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Syria : important video

From the comments
REVLON http://www.joshualandis.com/blog/?p=11200&cp=all#comments
Dear Joshua,
The videoclip that you posted is a cut of the original. It shows proceedings of the tribal meeting that came on the heel of the abduction of Sheikh Shuyookh Syrian tribes Sheikh nawaf AlBasheer.
بيان العشائر في دير الزور ‫29721474


Aug 3, 2011

Here is a transcription of some of the speakers statements
Young tribal member (5 minutes)
– No regime will sign to its surrender.
– Th soldiers, shabbeha and foreign merceneries besieging our city are terrified of us. They think of us as cannibals. This plays into our hands!
– The city of deirAlZor did not have and now does not have arms, as they claim.
– We will be open to negotiating with the regime (About the Sheikh’s arrest). We will extend one hand and guard ourselves with a stick in the other.
– The regime have succeded in subjugating us because we lost faith in God and Jihad. We have regaind them back. There is no going back
– Our elements are urged to head to our strategic points in the city. We have selected them so as our spies can provide advance warning for any impending threat from the regime forces.

Sheikh
– A couiple of days ago a group of us, including lawyers and Doctors met with a delegation from the Army
– Our demands were as follows:
o The release of all political prisnors, prior to the arrest of Sheikh Nawaf
o The withdrawal of Army and security forces from the city.
– The army negotiator replied that they agreed with some tribal benefactors on granting the tribes 20 license plates for automobiles and 5000 job opportunities.
– We rejected their offer as silly.
– The negotiating officer telephoned Officer Riadh Shaleesh and informed him of the tribal meeting demands.
– Shaleesh’s response: The army is in a mission and shall not withdraw.
– The Sheikh concluded by saying: By tomorrow, if our demands are not met we will bring our arms and go down to the city.

A religious tribal member:
– A religious prelude
– Jihad is part of the heritage of the Islamic Umma
– Our Sunni brothers make up the majority of the army; We want them out of the army.
– The regime are forcing our Sunni brothers to kill each other by sending Homsi’s to Kill Deiri’s and Hasakawi’s to kill in dar3awi’s. This should stop.
– We want peace. But if Jihad is forced on us so be it!

Sheikh conclusion remarks
– We welcome and respect the statements of the members
– This regime does not appreciate our peaceful stance and is not serious about dialogue.
– We have been pleading for dialogue for the last 5 months! Alas this regime is bent on staying in power.
– Frankly, as for 3alawis, the mind set of their professors and shepards in this conflict are one and the same.
– Notwithstanding, we have a committee to keep the channel of dialogue, while we stay alert with our guns to defend ourselves.
– We either live proud or die martyrs defending our honour and territories.
– We are proud tribes; when dar3a pleaded for help they addressed the tribes of our city first!
– I ask the able to donate for our cause.

Personal impressions:
– This is a prototypical example of a form of collective councel that is thousands of years old.
– Nowhere in any city in Syria a pre-announced, and organised gatherings can take place under the watchful eyes of the regime.
– It was attended by over a hundred members
– The speakers were representative of the young revolutionists, religious members, and the the tribal chief.
– One of the members had a machine gun strapped to his shoulder. This is nothing recent and has nothing to do with the revolution . They have always been armed.
It is part of their way of life.
– The speech of all members was defiant, with tribal and religious undertones.
This does not represent a intercurrent Salafi trend or infiltration.
It is a true reflection of the conservative mindset of the tribes of Syria.
– The decision is a declaration of rebellion until the approval of the demands of the tribes.

Syria : a Christian from Homs (Arabic)

Syria : The Great Divide!

Both Assad supporters and opponents are not as homogeneous as they are said to be, and both hold deeply held beliefs about the “other side,” but only the protesters have so far shown demonstrable willingness to rise above their prejudice and reach out to the other side. Assad supporters have responded by lies, accusations, and mindless violence.

Saturday August 6, 2011

Eyewitness reports that Hama City has now completely fallen under the control of Assad troops. Most inhabitants have left the city and those left are now hostages. Power is still out and many streets are reportedly strewn with bodies of residents who were killed by the shelling and/or snipers. Food supplies are running low, and the city virtually ran out of baby formulas. Eyewitnesses report serious shortage of potable water.

