Syria Watch

Syrian Revolution Digest – Monday, 14 January 2013

Fahrenheit 40!

Fahrenheit 40 – the temperature at which skin freezes and children die, the temperature which some Syrian refugees will have to endure sheltered only by open skies and Heaven’s grace, as world leaders keep giving them cold shoulders, and hearts. Fahrenheit 40 – the temperature at which humanity loses all meaning, and neither God nor mammon seems to give a damn.

Today’s Death Toll: 151 (including 21 children and 12 women)

74 martyrs in Damascus and suburbs including 30 in Moaddamiya, 31 in Aleppo, 15 in Daraa, 9 in Homs, 8 in Hama, 7 in Deir Ezzor, 5 in Idlib and 2 in Raqqa  (LCCs).

Points of Random Shelling: 329: including 24 by war planes, 8 by cluster bombs, 2 by vacuum bombs and 2 by explosive barrels. Artillery shelling hit 127 locations, mortar hit 103 and rocket shelling hit 63 locations allover Syria(LCCs).

Clashes: FSA rebels clashed with regime army in 126 locations. In Deir Ezzor, FSA shelled the military airport with mortars; in Aleppo, Hanano Barrack was targeted; in Daraa, FSA captured some soldiers and officers in Basr Alharir, and in Damascus suburbs the FSA liberated the meteorological center located in east of the town in the Widyan Al-Rabie area and arrested a number of soldiers. The center was being used as headquarters for pro-regime militias (LCCs).

 

News

Syria refugees say rape is a key reason they fled, report says Rape is one of the primary reasons that Syrian refugees say they fled their country, “a significant and disturbing feature” of the war raging between rebels and Syrian government forces, the International Rescue Committee said Monday. In a new report based on hundreds of interviews in Jordan and Lebanon, the assistance group said refugees recounted Syrian women and girls being gang-raped in front of their families or assaulted by armed men in public. Others were kidnapped, violated, tortured and killed, the refugee aid group was told.

Syria Launches Deadly Airstrikes in Damascus Suburbs The government has mounted attacks for days to push rebels out of Daraya and neighboring Moadamiyeh, trying to increase the buffer zone around the nearby presidential palace and the neighborhood of Kafr Souseh, where some key security offices are.

Syria: Airstrike on Market Kills and Injures Scores The attack in Azaz, a city near the border with Turkey, was particularly devastating. It followed earlier airstrikes that hit health facilities in the city, making it almost impossible for local medical staff to cope with the scale of the latest emergency. The injured were transported to medical facilities elsewhere in the region, including to an MSF field hospital in the Aleppo area.

Syria rebels seize ‘game-changing’ arms cache Abu Hasan, a commander of Jabhat-al-Nusra, a group taking part in the capture of the base, told Al Jazeera that the weapons fighters seized will be a “game-changer” for the rebels. “These weapons will benefit us a lot in our work on the ground,” he said. “And by God’s will, we will capture more places like that one. They will have great importance on the battlefield.”

Syria: Army Using New Type of Cluster Munition Evidence indicates that Syrian forces used BM-21 Grad multi-barrel rocket launchers to deliver cluster munitions in attacks near the city of Idlib in December 2012 and in Latamneh, a town northwest of Hama, on January 3, 2013. These are the first known instances of Syrian use of ground-based cluster munitions.

Azeris Say Armenians Fleeing Syria Resettled in Separatist Area About 6,000 Syrians have sought refuge in Armenia, the New York Times reported last month, adding that an estimated 80,000 of Syria’s 120,000 Armenians live in Aleppo, where rebels have been battling government forces after pushing into the commercial hub in July.

 

Special Reports

6 Months Of Combat, And No Victor In Syria’s Biggest City
Some six months after Syria’s rebels tried to storm the country’s largest city, they can claim the eastern part of Aleppo and perhaps 60 percent overall. In the west, the government army has the remaining 40 percent of the city.

Aleppo Dispatch: The Dark Side of the Syrian Opposition
Ibrahim’s plight is indicative of the growing anarchy gripping Syria’s liberated areas. In a country where the rule of law is vanishing as the state increasingly recedes, every fighter is policeman and prosecutor. Some have embraced their newfound powers judiciously. Most, however, have abused it. This exploitation of the war has reduced support for nationalist FSA units. Instead, Syrians are increasingly backing Islamists who largely eschew the material spoils of war.

