Syria Watch

Syrian Revolution Digest: Tuesday, 23 April 2013

Repeatedly!

Assad has “repeatedly” used chemical weapons, according to Israel, but the U.S. continues to dither. Whatever the reasons, this tendency to dither even when clearly set red lines have been clearly crossed has served to strengthen Assad’s resolve and is one way the U.S. has become complicit in Assad’s crimes. Providing humanitarian aid is not enough to alleviate the culpability and the guilt. Action is needed. A no-fly zone is needed. Many would say that there is no use asking for something when the political will for it is clearly lacking. But then, perhaps if we asked for it “repeatedly,” the political will for it might just materialize. Isn’t that what advocacy is about? Besides, a no-fly zone is part of the solution, we cannot make do without it so we cannot give up on it. How can we “guarantee” anyone’s safety when we have no ability to guarantee ours? 

Death Toll: 136 martyrs, including 7 woman; 9 children and 12 under torture: 53 in Damascus and Suburbs; 28 in Aleppo; 18 in Homs; 13 in Idlib; 13 in Daraa; 4 in Hama; 3 in Raqqa; 3 in Deir Ezzor; and 1 in Banyas (LCC).

 

News

Syria Used Chemical Arms Repeatedly, Israel Asserts “The regime has increasingly used chemical weapons,” said Brig. Gen. Itai Brun, research commander in the intelligence directorate of the Israeli Defense Forces, echoing assertions made by Britain and France. “The very fact that they have used chemical weapons without any appropriate reaction,” he added, “is a very worrying development, because it might signal that this is legitimate.” General Brun’s statements, made at a security conference here, are the most definitive by an Israeli official to date regarding evidence of possible chemical weapons attacks on March 19 near Aleppo and Damascus. Another military official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that the evidence had been presented to the Obama administration — which has declared the use of chemicals a “red line” that could prompt American action in Syria — but that Washington has not fully accepted the analysis.

White House: Syria’s use of chemical weapons unclear White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said Tuesday the administration has made no conclusions on whether or not Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s forces have used chemical weapons against civilians.

United States, Russia agree to try to revive Syria plan U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Tuesday he and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had agreed to look for ways to revive a Syrian peace plan, but admitted that doing so would be extremely difficult. Kerry, speaking after talks with Lavrov and NATO colleagues in Brussels, also backed away from earlier comments suggesting he was calling for increased NATO contingency planning on Syria. Kerry said he and Lavrov had discussed ways to revive a peace plan agreed in Geneva last June that called for a transitional government. “We are both going to go back, we are going to explore those possibilities, and we are going to talk again about if any of those other avenues could conceivably be pursued,” Kerry said. He said that while there might be a difference of opinion between Russia and the United States about when and how Syrian President Bashar al-Assad might leave office, “I don’t think there’s a difference of opinion that his leaving may either be inevitable or necessary to be able to have a solution.” But, he stressed: “I would say to you that’s it’s a very difficult road … No one should think there is an easy way to move forward on this.”

Obama: US will work to up support for Syria rebels President Barack Obama says the U.S. and Qatar will continue to work on more support for the Syrian opposition in the coming months. His remarks come after Secretary of State John Kerry said Sunday that the U.S. will double its nonlethal assistance to the opposition. That’s an additional $123 million in supplies that could include armored vehicles, body armor and night vision goggles. Obama spoke in the Oval Office alongside the emir of Qatar, Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani (HAH’-mihd bihn JAH’-sihm ahl THAH’-nee). The Qatari leader is one of several Mideast leaders Obama has invited to the White House following his trip to the region. Obama also says he and the emir spoke about Egypt and Middle East peace. He says both leaders are under no illusions about the difficulties in solving the region’s problems.

Anger in Lebanese streets as Syria border fighting rages Long-standing sectarian tensions in Lebanon have been further fuelled this week by heavy clashes in the border region. Lebanese Sunni Muslims support the Sunni-led opposition fighting Assad. Most Lebanese Shi’ite groups support Assad and the Alawite sect to which he belongs, an offshoot of Shi’ite Islam which has largely supported the Assad family’s four-decade rule. Along the border, pro-Assad forces – including fighters believed to be from Lebanon’s powerful Shi’ite guerrilla movement Hezbollah – have made strategic gains in recent days. They appear to be creating a crucial corridor between Assad’s seat of power, Damascus, and the Alawite stronghold region along Syria’s Mediterranean coast.

Boston reciprocates love to Syria in wake of attacks Thirteen Tufts University students and Somerville, Mass., residents created a sign about peace and safety for the Syrians who had offered condolences to Boston, after the marathon bombings, on a banner dated April 19. “I feel like a lot of people express sympathy when bad things happen in America; often we don’t see the same happening from our end to their end,” said Tufts junior Yeehui Tan, 22, who organized creating the Boston banner. “This is a step in changing that.” The activist group that posted the Syrian sign, Occupied Kafranbel, put the image of the Boston-created banner on their Facebook page Sunday — signaling the message reached Syria. Connection with this group was the goal, Tufts junior SaraMarie Lee Bottaro, 20, said.