In response to allegations that the Iraqi Government will be providing $10 billion in aid to the Assad regime, the Iraqi Minster of Finance, Rafei Aleissawi, issued a statement recently clarifying that the amount is actually $6 billion only, to be paid in three installments over the next 9 months, beginning from the agreement date signed between the two governments on July 27th.

Human Rights Organization put the death toll for Friday August 5, excluding Hama City, at 29, with dozens reported missing.

The Austrian Central Bank decided to stop abiding by a bilateral agreement to mint Syrian currency.

Syrian security officers arrest the known dissident Walid Al-Bouni, and his two sons.

Syrian army sends more tanks and troops into Homs and Deir Ezzor City.

Links

Prominent Syria poet calls on Assad to step down

Poet Adunis is one of the Arab world’s well-respected intellectuals; describes Syria’s oppostion movement as disunited.

Gulf countries call on Syria to end bloodshed

Gulf states called for an “immediate halt to violence and bloodshed” in Syria after security forces killed at least 24 civilians in the latest round of anti-government protests.

Leading politician urges EU to withdraw diplomats from Syria

A leading member of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats has called for EU ambassadors to be withdrawn from Syria. Meanwhile, Germany’s foreign minister says change is inevitable in Damascus.

Syria looks toward parliamentary elections by year’s end

But Syrian opposition members say it’s questionable whether the move could end decades of single-party Baathist rule without constitutional reform. Observers say one of the articles of the Syrian constitution guarantees supremacy for the ruling Baath party.

Syria Forces Extend Siege on Hama as Toll Rises

Activists also said that the death toll could be much higher, but that a comprehensive and accurate count was almost impossible, given the state of communications in the city, the siege and the difficulty of moving around. They said that they feared the near-total media blackout imposed on the city could mean that the military was carrying out an unrestrained operation.

Syria: inside the city under siege

It was the start of the Muslim month of Ramadan, supposed to be a period of daytime fasting and prayer to reinforce the virtues of patience, spirituality, humility and submission to God.

Police run Syria, defector says

Lieutenant Khalaf, who served in the Syrian army for 10 years, said the military itself is “completely” subject to the security apparatus, adding that Syrian prisons are filled with hundreds of army officers who refused to open fire on civilians.

Senator Robert Casey: Bashar al-Assad must step down

… the United States should continue to pursue a resolution at the U.N. Security Council condemning the Syrian government’s behavior. Last week’s statement by the council was a positive step but should be bolstered by a strong resolution.

The Assads do have supporters on the ground, after all the protesters are not killing themselves. But, and while the majority of the supporters of the Assads come from an Alawite, Christian, Druze and Ismailite background, not all members of these communities are in agreement with the Assads and many have been part of this Revolution since the beginning.

On the other hand, the Assad support base include a significant Sunni component whose membership is not only derived from the ranks of the Sunni commercial elite and the upper middle class, but also from the ranks of poorer urban and rural classes whose family members are connected one way or another to the Assads’ large security apparatus, and Baath institutions.

In theory, these communal intersections between the supporters and opponents of the Assads should facilitate dialog and negotiations at some point, but now is clearly not the time for that.

To be clear, the Assads can never be part of any dialog. Theirs has always been an all-or-nothing approach, which makes them unable to offer anything of substance to the protesters. Moreover, the Assads don’t seem to have reached the stage yet where they may be willing to negotiate an exit strategy for themselves. They still believe, it seems, as do their supporters, that they can somehow contain and survive the Revolution with little change. Current developments reflect continued commitment to this mentality. The Assads can never be part of any solution.

But there cannot be a solution, one that can help us avoid significant bloodshed, without successfully reaching out to the Assad support base.

The problem here is that if top military general and security chiefs have shown themselves to be too far gone to be promising candidates for a successful outreach effort, the civilian component does not seem that promising either, at least at this stage.