War crimes in Syria: Time to appeal to International Criminal Court?
Fifty-seven countries on Monday urged the UN Security Council to ask the International Criminal Court at The Hague to investigate possible war crimes in Syria. The call comes as other groups report a spike in sexual violence in Syria.

Syria’s ruined cities (VIDEO)
Six months ago the city of Maarat al-Nu’man was still functioning. Today it’s rubble. It’s a process that has played out over and over across Syria.

Syrian Purgatory
As winter clutches northern Syria, thousands displaced by the civil war take cold comfort in a temporary tent city.

IRGC Shows Its (True) Hand in Syria
By learning the positions of IRGC personnel operating in Syria, however, we can draw at least three important conclusions: first, the IRGC is deploying active duty combat commanders to Syria; second, the Quds Force is drawing from IRGC-GF personnel, indicating that they seek to draw on the Ground Forces’ training and experience conducting internal security and conventional or counter-insurgent operations; finally, several of the IRGC-GF personnel deployed to Syria hail from provincial units that face tribal and ethnic unrest (East Azerbaijan, Khouzestan, and Fars), further indicating that the Quds Force has tapped specific elements of the IRGC-GF for their unique experience in combating internal uprisings.

Fallout from the Fall of Taftanaz
For the rebels, the airbase capture indicates that major regime positions in the provinces are vulnerable. But it also suggests that better-defended areas — such as Damascus and environs, where regime forces are relatively dense and well supported — will remain a serious challenge. In addition, the battle raises questions about the regime’s strategy of maintaining some military presence, in every province. Although this approach allows Assad to maintain the image that he has not lost any province, it is costing the regime a good deal of personnel and equipment while providing the rebels with better arms and ammunition. Currently, several other northern airfields are under attack; if the rebels can overcome their organizational limitations and capture those bases as well, it would be a still greater, even strategic, defeat for the regime.

The Struggle for the Fertile Crescent
Syria’s sectarian civil war has upended the political equation across the region, from Baghdad to Lebanon.

 

Video Highlights

Leaked video: pro-Assad militias torture a captive by dragging his body around the streets of his neighborhood. At minute 4.44, the man asks: “For the sake of God, just let me say goodbye to my children.” The answer: “Would you let me fuck your wife? If you let me fuck your wife, I’ll let you see your children.” The man says: “My wife is my soul and the crown on my head.” The man gets struck a few more times for his trouble, the video ends with the men deciding to consult their colonel as to what to do next. We do not see the execution, but local activists report that the man was indeed executed.  http://youtu.be/_KI_t3IpmU0

Treating the wounded women and children of Kfarzeiteh, Hama http://youtu.be/xV72vJXOQFM ,http://youtu.be/mkmb_F-74FQ

Locals in Mouadamiyah Suburb in Damascus sift through the rubble in search of victims in aftermath of an aerial raid that killed 30 locals http://youtu.be/0_Bgh5VmWCg , http://youtu.be/pAfi5QfLd3M Dead children http://youtu.be/gyHExsuXxKs , http://youtu.be/8tDjgH1Clfg

Meanwhile, to the East, the suburb of Saqba and other towns in Eastern Ghouta are also pounded http://youtu.be/rjTR74ZcurE

Locals sift through the rubble in Haydariyeh Neighborhood in Aleppo City, in search of victims in the aftermath of an aerial bombardment http://youtu.be/gh67U6Krro0 , http://youtu.be/0e2MwOMqNZU The raid http://youtu.be/Y_dKo75oVpY

Rebels might have liberated the Taftanaz military airbase, but the regime took out its revenge on the town of Taftanaz turning it to rubble http://youtu.be/9VDxO24W3Jg Still, rebels are now in a position of several helicopter gunships http://youtu.be/6lR_uxy2X98

The town of Talbisseh, Homs, is hit with incendiary cluster bombs from a passing warplane. Local activists confuse these bombs with phosphorous bombs http://youtu.be/wFs9mlIb6Og

In the town of Saida, Daraa, rebels stormed the headquarters of the pro-Assad militias after weeks of clashes, many were killed on both sides, but rebels managed to captures 20 officers in hope to setting up another prisoners swap. But, according to local activists, pro-regime militias went on a rampage arresting civilians from buses and threatening to kill the lot if rebels failed to free their comrades. Eventually, both sides released their captives. The headquarters set on fire http://youtu.be/wZT3BnsA_aA Some of the rebels killed during the attack http://youtu.be/qU9EdCaYGVM

Syrian Revolution Digest – Sunday, 13 January 2013

Spring Cleaning!