False Report of White House Blast Shakes Up Stock Markets A false report of explosions at the White House and injuries to President Barack Obama sent U.S. stocks plunging Tuesday before they recovered quickly. The Associated Press said hackers broke into its Twitter account and wrote: “Breaking: Two explosions in the White House and Barack Obama is injured.” Within minutes, the most widely watched U.S. stock index, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, fell about 130 points, erasing the day’s gains. But the Dow regained the losses just as quickly when it became obvious the reports were a hoax. A group called the Syrian Electronic Army is claiming responsibility for the cyber attack. Its claim has not been verified. The group has claimed similar attacks on other news organizations.

Syrians live in fear as kidnappings increase Gunmen loyal to both sides kidnap people – sometimes for political reasons but more often as a money-making criminal enterprise. So most people in Damascus think it is safer to stay at home after dark. It is another way in which the war is destroying Syria’s social fabric and it will make putting this country back together a much harder job, whoever wins the war.

Damascus sees EU plan to buy rebel oil as act of aggression The EU will be trading “with the so-called opposition Coalition, which represents no one in Syria,” the letters to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the Security Council said. The decision is an act of “complicity in the theft of resources that belong to the Syrian people, represented by the current, legitimate government,” they added. “The European Union is following its political and economic campaign that targets the national economy and the daily bread of Syrian citizens,” the ministry added, referring to EU sanctions on the Assad regime.

Syria rebels, army in fierce battle for Al-Qusair Fierce clashes pitted Syrian rebels against government troops assisted by Hezbollah fighters in several villages near the border with Lebanon Tuesday, as a military source told AFP the army expects to seize Al-Qusair, a rebel stronghold, “within days.” “The army is leading the campaign on the northern and eastern fronts, and Hezbollah is leading the fight on the southern and western fronts,” said Syrian Observatory for Human Rights director Rami Abdel-Rahman. “The army is advancing in the Al-Qusair region, and the capture of the city is just days away, at most,” the military source said on condition of anonymity. “The aim is to cleanse the region of terrorists in order to guarantee the safe return of residents” who fled fighting in the area, the source added, using the regime term for rebels.

Brahimi tells Security Council: Syria situation hopeless U.N.-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi described the situation in Syria as “hopeless” in a recent closed-door briefing to the U.N. Security Council, according to a document leaked Tuesday. He added that dialogue was impossible when all warring parties were confident of victory. During his briefing Friday, the text of which was published by Lebanon’s Elnashra in full Tuesday, Brahimi acknowledged that the growing regional dimensions of the conflict increasingly made it resemble a proxy war.

Syrian bishops in hands of ‘Chechens’: church sources “The news which we have received is that an armed group… (of) Chechens stopped the car and kidnapped the two bishops while the driver was killed,” an official from the Syriac Orthodox diocese who declined to be named said in a statement posted online. Bishop Yohanna Ibrahim, head of Aleppo’s Syriac Orthodox diocese and Boulos Yaziji, head of the Greek Orthodox diocese in the same city, were kidnapped on Monday near the Turkish border, the statement said.

 

Investigative Reports

Bashar’s War: For the Syrian regime’s faithful mouthpieces, victory is always around the corner. In a conflict where new media — both pro- and anti-regime — have helped shape events on the ground, the traditional Syrian state media feel robotic and derivative. The print media coverage consists largely of rewritten SANA news releases, while Radio Damascus’s call-in shows — and their suspiciously articulate participants — sound like playacting. The one bright spot is Syria’s official television: If you can detach from the content of the coverage, the reports are frequently so acid and sarcastic that they’re hilarious.

‘We don’t want them in our revolution’: Syria rebels decry Al-Qaeda interlopers With the Syrian revolution faltering and secular rebel groups disintegrating amid infighting and civilian abuses, it is the jihadists who have benefitted most. Syrians believe these groups have hijacked a secular revolution. “We don’t want them here,” shouted Ahmad Fartawi, 35, when queried about the organization. “We don’t want them in our revolution. These people don’t help our cause,” the computer peripherals salesman explained bitterly while biting into a falafel sandwich.

Jennifer Rubin: Running out of excuses on Syria The appropriate House and Senate oversight committees should get senior officials under oath and have them explain why the administration, unlike the French, British and Israelis, won’t acknowledge the use of chemical weapons and whether the president simply is refusing to acknowledge the obvious for fear of having to act. As for the White House press corps, once again they are demonstrating an utter lack of interest in pressing the White House on important issues. It’s time for them and for Congress to do their job; the president sure isn’t.