Indeed, there is a certain level of paranoia and denial within the ranks of Assads’ supporters that leaves little room for any kind of dialog or outreach, again at this stage. They keep seeing networks of Salafists and terrorists springing up all over Syria leading to the establishment of one Kandahar after another, when the only evidence in this regard is the verbal assertions of regime propagandists and inflammatory reports on state-run media. Regional and international news networks that provide evidence to the contrary, evidence that highlights regime brutality and the peaceful nature of the Revolution, are seen as part of an ongoing conspiracy, and their evidence is ignored.

Even Assad supporters living in the West and who have access to reportage by known western journalists like Anthony Shadid among others, who actually managed to visit Hama City, walked down its streets and talked to its residents and protest leaders, chalk off the observations of these people on the peaceful nature of the protest movement as part of the international conspiracy or as reflection of the naivety of the journalists involved.

Furthermore, signs of religiosity among the protesters are taken as evidence of extremism, and the rural appearance of some as evidence of backwardness and lack of readiness for democracy. Meanwhile, most Assad supporters, especially those who joined the army or security forces or became members of the proliferating pro-Assad militias, themselves come from a rural background and are no less religiously observant than the protesters, as evidenced by the jewelry and/or tattoos they wear: the crosses, the Allah engraving and the mini forked swords (a Shiite and Alawite religious symbol). Religiosity is simply not the exclusive domain of the Sunnis in Syria.

How can rational dialog take place in these conditions? What sort of guarantees can be offered to change this mentality? What sort of statements and/or actions can the protesters offer to appease the fear and worries involved? Assad supporters seem to be currently cruising on a “cut down the tall trees” mode, it’s pretty much doubtful that they will stop for a serious rational chat anytime soon. So long as they cling to the belief that the Revolution can and should be crushed, and that Assad should be in charge of whatever “reform” process to take place, they leave little room for dialog or even negotiations.

Religious and sectarian prejudice is deeply ingrained in our culture, this is something that no one can deny. And yes, both protesters and supporters, irrespective of their particular religious sectarian backgrounds, are guilty in this regard. But the protesters have been trying to rise above theirs since the beginning of the Revolution. The discourse of some of their “spokespeople” might occasionally fall short of the slogans of national unity they raise, a shortcoming characteristic of such nascent movements and which at this stage also comes as a reaction to the ongoing brutal crackdown and the lies and provocations that come with it, but the preponderance of their actions come as a reflection of a sincere desire to build something new and inclusive.

Their efforts at outreach, however, are unlikely to have the desired effects at this stage. It is only when the regime is at the very point of collapse that we can hope to begin negotiating and dialoging with the other side, because only then some might be willing to listen, driven by the same existential angst that is being manipulated by the Assads today and channeled into the current crackdown.

Right now, the focus of the protesters should be on winning, and that, in large part, calls for keeping their activities peaceful. With increasing violence on part of the Assads and their supporters and loyalists, and increasing attempts by fringe elements to push for retributions, protest leaders have their work cut out for them.

The focus on winning, however, does not preclude the need for enunciating a vision for an inclusive tomorrow and coming out with a plan for the transitional period, seeing that our ability to acquire international legitimacy and to successfully reach out to that important segment of the population that remains silent seems to hinge on this.

At the end of the day, however, it seems quite probable that the Assads will have some diehard supporters who will fight for them to the end. While so many are focused on the potential drive for retribution on part the revolutionaries, it is more than likely that these diehard elements, who are responsible for the preponderance of the violence today, will be the ones to seek retributions tomorrow when their cause is lost, after all they are the better organized and armed side, and the brainwashed ones whose paranoia is fueling the current mayhem.

source

The Syrian Free Officers

propaganda on Syria

The propaganda for and against the Syrian regime intensifies at a feverish pitch.  Syrian regime TV is an insult to anyone’s intelligence.  You watch the news and think that Syrian regime is fighting Israel, and not its own civilian population.  They list casualties among the “regime/order preserving forces”, but not the civilians unless they talk about “the criminal gang” that roams the country and shoots at people and Syrian regime forces alike.  AlJazeera continues its propaganda that ignores news: it is now the YouTube channel.  It merely reproduces YouTube clips from the internet.  I also notice that it keeps increasing the estimate of the Hamah massacres week after week: Amnesty International and Syrian Muslim Brothers used to rely on the estimate of 10,000, although it could be more.  Yesterday, Aljazeera increased the estimate to 38,000 (in the previous version of this article, it talked about an “official estimate” of more than 10,000.  