Spring doesn’t come very often in our region, but when it does, the accompanying cleaning process tends to be onerous, long and thorough. Taking out centuries-old trash in particular is a thankless job, but one that needs to be done. Sweeping things under our famous carpets and rugs is exactly what brought us to this point in time when drastic measures are needed. As we go about cleaning our ‘hoods, it doesn’t help of course that bystanders keep littering rather than lending a hand. It’s simply not enough to come up with Universal Declaration of Human Rights to teach people manners, and about their mutual obligations. That requires a sense of common destiny we have yet to develop. For now, we are not one, although we are the same.

Today’s Death Toll: 141 (including 17 children and 4 women)

51 martyrs were reported in Damascus and its suburbs, including 10 martyrs in Douma and 9 martyrs in Hazzeh. 34 martyrs were reported in Aleppo including 20 in Izaz, 16 in Deir Ezzor, 14 in Daraa, 8 in Homs, 5 in Idlib.  One martyr was also reported in each of Lattakia and Hama (LCCs).

Points of Random Shelling: 374

24 points using airstrike bombardments and 6 areas bombarded using cluster bombs. 2 points were bombarded using explosives barrels, one point using thermobaric bombs and one point using phosphorus bombs. 170 points recorded from artillery shelling, 134 points were recorded from mortar shelling, and 44 points were recorded from rocket shelling in various parts of Syria (LCCs).

Clashes: Free Syrian Army clashed with regime forces in 110 points during which a warplane was shot down in Taybat al-Imam in Hama and damaging another one near Kweiris Airport in Aleppo, after FSA had stormed into the airport and shelled it with local bombs (LCCs).

 

News

Clashes flare up in strategic Syria suburb Syria government tanks try to enter Dariya, which is also attacked by air. Rebels say a stalemate continues.

Syrian Warplanes Bomb Damascus Suburbs Syrian fighter jets bombed the Damascus suburbs Sunday, killing at least nine people, including a number of children, in a government offensive to dislodge rebels from strategic areas around the capital.

Russia rejects Assad exit as precondition for Syria deal U.S. insists the Syrian president must step down in order to end the civil war. Russia is Assad’s main backer during 22-month-old crisis, blocking resolutions aimed to push him from power.

Russia tells Syria rebels: Seek dialog with Damascus “President Assad came out with initiatives aimed at inviting all opposition members to dialog. Yes, these initiatives probably do not go far enough. Probably they will not seem serious to some, but they are proposals,” the Interfax news agency quoted Lavrov as saying. “If I were in the opposition’s shoes, I would come up with my ideas in response on how to establish a dialog.”

Senior Officer Defects As Battles Rage For Airports, Damascus Suburbs Jumaa Farraj Jassem, a section chief in Syria’s General Intelligence Directorate, announced his defection and described Assad’s regime as “criminal.”

Report: Iran Spying on Israel from Syria Iran has been establishing intelligence stations in several parts of the Middle East, including the Golan Heights, U.S. report indicates.

 

Special Reports

Assad still confident that he can control Syria
That appears to be Assad’s strategy — to wreak enough havoc that the rebels can’t win, even if he can’t win, either, a scenario that threatens even greater bloodshed than has gone before, said Fred Hof, a former State Department official who was deeply involved in formulating Syria policy before he joined the Atlantic Council last year. “Basically what he’s saying is that the cost of removing me is the destruction of Syria,” Hof said — an outcome many Syrians increasingly fear is the most likely one of all.

As Syrians Freeze, Diplomacy is at a Standstill
After countless meetings and conferences in the Middle East and Europe, there is no clear international game plan.