The Syrian Revolution and Future of Minorities (PDF) In a nutshell, there is no fear for Syria’s minorities, but as the Syrian saying goes, “he who does not go to the market shall neither buy nor sell”. It is futile therefore to talk about a better and more secure future for the next generations, or commit to democracy and citizenship rights, if all sectors of the population do not take part in making change possible or help in the demolition and reconstruction process. Extricating ourselves from the present situation does not happen by safeguarding the status quo, but by tearing it down. Likewise, a neutral, fearful or hesitant position on the part of Syria’s minorities, and allowing themselves to be swayed by provocative and exaggerated claims against the revolution, will only lengthen the birth process, bring more pain and suffering and distort the revolution’s future and its dreams of a dignified and fee nation.

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.

 

Don’t Rush to Judgment

Things are seldom what they appear to be in Syria. This has been true long before the Revolution, and is increasingly true now, hence the need for careful examination and constant review of available evidence.

We actually don’t know yet who is behind the kidnapping of the two Christian Archbishops in Syria. Archbishop Ibrahim had turned increasingly critical of late of the government stances on the revolution and her violent tactics. The Assads have very limited tolerance for overtly critical clergymen in their midst.

Not long ago, one of Assad’s top supporters within the Sunni religious establishment, Sheikh Ramadan Al-Bouti, was killed in an incident at first described as a suicide bombing attack that left 90 dead. But a video that emerged few weeks later, whose validity was finally confirmed by Syrian State TV, told a different story, supporting claims that the loyalist Sunni cleric was actually assassinated by his own body guards, and that the whole scene was later staged, poorly, to back government claims of suicide bombing attack. Though, we cannot to date be sure of the exact reason for which the regime chose the dispense of their servile cleric, it exploited quite well to send different messages to the international community, to its supporters, and to that critical segment of the population still clinging to silence and irrelevance. All in all, the death of Al-Bouti was useful, and perhaps that’s in itself is sufficient explanation.

So, could the regime be behind the kidnappings of the two archbishops? Of course, it could. But so could any myriad of actors at this stage, especially when you take under consideration the possibility raised by church officials that a group of Chechen fighters is behind the kidnappings. And, if these reports are indeed true, whose interests could these Chechens be serving: Al-Qaeda’s or the FSB’s?

Today Syria is not just host to rebels and loyalist militias, we now have mercenary groups, made up of foreign and domestic elements, willing to sell their services to the highest bidder. In the northeast, Jabhat Al-Nusra itself is selling oil to the regime, then, using the funds to provide goods to the local population as part of its heart and minds campaign. The regime is funding the rebellion, the rebels are enabling the crackdown.

Moreover, all different sorts of security agencies now have their agents in the field and are funding their own little fighting groups on both sides, implementing agendas that seem to reflect calculations not necessarily related to the current goings-on in Syria.

As for the Assad, and even though I, like so many others, tend to refer to him as if he is still in charge, in reality, he is NOT. He is just a tool at this stage wielded by a military-security complex run by people whose ultimate loyalty now is to Iran, Russia and themselves. No one represents or speaks for Syria, or any of her ethnic communities. All Syrians are now fodder in a complex proxy-war.

As for my comments yesterday trying to explain Assad’s take on American policy towards him, it’s important to note, that irrespective of what the reality is, and what I personally believe, this is what Assad himself seems to think, as he explained in his own words. As a descendant of a dynasty that profited from the shifts and contradictions of American foreign policy, I can understand how he came to believe what he believes about America. Directly and indirectly, and often unintentionally, the U.S. contributed to the way Assad thinks and behaves today, which makes the U.S. complicit in what is taking place in Syria at this stage. The U.S. needs to understand that and takes responsibility for it. The U.S. is far from blameless in this, and the hand wringing by American officials is quite hypocritical.

 

Video Highlights

Rebels in Aleppo claim these corpses belong to Iranian militias operating in the village of Nabol http://youtu.be/xnG3uoImruc

Fighter jets continue their raid against rebel strongholds around Damascus: Zamalka http://youtu.be/EIj9JdnNvQ8 Al-Qadamhttp://youtu.be/rHlrhTIG9-c Jobar http://youtu.be/TvN_2qCnu2IMoadamiyeh http://youtu.be/TS8zEj2pguU Darayahttp://youtu.be/eSBRLMZMSJc

Rebels in Mayadeen, Deir Ezzor Province, pound the military airport with homemade rockets http://youtu.be/bCQ1ZO1qnk0 Meanwhile, Deir Ezzor Citycomes under heavy pounding http://youtu.be/A75I7zhO69Y

The village of Bashiriyeh, Idlib Province, comes under heavy poundinghttp://youtu.be/VforzTFS-gg , http://youtu.be/1vZssGtK3QM ,http://youtu.be/AiR1UupatxM

Syrian Revolution Digest: Monday, 22 April 2013

Betting on America!

