http://www.debka.com/article/20997/

 

Rekindled Syrian protests could revive Assad's threat to hit Israeli border 
DEBKAfile Special Report June 4, 2011, 5:55 PM (GMT+02:00) 

Tags:   <http://www.debka.com/search/tag/Syria/> Syria
http://www.debka.com/static/images/tag_arrow.gif
<http://www.debka.com/search/tag/Bashar%20Assad/> Bashar Assad
http://www.debka.com/static/images/tag_arrow.gif
<http://www.debka.com/search/tag/Israel/> Israel
http://www.debka.com/static/images/tag_arrow.gif
<http://www.debka.com/search/tag/Turkish%20PM/> Turkish PM
http://www.debka.com/static/images/tag_arrow.gif
<http://www.debka.com/search/tag/Muslim%20Brotherhood/> Muslim Brotherhood
http://www.debka.com/static/images/tag_arrow.gif 

http://www.debka.com/dynmedia/photos/2011/04/14/big/5.jpg

It's still not over for Bashar Assad?

Two unforeseen events Friday, June 3 rekindled Syrian protests with full
force - just as Syrian President Bashar Assad was preparing to celebrate his
reassertion of authority after suppressing the uprising against his regime
with active Iranian and Hizballah help: The leaders of the Syrian
opposition-in-exile meeting in Antalya under Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip
Erdogan's aegis struck a deal with the Muslim Brotherhood which brought
100,000 Brotherhood loyalists back on the streets in the northern town of
Hama.
debkafile's military sources disclose: Just as the conference of major
Syrian opposition party leaders approached a fruitless ending, the Muslim
Brotherhood, consented to introducing a clause in the "National Unity
Charter" providing for the separation of religion and state in the
guidelines of the post-Assad regime.
The MB made this concession after consulting with the group's leaders in
Cairo and under heavy Turkish pressure.
It means that, even if the Brotherhood, which is banned and persecuted under
the Assad regime, does run for election, the regime taking over would not be
religious in nature.
This decision is of major significance not only for Syria but also for
Egypt, Jordan and the Palestinians where the Muslim Brotherhood has a strong
presence.
Word of the Antalya accord flashed through Hama, center of the Brotherhood's
revolt against the Assad family since 1982, and brought half the population
out on the streets. Syrian security forces were caught unawares. Someone on
the spot or along the higher Syrian and Iranian chain of command in Damascus
panicked. An order went out to shoot directly into the crowd and break up
the demonstration with maximum casualties. The result of up to 150 dead and
350 injured ignited fresh outbreaks in neighboring Homs, a town of more than
1.2 million inhabitants.

Northern Syria was aflame again after the uprising in the North and most
other parts of Syria had largely subsided last week.
Fresh disturbances also hit the southern province of Horan and its capital
Deraa a month after unrest there had been suppressed by troops shooting dead
more than 500 protesters and injuring thousands. Covert Saudi agents
operating from Ramtha in neighboring Jordan managed to whip up fresh
anti-Assad riots in Deraa and Deir a-Zur among the Shamar, a nomadic tribe
which roams across the Syrian, Jordanian and Iraqi borders and whose center
is in northern Saudi Arabia.
The new outbreaks confronted President Assad with a fresh challenge at the
very moment that he was polishing his victory speech to celebrate the
crushing of the revolt against him.

He must now decide between carrying on with his iron-fist crackdown to douse
persistent protests, or rely on the new bloodbath in Hama, Deraa and Deir
a-Zur to act as a deterrent against the nationwide revival of mass
demonstrations.

The third option, which he threatened earlier in the three-month revolt,
would be to re-channel the fury directed against his regime into aggression
on the Syrian-Israeli border.

 

 

 

 



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