Neighborly Strife: The Evolution of Turkey’s Syria Policy
Some experts suggest that Turkey has gone too far and acted too ambitiously during this crisis. For example David Gardner from the Financial Times claims that “Turkey…may have bitten more than it can chew”, an opinion shared by opposition political movements in Turkey. The AKP government has also been criticized because of Kurdish involvement in Syria, since Turkey’s political struggle against the Assad regime is claimed to be positive for Kurdish groups. Sinan Ülgen summarizes the Kurdish dimension of Syrian crisis by saying: “The fear in Turkey is of Syria’s disintegration into ethnically and religiously purer mini-states, with a Kurdish entity in the north, an Alawite entity in the west, and a Sunni entity in the rest. The Kurdish opposition’s recent unilateral power grab in northeastern Syria rekindled Turkish concerns about the emergence of an independent Kurdish entity linking the north of Iraq to the north of Syria”.

Syrian activists based in the United Arab Emirates report that they are being prevented from using services like Western Union to send funds to support refugees in Turkey, Jordan and Lebanon. This is happening despite the fact that no clear written instructions have been issued by Western Union and similar services, the move, it seems, came as a result of oral instructions from UAE police.

 

Video Highlights

The aerial bombardment of restive towns in Eastern Ghoutah, Damascus, resumes: Saqba http://youtu.be/gJX4kvqON-0 Jisreen http://youtu.be/dqjMc8D6W1o , http://youtu.be/ICH-sJo1V1A People run for cover http://youtu.be/G-YsiRgiJiE , http://youtu.be/JBdUuzEv9GY Scores were killed and injured in Douma http://youtu.be/lV9A5vULoD0 Trying to rescue a child dying of exsanguination http://youtu.be/K_tLAcRDYgc Many children were killed in Hizzeh http://youtu.be/Mw7RtMC5zXo

Meanwhile, the siege and pounding of the suburb of Daraya continue http://youtu.be/pMsx5KxxlhE ,http://youtu.be/dCvavXR76hs , http://youtu.be/LxgNcxP0iK4

Leaked video (English subtitles): member of a pro-Assad militia executes a captive while talking to his Mom on the phone so she could listen in. Mama’s boys come in all different shapes I guess http://youtu.be/11rCIwZBGzw

But this video shows how one young Syrian is using empty shell casings to create functional art http://youtu.be/qxXr_LsbkBE

The town of Deir Sanbil, Idlib, comes under heavy aerial bombardment http://youtu.be/s9-lkhs7AZ4 People run for cover http://youtu.be/Fs694NSFS2I Many children were killed http://youtu.be/KB5QM23ZhfY

Rebels storm the military airport in Deir Ezzor http://youtu.be/2M_4NBkHlpo , http://youtu.be/uMArrtV7xfk Meanwhile, aerial bombardments against Deir Ezzor City continues http://youtu.be/w8RpeFFFOmw

Clashes between rebels and loyalists in Basr Al-Harir, Daraa, continue http://youtu.be/_KrQZPJfAQM ,http://youtu.be/E0VkeW0uFZQ , http://youtu.be/4wWrVNeh0Cs , http://youtu.be/g8n6hdJajGM ,http://youtu.be/Kq0la9EsR-Q , http://youtu.be/nMHiStmPWtI , http://youtu.be/cxOhd9dMXBA ,http://youtu.be/9Abj15MJoaQ , http://youtu.be/CpuPCKUGC0I

Syrian Revolution Digest: Wednesday, 9 January 2013

The Swap!

Syrian Revolution Digest – January 9, 2013 

Since the beginning of the armed phase of the revolution, Assad never bothered trying to get his own captured soldiers, irrespective of their backgrounds, but, today, he was willing to release over 2,100 prisoners in exchange for 48 Iranian captives. These priorities of his might give us a “hint” as to who is really in charge in Syria at this stage. The demons within are legion, so are the demons without. Snowfall notwithstanding, we are already in the lowest depths of hell, and we’re fighting our way out.

Today’s Death Toll:92 (including 9 children and 4 women)

29 martyrs were reported in Damascus and its Suburbs, 27 martyrs in Aleppo, 14 martyrs in Hama, 7 martyrs in Idlib, 8 martyrs in Homs, 4 martyrs in Daraa and 3 martyrs in Deir Ezzor (LCCs).