You let a man get away with murder once and he might think that you didn’t notice, twice, and he might think that you are infirm of purpose, but letting him get away with it, shall we say, 100,000 times, and he might just mistake you for an ally. your rhetoric notwithstanding. This is how Assad thinks about America. But don’t take my word for it, take his: “The Americans have been pragmatic from the very beginning and never pursued any course to its [logical] conclusion. They would eventually side with the victor.”


Death Toll: 106 martyrs, including 3 women, 5 children, and 8 under torture: 47 in Damascus and Suburbs; 24 in Aleppo; 12 in Idlib; 10 in Homs; 4 in Daraa; 4 in Deir Ezzor; 2 in Hama; 1 in Raqqa; and 1 in Lattakia (LCC).

 

News

Up to 500 feared dead in Damascus suburb: activistsAt least 109 people have been documented as killed and up to 400 more are likely to have died in an almost week-long offensive by forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on a rebellious Damascus suburb, opposition activists said. If the accounts are confirmed, the killings in the mainly Sunni Muslim suburb of Jdeidet al-Fadel would amount to one of bloodiest episodes of the two-year-old uprising against Assad. Many of the dead were civilians, the activists said.

Lebanese Salafists call for jihad in Syria The calls by Sidon’s Sheikh Ahmad Assir and Tripoli’s Sheikh Salem alRifai, staunch supporters of the Syrian uprising, came as the newly appointed head of Syria’s opposition National Coalition warned that Hezbollah’s role in fighting in the central Syrian province of Homs amounted to a “declaration of war.” “What is happening in Homs is a declaration of war against the Syrian people and the Arab League should deal with it on this basis,” George Sabra said in Istanbul shortly after the opposition bloc announced his appointment as interim chief. “The Lebanese president and the Lebanese government should realize the danger that it poses to the lives of Syrians and the future relations between the two peoples and countries.” His statement follows reports that fighters from Hezbollah were taking the lead in the Syrian regime’s battle against rebel groups the Al-Qusair area of Homs.

Syria says two bishops kidnapped by rebels SANA news agency said the Syriac Orthodox and Greek Orthodox Archbishops of Aleppo, Yohanna Ibrahim and Paul Yazigi, were seized by “a terrorist group” in the village of Kfar Dael as they were “carrying out humanitarian work”. A Syriac member of the opposition Syrian National Coalition, Abdulahad Steifo, said the men had been kidnapped on the road to Aleppo from the rebel-held Bab al Hawa crossing with Turkey. Several prominent Muslim clerics have been killed in Syria’s uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, but the two bishops are the most senior church leaders caught up in the conflict which has killed more than 70,000 people across Syria.
EU lifts Syria oil embargo to bolster rebels he decision will allow for crude exports from rebel-held territory, the import of oil and gas production technology, and investments in the Syrian oil industry, the EU said in a statement. Any export or investment initiatives will be taken in close coordination with the leaders of the Syrian opposition, the bloc’s 27 foreign ministers decided at a meeting in Luxembourg. The move marks the first relaxing of EU sanctions on Syria in two years as governments try to help ease shortages of vital supplies in areas held by the opposition in the civil war-struck Arab state.

Rebels warn Hezbollah to stay out of Syria Syrian National Coalition urges the Lebanese government to ‘adopt the necessary measures to stop the aggression’ of the pro-Assad Shi’ite group.

Syria’s pro-Assad hackers are hijacking high-profile Twitter feedsOn Saturday, hackers identifying as members of the Syrian Electronic Army defaced four Twitter accounts owned by CBS News, including the “60 Minutes” account, which had 320,000 followers until it was disabled by Twitter in apparent response to the hacks. The messages were among some of the pro-Assad hackers’ most elaborate, a long string of messages that accused the United States of supporting terrorism in Syria as part of a larger plot to impose a one-world government.

Health Experts: Leishmaniasis on the Rise in War-Torn SyriaHealth workers in northern Syria have reported a dramatic rise in cases of Leishmaniasis–locally dubbed “Aleppo Button Disease” for the sores it produces–and are calling on the World Health Organization and other international agencies for help.

Car bombs on the rise in Syria, report shows The introduction to the VDC report notes that both the regime and the rebels have accused each other for bearing responsibility for all those unclaimed car bombs and explosions, which thus far have killed 1,156 civilians and rebels – including 120 children and 93 women, and only 106 opposition fighters – and 389 regime soldiers. The Daily Star could not independently verify the contents of the report.