That is a lie because the lousy Syrian regime never ever gave any estimate of the massacre and its never ever talks about the massacre.  See my problem with Aljazeera: it is not about politics, it is about unreliability, unprofessionalism, and fabrications, exaggerations, and lies.

 It has made it easy for supporters of the Syrian regime to discredit it.  New TV, on the other hand, clearly has resolved to support the Syrian bloody campaign of yesterday.  Instead of covering the stories of the victims of the regime, it showed (YouTube again) images of unknown people tossing unidentified dead bodies in the water and said they were protesters tossing bodies of soldiers of the Syrian army.  

Hariri media initially ignored the protests of Syria (in the first few weeks, only As-Safir and Al-Akhbar covered extensively the protests in Syria): they were clearly waiting for orders from Saudi Arabia.  Once the orders from Riyadh came, they went all out against the regime like Saudi media.  Yesterday, mini-Hariri spoke about the right of the Syrian people to “decide on its own choices freely and in the framework of its human rights”.  Mini-Hariri was not asked if he supported such rights in Saudi Arabia.

Syria is on course for destruction

Bashar al-Assad knows his fall from power is inevitable, but seems determined his dominion will self-destruct with him

Syria: Hama protest

A citizen journalism image of Syrian anti-regime protesters in the city of Hama, Syria. Photograph: AP

The night before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan began, the Syrian army was mobilised and deployed, not to the occupied Golan Heights, but to Syrian cities and villages.

The brunt of this campaign of state-sponsored violence was absorbed, yet again, by the defiant city of Hama. In 1982, President Bashar al-Assad’s father brutally crushed an armed insurrection by the Muslim Brotherhood there, killing more than 20,000 Syrian citizens along the way.

Today the Syrian army continues a tradition of fostering instability in the country, first started in 1949 when the eccentric General Husni al-Zaim (with the help of the CIA) used the Syrian army to topple the country’s first democratic government after independence.

Ironically, 1 August is called Armed Forces Day – a day when Syrians can celebrate the institution that is supposed to protect them.

Many analysts argue that the Assad regime has made a desperate attempt to crush the uprising prior to the holy month of Ramadan, when prayers held every evening in mosques throughout the country are expected to increase the frequency and intensity of protests – but I don’t think so.

I think this regime has deliberately and intentionally bloodied the nose of the Syrian people on the eve of this holy month. By now, only the most deluded of Assad’s circle of close advisers would think that the Syrian uprising can ever be crushed. The start of Ramadan should be seen as the beginning of a war of attrition by the regime against the Syrian people, similar to the situation in Libya.

Already there are smatterings about the formation of a “Free Syrian army” which, if it exists, will mean the country is entering an even bloodier stage. Yet the Syrian protesters have, in spite of fantastic stories about saboteurs and Salafist terrorists by the regime’s media, remained overwhelmingly peaceful in their protests.

In the weeks preceding the recent crackdown, Hama witnessed some of the biggest demonstrations in the country with almost no loss of life – attributed to the fact that the Syrian security forces were withdrawn from the city. But it seems that the regime is intent on provoking a violent reaction; the arrest and humiliation of an important tribal chief over the weekend was seen as a deliberate provocation, with one spokesman for the al-Baggara tribe telling al-Jazeera Arabic that “the peaceful nature of the protests will be considered over” if their chieftain is not released immediately. It seems to me that those in Assad’s circle who thought they could defuse the situation with minimal violence (I abhor labelling them as moderates) have been drowned out by the more hardline elements.

In the end, Syria has gone down the road of Libya, not that of Tunisia or Egypt. As with Muammar Gaddafi, Assad seems to have realised that once the Syrian people broke through the fear barrier, his fall from power would be inevitable. As a result, I have no doubt that the regime now intends to pursue a ferocious campaign against the people who dared to rise up against it.