Points of Random Shelling: 180

2 points were shelled by warplanes, Cluster Bombs were used in Taftanaz and Omar Oil Field in Deir Ezzor, 86 points were shelled by artillery (the fiercest was reported in Damascus Suburbs), 51 points by missiles and 42 points by mortars (LCCs).

Clashes: The FSA clashed with regime forces in 77 locations (the fiercest clashes were reported in Damascus Suburbs, Idlib and Aleppo), the FSA stormed several buildings in Taftanaz Military Airport and targeted its main building, the FSA blocked many attempts by the regime forces to storm Daraya and Mouadamiya in Damascus Suburbs and Basr Al-Harir in Daraa(LCCs).

 

News

Syria releases 2,130 captives to rebels in exchange for 48 Iranian prisoners “Assad proved he is an Iranian puppet because he agreed to release over 2,000 in return for 48 Iranians,” said Louay Moqdad, a Free Syrian Army spokesman. “He did not care about Syrian officers who are also detained with us.”

Syria opposition welcomes Brahimi comments criticizing Assad Brahimi earlier told the BBC a speech by Assad on Sunday was a “lost opportunity” to end the crisis in Syria and that Assad’s initiatives to end the violence were “sectarian and one-sided”. He also said the Assad family’s more than 40-year rule was “too long”.

U.S. Government Assistance to Syria U.S. assistance includes vigorous diplomatic support of the newly formed Syrian Opposition Coalition, humanitarian assistance to help those affected by the conflict, and non-lethal support for local councils and civil society inside Syria.

 

Special Reports

The Humanitarian Front
Cry for food in Syria may be opening for peace
The UN warns it cannot feed some 1 million displaced Syrians, many in war zones with few bread supplies. A global response to this humanitarian crisis might help diffuse differences over political solutions.

Surviving in Aleppo
The rebels’ hope for a quick victory in Aleppo has given way to the reality that there is no end in sight to this war. Though the rebels recently seized the Sheikh Suleiman Air Base and the Infantry School on the outskirts of Aleppo, the regime still controls large swaths of the city itself and regularly shells rebel-held zones. The creation of a new government-in-exile and a unified military command means little to families on the front lines, fervently hoping the next shell will not land in their living room. The new National Coalition offers them neither the necessities or the security they pine for.

Winter, Food Shortages, Descend on Syria’s Refugees
In a crowded makeshift camp, tens of thousands of exiles face an ever more dire existence as temperatures plummet. Mike Giglio reports from Syria. Plus, see exclusive photos from Syrian refugee camps.

The misery of Syria’s displaced Kurds
It is a very cold winter at the Domiz camp in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq. It has been raining for hours. The place is muddy and very cold… From a vantage point, the camp looks more like a settlement of tents. Around 30,000 people live in the camp alone. An average of 500 people come in every day, so you can predict that the influx is only growing. The UN refugee agency is stretched. It provides waterproof tents and non-food items. It has different phases to house the refugees after the transit in tents.

Geopolitics 
For Obama, the Key to Damascus May Lie in Ankara
Although Turkey and the United States both want Assad to go, the two countries are in different places. For Washington, Syria is a smoldering conflict, and Americans abhor the Assad regime. But Washington fears the unknown after Assad, and is reluctant to get dragged into a war in another Muslim country…. For Ankara, the Syrian conflict is a conflagration next door that needs to be extinguished now. Assad has to go, and fast. Many reasons drive the Turkish calculus. First, there is the uptick in Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) attacks. As soon as Ankara took sides against the Assad regime in August 2011, Damascus retaliated, allowing the Turks’ archenemy, the PKK, and its Syrian franchise, the Democratic Union Party (PYD), to operate on its territory again.

Syria’s neighbors fear escalation
The Syrian civil war threatens the country’s neighbors. Turkey plans to protect itself with Patriot missiles, but other countries are also worried about the potential collapse of the Syrian state.

Syria sectarianism spills into Lebanon
Sheik Ahmad Assir’s skyrocketing popularity is threatening to turn some members of Lebanon’s primarily moderate Sunni population more extreme, forcing the country’s long simmering sectarian tensions to a boil. Assir is the most high-profile of Lebanon’s Salafists — an ultra-orthodox branch of Sunni Islam. His status is buoyed by the neighbouring war in Syria, which has devolved into a mostly sectarian fight between Sunnis and Shiites.