Syrian opposition to establish moderate form of Islamic law he legal code was drawn up by Muslim scholars, judges and top anti-Assad politicians in advance of meetings this week in Istanbul convened by the Syrian National Council (SNC), where transitional justice arrangements are being discussed. The opposition hopes that an interim government, as yet unformed, will apply a version of the new legal system nationwide, after it goes into effect in areas currently controlled by the insurgents.

 

Investigative Reports

No Exit: Syria’s War Through the Eyes of a Fighter on Both SidesRebel fighter Siraj, who only uses one name to protect his family still in Damascus, understands that reluctance. Something has happened over the course of the war that corrupted even the most upright of leaders, he says. Once he defected from the Syrian Army in early 2012, he quickly climbed the ranks of a well-regarded rebel brigade fighting near Homs. But he was blinded in one eye in the battle of Baba Amr and escaped to Lebanon for surgery. When he returned to Syria a few months later, he was shocked by the levels of corruption and thievery within the ranks of his own brigade. The weapons he arranged to have smuggled over the border from Lebanon had been sold off for cash, and comrades who once winced at firing a gun now relished in the kill. Acts of battlefield barbarity had become commonplace. He saw corpses mutilated and watched opposition fighters steal from the populations they were supposed to be defending. “I started thinking, ‘Why am I in this fight?’ I sacrificed my life, my sight, my education because I thought I was on the right side. But the way they were behaving, they made me think this side isn’t so good either.” Disillusioned, Siraj joined a Salafist brigade near Damascus similar to Jabhat al-Nusra. Al-Nusra stands out for its designation as a terrorist group, but there are many fighting brigades in Syria that share its jihadi ethics and prowess on the battlefield. They may not have formally joined al-Qaeda, but they do not disguise their admiration for the global terrorist organization. Siraj’s experience with the jihadis gave him pause. He appreciated their discipline and ironclad rules — no stealing, no killing of women and children, and no raping. But he soon realized that the group, largely made up of foreign fighters, had a different vision for his country. “They saw another Syria,” says Siraj. “A land for fighters, a place for guns, for training, where there is no law and no government. They wanted to make Syria a land of jihad. And I thought, ‘What about our revolution?’” So he left, eventually ending up in an apartment where he lives with other refugees of the Syrian war.

Peter Harling & Sarah Birke: The Syrian Heartbreak The regime and its allies have lost any moral standing in what they chose early on to frame as an existential struggle, in which self-serving ends justify abominable means. Much of the opposition, in response, has gradually adopted a similar worldview, brandishing its enemy’s ruthlessness to excuse its own excesses, to the point of no longer recognizing them as wrong. “I see the change in myself and in my men,” commented one rebel commander with discomfort. He described moving from feeling sorry for his opponents to summarily executing them. Several months later, he has stopped worrying about it. More than ever, one side’s casualties erase any regret for the other’s losses. Fighters see their predicament as a zero-sum game: Kill or be killed. Even some of the smartest activists have started to say that soldiers (and, in some cases, ‘Alawis) — who they once described as “brothers” — deserve whatever they get for failing to desert the regime.

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.

 

Assad’s American Bet

In his meeting with a Lebanese delegation from the pro-Hezbollah March 8 coalition on April 21st, Assad revealed an important element in his thinking at this stage when he told his guests that “The Americans have been pragmatic from the very beginning, and never pursued any course to its [logical] conclusion.  They would eventually side with the victor.”

Over the years, the Americans have given Assad plenty of reason to think like this. Even under the Bush Administration, pressures on Assad were lessened in order to allow for Syria’s participation in the Annapolis peace conference. Under the Obama Administration, he was treated as a reformer for reasons more closely linked to the Administration’s ideological stands than Assad’s own record. Then, and ever since the beginning of the Revolution, and despite calls on him to step down, Assad has been allowed by the Administration to literally get away with murder, not once or twice, but 100,000 times by conservative estimates, as red lines keep shifting and vanishing.

Assad has been given too many opportunities before, and has been allowed to get away with too many things to think differently. His father’s own career, especially, his relations with various American administrations would also go a long way in reinforcing this.

At this stage, Assad’s entire strategy seems hedged on surviving long enough for America to come around and hitch her regional wagons to him again.

 

Video Highlights

Leaked video from the village of Mukharram, Homs Province, shows pro-Assad militias setting the corpses of several rebels on firehttp://youtu.be/2IG3y5S9Qm4

An Alawite supporter of Assad in Tripoli Lebanon gets abused by local rebel sympathizers, as sectarian tension keep escalatinghttp://youtu.be/FPBPkrB9kS0

Rebels in Aleppo showcase their gains from a recent takeover of a loyalist position, known as Al-Alkamiyah http://youtu.be/k8hvJGWztZs ,http://youtu.be/VNvZf51_uR0 Scenes from the clasheshttp://youtu.be/h2KweUjprAY The position of a strategic importance and its capture could facilitate the takeover the military airport a Minnigh.

