delicacy.

  _____  

Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article:
http://frontpagemag.com/2011/04/25/the-bloody-streets-of-syria/

 



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