The Cultural Front
Another casualty of Syria’s war: Its cultural heritage
Sites in Syria dating as far back as Christ as are being leveled at alarming rates.

Update from an aid worker based in Beirut
We still go a couple of days a week to Damascus unless the situation is too bad. Actually it is getting pretty bad also inside Damascus now, they were firing rockets from helicopters right over us last time I was in and the rockets they fire on Daraya and Mu’adamiyah among other places sometimes fly right over us. I saw some of the effects of the carpet bombing of Harasta from the old city – SANA ran a great article about how “Damascus lovers” still go the restaurants in the old city to hang out – they just forgot to mention that the whole town closes down to checkpoints at sunset, that traffic effectively closes down after 7 and they take away young men for the army at the checkpoints, that shooting is heard from places all over the centre when it is dark and there are army snipers on the roofs, and that the shabiha roam the streets of the old city for fear of FSA infiltration. Not exactly the romantic atmosphere for “Damascus lovers”….

Terrorist group fills power vacuum among Syria rebels
Nada Bakos, a former Central Intelligence Agency, has this to say about Al-Nusra’s plans in Syria:

Al-Nusra is using some of the same tactics as al Qaeda in Iraq (e.g., suicide bombings, kidnappings and car bombs), but it appears to be trying to strike a balance Zarqawi was unwilling to make: Not only does it seem to be avoiding alienating—if not antagonizing—the larger population, but it also is providing the people of Syria with a range of goods and services such as food, water and medical care—basic necessities that people need to survive in the best of times, let alone when their country is in the throes of a civil war.

If this becomes a trend, it might signal that al-Nusra aspires to be more like Hezbollah or Hamas, organizations that defy neat categorization based on the range of social, political and military activities they engage in and the resultant legitimacy they have in the eyes of their constituencies…

My read of al-Nusra, however, is that, like Zarqawi, it does not aspire to be a political player and is unlikely to settle for a political role in the new government. Instead, it may aim to play the spoiler for any transitional government and use its resources and political violence to empower and encourage other like-minded extremists. With time and opportunity, al-Nusra could not only add to regional instability in the Middle East, but also rekindle global jihad.

However, information obtained from a variety of local activists in Syria indicates that Al-Nusra is seriously establishing its own political council with representatives in the local government emerging throughout the liberated territories in the north and the northeast. As such, the recommendation made by Bakos to use the “designation of al-Nusra [as a terrorist group] as both a stick and carrot, cajoling and encouraging it to enter into mainstream politics when (or if) the Assad regime falls” sounds like something that the Obama Administration could try soon, considering that “the opportunity for meaningful U.S. intervention might have passed.”

 

Video Highlights

As snow falls, Syrian families in Damascus wait for the release of their loved ones in accordance with the prisoners swap agreement between rebels and authorities http://youtu.be/2A91LMqNRBE The first few are released http://youtu.be/v2FEfkTrIv0 , http://youtu.be/whnXryohVKY

Rebels from Jabhat Al-Nusra bring down a helicopter gunship n the town of Alboukamal on the Iraqi borders, and arrest its 6-member crew http://youtu.be/R_nORNTHaOM Meanwhile, an affiliate of Al-Nusra distributes gas cylinders in the village of Shmeitiyeh http://youtu.be/QwlvhRyO3P8

Clashes around the military airport in Deir Ezzor continue http://youtu.be/hDN4BxLphNE

Rebels take control of Wadi Obeid oilfield in Raqqah Province http://youtu.be/wD2iEsv8mdI

Rebels affiliated with Ahrar Al-Sham attack the military airport at Taftanaz in Idlib Province http://youtu.be/-hqq3_sP0oQ , http://youtu.be/G2qFSeJ97a8Rebels use a confiscated armored vehicles to storm over the airport fence http://youtu.be/QFhr8zVGJqY

Intense clashes between FSA rebels and loyalist militias continue in Basr Al-Harir, Daraa http://youtu.be/li9L5VuwUIc , http://youtu.be/23kuh7HeQpM

FSA rebels in Aleppo continue their siege of the police academy http://youtu.be/MyTZ2y8x_Uw