Loyalists take up positions around the town of Hraak, Daraa Provincehttp://youtu.be/YRPtm0jJj-w Prepare their own tanks for the looming confrontation http://youtu.be/e5FRcJULDEI and their anti-aircraft batterieshttp://youtu.be/oTtjqeayeVQ Rebels and loyalists clash near Khirbet Ghazaleh http://youtu.be/lQbBUjFmlhw and around Basra Al-Shamhttp://youtu.be/gCMwSsIk_xA

The intensive pounding of Jobar Neighborhood, Damascus Cityhttp://youtu.be/eCnia0HIY-g , http://youtu.be/TEkXMxdabkA leaves a family of 5 dead http://youtu.be/NDNluhqKjRw

Aerial bombardment on rebel strongholds in Eastern Ghoutah, Damascus Suburbs, continues: Saqba http://youtu.be/Cs42CzEZNH0 ,http://youtu.be/voqIhyRFGXs , http://youtu.be/oNqedJTNYos Kafar Batnahttp://youtu.be/ziZM6UaWSFI , http://youtu.be/tM7WHjqiFWE Zamalkahttp://youtu.be/pBQx6ICaEU8

To the West, the suburb of Moadamiyah continues to be poundedhttp://youtu.be/myC3GICbQoE Nearby Daraya comes under aerial attackhttp://youtu.be/uvYXL-Um3Kk , http://youtu.be/FksTL-Kaqio

Syrian Government Reportedly Killed ‘at Least 85’ People in Damascus Neighborhood Massacre

By Ali Al-Bassam
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

DAMASCUS, Syria — Opposition activists reported last Sunday that at least 85 people were executed by Pro-Assad Syrian forces in the town of Jdeidet Al-Fadel.  Other groups estimated the death toll to be around 250.  The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that they can confirm that 109 people were killed, but that the actual death toll could actually be closer to 500, making it one of the deadliest incidents to occur since the start of the revolution.  Women and children residing in the Damascus neighborhood were reported to be amongst those killed in the massacre.

Syrian troops reportedly killed 85 – 500 people “at close range.” (Photo Courtesy of The Guardian)

 

“We documented 85 summarily executed, including 28 shot in a makeshift hospital after Assad’s forces entered Jdeidet Al-Fadel. We fear that the victims of the massacre are much higher,” said Abu Ahmad Al-Rabi, an opposition activist residing in the adjacent district of Jdeidet Artouz.

Inconsistent reports regarding the number of those killed is due to the Syrian military lockdown of the neighborhood.  Journalists and NGOs cannot provide a clear number because they cannot get close enough to the town to accurately report what is happening.  The lockdown also precludes information from getting out of towns, leaving the world to rely on observations made by observers and private citizens using social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter.

Syrian run SANA State News Agency reported that the military “inflicted big losses on terrorists in Jdeidet Al-Fadel and destroyed weapons and ammunition and killed and wounded members of the terrorist groups.”

Jamal Al-Golani, member of the Revolution Leadership Council, also believed  the death toll to be higher, and said that there could be more than 250 people who were killed, mostly shot at close range.  However, due to the presence of army patrols, it is difficult to determine.

Other Rebel groups called the offensive against JdeidtAl-Fadel, a “crime against humanity,” and “a massacre of epic proportions.”  Syrian National Coalition President George Sabra said that President Bashar Al-Assad explicitly ordered troops to “kill and massacre” civilians in the offensive.

Jdeidet Al-Fadel had long been held under rebel control, but was always surrounded by Syrian troops.  Some believe that the Syrian military took a step forward in reclaiming “lost ground.”  Tactically, opposition forces considered their control of the town to be a “lost cause” due to its close proximity to Damascus.  “Jdeidet Al-Fadel was militarily a lost cause from day one because it was surrounded by the army from every direction.  There are almost no wounded because they were shot on the spot,” said Al-Golani.

For further information, please see:

Arab News — Assad Forces Executive 85 — 23 April 2013

AntiWar — Syrian Rebels: 500 Dead in Damascus Suburb Offensive — 22 April 2013

Foreign Policy — Has the World Stopped Caring About Massacres in Syria? — 22 April 2013

The Guardian — ‘At Least 85 People Killed in Damascus’ as Pro-Assad Forces Storm Suburb — 21 April 2013

Syrian Revolution Digest: Monday, 22 April 2013

Humpty Dumpty Has Fallen!

As world leaders continue to obsess over guarantees that no one is in a position to provide, Assad and his militias continue their slaughter, and the country continues to fall apart. We have passed the point of no return. The old is dead, and the new is stillborn. Syria is no more. This is the dawn of the age of warring fiefdoms. Who will rake in the spoils of their wars, I wonder? Who will benefit from our suffering? It will be a pity if it went to waste.