In the meantime, an elaborate and extensive international network of lawyers, lobbyists, statesmen and governments will be probably be utilised to stretch out the regime’s existence for as long as possible.

Whether it was Saddam Hussein or Gaddafi, it seems as if all Arab dictators have spent the decades of their rule, apart from plundering their countries, also ensuring their dominions would self-destruct should they ever be ousted from power, as an additional bolster to their eternal rule – Après moi, le deluge! I fear that when Assad is finally ousted from power, Syria will be left a smouldering wreck.

Free Syrian Army Founded by Seven Officers to Fight the Syrian Army

[youtube http://youtu.be/SZcCbIPM37w?]

They say that based on their “patriotic feelings…[which require] an end to the massacres of the Syrian regime” they “announce the formation of the Free Syrian Army to work hand in hand with the people to obtain freedom and dignity, to overthrow the regime, to protect the uprising and the country’s wealth and to stand in the face of the irresponsible army that protects the regime.”

“We call on all the honest people in the army, officers and soldiers, to immediately defect from the Syrian army… and to join the Free Syrian Army [which aims] at forming a national army capable of protecting the uprising and all the components of the Syrian civil society of all sects,” the  officers also say in the video.

“From this moment on, we will deal with the security forces that are killing the civilians and encircling cities. We will target them in all Syrian territories with no exception.”

“We ask all honest people in the army to stand by the people and their uprising and leave the army that no longer represents the Syrian people.”

To read more: http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetails.aspx?ID=253828#ixzz1TaiVpM7K
Only 25% of a given NOW Lebanon article can be republished. For information on republishing rights from NOW Lebanon: http://www.nowlebanon.com/Sub.aspx?ID=125478

What are you afraid of ?

[youtube http://youtu.be/v-UpWA_d5Vo?]

Way out of the Syrian crisis

Some observers believe that a dialogue between the regime and the opposition is the safest way forward

Way out of the Syrian crisis

  • Image Credit: Niño Jose Heredia/Gulf News
  • The opposition faces a stark choice: either to go all out to bring the regime down, or to cooperate with it in building a new and better Syria.

The Syrian protest movement, which started in mid-March, has this week entered its fourth month. Week after week, the Friday demonstrations have grown and their tone has hardened. Increasingly, the strident call is for the fall of the regime. Angry protesters say that more than 1,500 of their number have been shot dead in the streets and well over 10,000 arrested, while the regime retorts that 400 of its soldiers and policemen have been killed by ‘armed gangs’.

As casualties mount on both sides, so the rift widens between the regime and its opponents. Ramadan is fast approaching. When the daytime fast is ended at sunset, the tradition is for the rich to feed the poor, often at trestle tables in the courtyards of mosques — or so it was before mosques became centres of protest. If large crowds gather next month for occasions of this sort, there could be serious trouble.

The opposition faces a stark choice: either to go all out to bring the regime down, or to cooperate with it in building a new and better Syria. The first course is hazardous: if the Baathist state is torn down, what will replace it? The future is uncharted. The second course requires an act of faith: it means accepting that the regime truly wants to implement radical reforms by means of a national dialogue. Its attempt to launch such a dialogue has so far failed to convince.

The regime has mishandled the protest movement. Slow to grasp the nature of the popular challenge, it has been violent and incompetent in confronting it. The security services, like President Bashar Al Assad himself, seem to have been taken by surprise. By resorting to live fire against the protesters, they displayed indiscipline and arrogant contempt for the lives of ordinary citizens. Ordinary people want respect. This has been one of the motors of the Arab Spring.

Al Assad himself has fumbled. Of his three speeches in the past four months, two were public relations disasters and the third far from the rousing, dramatic appeal to the nation that his supporters had expected and the occasion demanded. Above all, he has failed to put an end to the killings, arbitrary arrests, beatings and torture which have sullied his and the country’s reputation.

Meanwhile, the Baath party — ‘leader of state and society’, according to the notorious article 8 of the Constitution — has been virtually silent, confirming the widespread belief that it has become a hollow shell, concerned only to protect its privileges and its corrupt network of patronage.