Snow http://youtu.be/_IMwo6OPPz0 does not prevent the continuing pounding of restive neighborhoods in Old Homs http://youtu.be/4Pe_HPV8hiI

Snowfall http://youtu.be/JVXtD36EpJU does not prevent clashes in parts ofDamascus City http://youtu.be/HzDrqs-bpsc

Children in Al-Zaatari Camp in Jordan try to fix their fallen tent http://youtu.be/Biko44LrpeI

Syrian Rebels Release 48 Iranian Prisoners

By Ali Al-Bassam
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

DAMASCUS, Syria — In a deal with Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad, brokered by Qatar and Turkey, a Syrian opposition group released 48 Iranian prisoners in exchange for 2,130 civilian prisoners .  On Wednesday, the prisoners were met by the Iranian Ambassador, Mohammed Reza Shibani, in Damascus.  They were then flown to Tehran.  The exchange was the biggest to occur in the 21-month old Syrian conflict.

Iranian prisoners, released on Wednesday by Syrian opposition groups, met with the Iranian Ambassador to Syria at a Damascus hotel. (Photo Courtesy of Al Arabiya)

“This is the result of months of civil diplomacy carried out by our organization,” said Bulent Yildirim, head of the Humanitarian Relief Foundation, a Turkish humanitarian group who helped broker the deal.

Iranian state television reported that the Iranian prisoners were held hostage by Syrian opposition fighters since last August, and were threatened to be executed.  Iran said that the prisoners are Shias who traveled to Syria on part of a pilgrimage.  Opposition fighters, however, claimed that the prisoners were members of Iran’s National Revolutionary Guard who came to Syria with the purpose of assisting pro-Assad forces.

The opposition fighters released a video showing Iranian military identification cards, allegedly taken from the captives.  “The fighters captured 48 of the Shabiha (militiamen) of Iran who were on a reconaissance mission in Damascus,” said a man in the video, who appeared to be an officer of the Free Syrian Army.  “During the investigation, we found that some of them were officers of the Revolutionary Guards,” he said, revealing ID documents taken from a prisoner who was in the background.

The Iranian government denounced the allegations, insisting that the prisoners traveled to Syria to visit the Sayyida Zainab shrine south of Damascus where they were captured.  An official at the Iranian Pilgrimage and Travel Organization denied that the prisoners were linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, and said that the group, which included college student and public servants, were all civilians.

Of the 2,130 civilian prisoners who were brokered as part of the deal, 73 of them are women, four are Turkish citizens, and one is a Palestinian.  The others are Syrian.  “Most of the prisoners to be swapperd are Syrian citizens in exchange for Iranians, and there are a few Turks as well,” said Osman Atalay,board member of the Humanitarian Relief Foundation.

Meanwhile, Lakhdar Brahimi, UN Envoy to Syria, said of Assad’s speech last Thursday, where he called on Syrians to fight the “murderous criminals,” was a “lost opportunity to resolve the crisis in Syria.”  Brahimi will meet with top US and Russian officials in Geneva next Friday to discuss ways to push through a peace plan which was outlined by the Action Group for Syria.

For further information, please see:

Al Arabiya — Syria Rebels Release 48 Iranians in Prisoner Swap: Reports — 9 January 2013

Al Bawaba — Iranians Freed by Syrian Opposition Fighters Arrive in Damascus Hotel — 9 January 2013

Al Jazeera — Syrian Rebels Free Iranian Hostages in Swap — 9 January 2013

BBC News — Iranians Held by Syria Rebels Released — 9 January 2013

Syrian Revolution Digest: Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Time for a National Charter!

Syrian Revolution Digest – January 8, 2013 

A provisional government is needed to claim control over the embassies around the world and increase the diplomatic isolation of the regime. Local governments are needed in order to manage the liberated territories. But a charter is needed as well in order to govern the operations of all governments. If a charter is well-drafted it could finally provide that much needed vision for the future of the country and could serve as the nucleus for a future national constitution. After 2 years of bloodshed, and seeing that the conflict could still drag on for few more years, it’s about time we began discussing the specifics of what we are exactly fighting for.