Death Toll: 566 martyrs, including tens of women and children: 483 martyrs were reported in Damascus and its Suburbs most were killed in Jdeidet Al-Fadl Massacre; 23 in Aleppo; 21 in Idlib, including 14 in Maghara village; 15 in Homs; 12 in Daraa; 7 in Deir Ezzor; and 5 in Hama (LCC).

 

News

Slaughter Reported Near Damascus Shamel al-Jolani, an activist who lives nearby, said area residents were able to document the names of 80 people who had been killed. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based group that tracks the conflict through a network of contacts in Syria, said the victims included 71 men, 3 children and 6 women. It said 19 of the men were rebel fighters. Residents said the death toll was much higher — and the Observatory said the total could reach 250 — but that it was difficult to identify and count the victims because the fighting was continuing and because many of the bodies had been disfigured. “They’re just scattered limbs and charred bodies that are completely unrecognizable,” Mr. Jolani said in an interview conducted over Skype.

Syrian activist group: Record number of dead found The bodies of at least 566 people who were killed over a six-day period across Syria were found Sunday, according to Local Coordination Committees in Syria, an opposition group based in the country. That is the highest number of victims discovered in a single day since the war began in March 2011, according to LCC spokeswoman Rafif Jouejati. At least 450 bodies were found in the Damascus suburb of Jadidat al-Fadel, LCC activist Abu Aasy said. Over the past six days, some 3,000 members of the security forces stormed the area, and the dead include at least 300 civilians and 150 members of the Free Syrian Army, he said.

Syria aid package falls short of opposition demands for arms The U.S. is doubling its non-lethal aid to opposition forces in Syria to $250 million, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry announced Sunday, falling short of opposition demands for military aid. At the Friends of Syria meeting in Istanbul late Saturday, the Syrian National Coalition called on international backers to carry out “surgical strikes” on positions used by President Bashar Assad’s regime to fire missiles on civilians. While this latest U.S. aid package will not include arms, Kerry said Sunday that the rebels’ foreign backers were committed to continuing support to them and “there would have to be further announcements about the kind of support that that might be in the days ahead” if Syrian government forces failed to pursue a peaceful solution to the crisis. Kerry also said that foreign backers have agreed to channel all future assistance through the rebels’ Supreme Military Council.

New Aid To Syria Comes With Fear Of Funding The Wrong Opposition Western governments are still investigating claims of chemical weapons use, but the Syrian opposition arrived at the meeting seeking interventions to neutralize Syria’s chemical weapons and ballistic missile capabilities. They also want a no-fly zone, and a lot more weapons. But many among the opposition’s backers are wary of shipping arms to the fractious Syrian rebels, for fear that they’ll end up in the hands of Islamist units like the al-Nusra front, that recently announced an alliance with al-Qaida.

Syria fighting flares both sides of Lebanese border Syrian troops and Lebanese Shi’ite militias attacked rebel-held areas on the two countries’ border on Sunday, in the heaviest clashes of Syria’s civil war in the strategic region, Lebanese and Syrian sources said. At least two towns held by Sunni Islamist rebels in the al-Qusair region near the Orontes River were overrun after sectarian clashes escalated early last week, threatening to bring in Iranian-backed Hezbollah openly into the battle, the sources said. On Saturday, in the first attack well inside Lebanese territory, rockets hit the town of Hermel, a Hezbollah stronghold in the Bekaa Valley, causing damage but no casualties. A Hezbollah fighter was killed in the Shi’ite border town of Zita, inside Syria, residents said. Six rebels were killed in clashes in the Syrian city of Qusair on Sunday and one woman was killed in Syrian air strikes in the region, opposition campaigners said.

Germany will ‘respect’ Syria embargo changes Speaking in Istanbul after a “Friends of Syria” meeting Saturday, Westerwelle said the embargo would be discussed when EU foreign ministers meet in Luxembourg Monday. “If there are one or two countries in the European Union who think there is no risk that arms will fall into the wrong hands,” then Germany “will have to respect that,” Westerwelle said.

Syrians held over violence in Jordanian refugee camp Eight Syrians have been arrested on suspicion of inciting violence at a refugee camp in Jordan, officials say. The arrests come after an incident on Friday in which some 100 camp residents threw stones at police who would not allow them to leave the camp. Ten police officers were injured – one so badly he had to undergo surgery, said a government spokesman. UN officials have warned the flood of refugees fleeing Syria threatens to overwhelm those providing assistance.

‘Jordan opens skies for IAF drones flying to Syria’ ‘Le Figaro’ quotes Western military source as saying armed Israeli drones conducting surveillance in Syria by way of Jordan.