No forceful leadership

If the regime has shown itself to be weak, the opposition is weaker still. It wants to challenge the system, but it evidently does not know how to proceed. It is split in a dozen ways between secularists, civil rights activists, democrats — and Islamists; between angry unemployed youths in the street and venerable figures of the opposition, hallowed by years in prison; between the opposition in Syria and the exiles abroad; between those who call for western intervention and those who reject any form of foreign interference.

The opposition met at Antalya in Turkey some weeks ago, and then more recently in Istanbul, but no forceful leadership or clear programme has emerged, let alone anything which might look like an alternative government. The opposition movements that have declared themselves — the National Democratic Grouping, the Damascus Declaration signatories, the National Salvation Council formed last week in Istanbul, the local coordination committees in Syria itself — are loose groupings of individuals with little structure or popular base and few clear ideas.

The truth is that, as Tunisia and Egypt have discovered, it is exceedingly difficult to bring about a transition from an autocratic, highly centralised, one-party system to anything resembling democratic pluralism. In Tunisia, no fewer than 90 political parties are planning to contest next October’s elections in conditions of great confusion.

In Syria — and for that matter in most Arab countries — there is no experience of free elections, no real political parties, no free trade unions, no state or civil society institutions, no separation of powers, no independent judiciary, little real political education. The Syrian parliament is a farce. And, as in Egypt and Tunisia, the problem of how to integrate Islamic movements into a democratic political system remains a puzzle.

Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood — renamed the Freedom and Justice Party in preparation for the elections — and Tunisia’s Al Nahda tend to frighten the western-educated middle and upper classes. That is why many worried secularists across the region look to Turkey as an inspiring model because Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s AKP has proved that Islam is compatible with democracy.

In Syria, everything will have to be rebuilt from the ground up — including the ideology of the state. The old slogans of anti-colonialism, Arab unity and Arab nationalism, Baathism, radical Islamism, Arabism itself, all will need to be rethought and redefined for the political challenge ahead.

Since the task is so vast, and since any viable transition must inevitably take time, some observers have come to the view that a dialogue between the regime and the opposition is the safest way forward. Creating a new political system is not the only problem. Equally urgent is tackling the huge social and economic problems with which countries like Syria are faced: an exploding population, rampant youth unemployment, an impoverished middle class and a semi-destitute working class, a soaring cost of living, policies of economic liberalisation which have gone wrong and benefited only a tiny and corrupt elite; the neglect of workers’ rights whether on the land or in shops and factories. Syria needs a new social contract.

The rich monarchies of the Gulf can spend their way out of trouble. Saudi Arabia, for example, has announced plans to spend $70billion (Dh257billion) on low-cost housing. Syria, with about the same size of population, can only dream of such figures. If the Syrian economy is not to collapse, it will no doubt need bailing out. Iran may have to come to the rescue.

No one should suppose that the Syrian regime will go down without a fight. Most regimes seek to destroy their enemies. China had its Tiananmen Square massacre and Russia its bitter war in Chechnya. Iran crushed the Green movement. In 1982, Israel killed 17,000 people in Lebanon in an attempt to destroy the PLO and install a pro-Israeli vassal in Beirut. The use of live fire is an Israeli speciality, as Lebanon discovered in 2006 (1,600 dead), Gaza in 2008-9 (another 1,400 dead) and the Palestinians for the past 60 years.

When America was attacked on 9/11, that great bastion of democracy invaded Afghanistan, and then Iraq. Hundreds of thousands died. Millions were displaced or forced to flee abroad. Many were tortured. Was it 160 times or 180 times that Khalid Shaikh Mohammad was water-boarded? Syria still plays host to about a million Iraqis, victims of America’s war.

A sectarian civil war on the Iraqi or Lebanese model is every Syrian’s nightmare. There must surely be another way out of the crisis.

Patrick Seale is a commentator and author of several books on Middle East affairs, including Asad of Syria: The Struggle for the Middle East and Abu Nidal: A Gun for Hire.