A city that’s not a city – inside a Syrian refugee camp: Readers share their experiences through GuardianWitness to help us document the reality of life for refugees

 

Investigative Reports

In Syria, kidnappings on the rise as lawlessness spreads “People are taken just for the money to release them,” said the director of the Britain-based watchdog Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, who uses the alias Rami Abdulrahman. Kidnapping was relatively unknown in Syria before the uprising began. The first reported abductions in the conflict occurred in summer 2011 and involved Sunnis, many of whom support the opposition, and Alawites, who mostly support the government. In many cases, there were tit-for-tat kidnappings in which one group took a set of hostages to negotiate the release of others, activists and monitoring groups say.

THE RIVER MARTYRS: Day by day, a city at war with the regime collects its dead. In recent months, the jetsam has included bodies. At the end of January, a hundred and ten murdered men and boys were fished out and laid on a concrete bank, their hands bound behind their backs, their skulls broken by bullets. The killings became known as the River Massacre. Those whom no one recognized, or who were unrecognizable, were taken to Cobblers’ Garden. Since then, the graveyard has steadily grown. Recently, while I was there, a small pickup arrived with the two-hundred-and-thirty-fourth victim from the river, the ninety-fourth delivered to the park.

Kurdish women warriors battle in Syria “Women can shoot machine guns, Kalashnikovs and even tanks – just as well as men,” said Engizek, 28, wearing trousers and a sleeveless jacket, her dark hair bound tightly behind her head. “Women are an integral part of our rebellion,” she told AFP in a deserted alleyway squashed between bullet-riddled and blasted buildings amid the sporadic crackle of sniper fire. Fighters like Engizek – whose Committees for the Protection of the Kurdish People (YPG) brigade is 20 percent women – are the hidden face of Syria’s armed rebellion against the regime of Bashar Assad.

Syrian activist communities, the battle inside The third kind of activist is still true to the peaceful aims of the original protest and still active. Although they are the fewest, they are the most vulnerable to brutal arrests, executions and torture, given that they are considered the most dangerous by the regime.

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.

 

Video Highlights

Some of the dead in the latest and largest massacre so far: the massacre atJdeidet Al-Fadl, Damascus. The clips that have emerged so far are fewhttp://youtu.be/14PntvwGnYM , http://youtu.be/fWrcK3twHQg ,http://youtu.be/WHh0gmvn5lU This leaked video was reportedly made by a member of the pro-Assad militias who perpetrated the massacre. We can hear someone in the background addressing the bodies of the dead rebels saying “You’re going to see the Houris (maidens promised to martyrs in Paradise), you sons of bitches?” http://youtu.be/FSHjsbLeYxg

An aerial raid hits a school in Al-Magharah, Idlib province killing many children http://youtu.be/Qf5js-YA8B8 , http://youtu.be/vLmCEz5mKLQ ,http://youtu.be/9Xk6ph0DPZA , http://youtu.be/hgVoh4SD59M and wounding many http://youtu.be/4kQON3-ZdBE The funeral http://youtu.be/VFINuTjXZeA , http://youtu.be/wXIJcDl22Ighttp://youtu.be/75F7Sd21Tl4

An aerial raid on the suburb of Moadamiyah, Damascus. We can clearly see the bombs as they hit their targets in the first clip http://youtu.be/uGfwxn5z6lIhttp://youtu.be/l-ZCajq3lOM , http://youtu.be/bhTYh8yKh94http://youtu.be/eS8xhlZr-DA Nearby Daraya continues to be pounded as well http://youtu.be/Nfj8yG-3wG0 , http://youtu.be/OKpRUpe0PNo

The vicious pounding of rebel strongholds in the eastern parts of Damascus City and Suburbs continue: Zamalka http://youtu.be/B7f9Cwbof-g ,http://youtu.be/H_XTAwccNXs Jobar http://youtu.be/R0JhQuzDd78

Leaked video from the town of Maarabah, near Damascus shows pro-Assad militias torturing two captives to death, including setting the head of one of them on fire while he is still alive, then outing out the fire, and continuing the torture http://youtu.be/gYkv1MriNPw

Rebels in the neighborhood of Sheikh Maqsoud, Aleppo City, renovate a church that was hit during the regime bombing campaignhttp://youtu.be/t5ImWSRamyU

In Khaldiyeh, Aleppo, rebels use the few tanks under their command to pound loyalist positions http://youtu.be/ZEAhGQ5KUSo ,http://youtu.be/JNIZO2aqPyY Some of the shells usedhttp://youtu.be/uCQKkziPYfY Preparing the automatic machinegunshttp://youtu.be/iviGDG4edQc

Rebels use homemade rockets in pounding Kuweiris Military Airport, Aleppohttp://youtu.be/5PxLirjLR0M