Today’s Death Toll:118 (including 3 children and 3 women)

47 martyrs were reported in Idlib most in Al-Mastumeh, 35 in Damascus and its Suburbs, 15 in Deir Ezzor, 9 in Aleppo, 6 in Homs, 3 in Daraa and 1 in Hama (LCCs).

Points of Random Shelling: 193

11 points shelled by warplanes, 80 points shelled with heavy caliber artillery with the fiercest shelling reported in Damascus Suburbs, 52 points with mortar, 50 points with rockets (LCCs).

Clashes: The Free Syrian Army clashed with the regime forces in 84 locations. FSA rebels managed to shoot down a regime helicopter gunship over Taftanaz Military Airport, they also attacked the regime Malaab checkpoint located in Salah Al-Dein neighborhood in Aleppo. Rebels also repelled the attempts of regime forces to storm Busr Al-Harir in Daraa and the Mouadamieh and Darayya subirbs in Damascus. They also took control of the military security headquarter in Harasta. In Deir Ezzor, FSA rebels targeted an aircraft loaded with ammunition and set it on fire, they also blew up the building occupied by regime forces in the neighborhood of Jbeila, and destroyed the ammunition depot when they targeted Deir Ezzor Military Airport (LCCs).

News

Fighting Flares in Palestinian Camp in Damascus

Family of James Foley, journalist kidnapped in Syria, pleads for information

Nearly 9,000 Syrians flee to Jordan in six days: govt

Syrians brush off Assad speech as fighting rages Damascus residents said Assad’s speech, which offered no concessions to his foes, was met with celebratory gunfire in pro-Assad neighborhoods. But even there, some saw no sign peace was closer: a loyalist resident of southern Damascus reached by internet said the speech was eloquent but empty. “It sounded more like gloating than making promises,” said the woman, who gave only her first name, Aliaa. “I agree with the ideas but words are really just words until he takes some action. He needs to do something. But even so, everything he suggests now, it is too late, the rebels aren’t going to stop.”

Syria conflict blocks aid to 1 million needy, U.N. agency says The World Food Program says fighting has prevented deliveries of aid. In addition, hundreds of thousands are ill-equipped for the harsh winter.

UK meeting plans for possible post-Assad Syria The meeting will take place on Wednesday and Thursday, and delegates will include Syria experts, academics in post-conflict stabilization, representatives of the Syrian National Coalition (SNC) opposition group and other agencies. The gathering highlights jitters over the shape of a post-Assad Syria, and experts fear regional and sectarian rivalries could extend the bloodshed and destabilize other countries in the strategically sensitive and volatile region.

World ignoring Syria’s systematic ruin: Jumblatt World powers are abandoning Syria to be “systematically destroyed” by a civil war which has already wrecked whole cities in a once-great Arab nation, Lebanon’s Druze leader Walid Jumblatt said. Accusing them of “indifference or conspiracy”, Jumblatt said none of the international players, which are deeply divided over the 21-month-old uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, had shown any urgency to stem the bloodshed. Jumblatt has called for foreign states to do more to help rebels defeat Assad swiftly and avoid the partition of Syria, home to majority Sunni Muslims as well as minorities including Assad’s Alawites, Christians, Kurds, Shi’ites and Druze.

France’s Le Pen says ‘blind West’ aiding Syrian war Le Pen spoke to SAMA TV, which is part of Dounia TV, a conglomerate run by businessman and cousin of Bashar al-Assad, Rami Makhlouf, in a video that was uploaded to YouTube on January 2. The interview is the first accorded to a French politician since the start of the Syrian uprising. Speaking of an “Islamist fundamentalist” takeover of the country, the far-right leader said from her office in Paris that the rebellion had been “in part aided by the blindness of Western countries”. Le Pen said that Western powers were “doing in Syria exactly the same thing as they did in Libya, but secretly”. She said that by allegedly supporting Qatari and Saudi schemes to arm dissident militants in Syria, European leaders were “helping to fuel the civil war of which civilians are the first victims”.

Syria Refugee Camp Riot Breaks Out In Jordan A winter storm is magnifying the misery for tens of thousands of Syrians fleeing the country’s civil war, turning a refugee camp into a muddy swamp where howling winds tore down tents and exposed the displaced residents to freezing temperatures. Some frustrated refugees at a camp in Zaatari, where about 50,000 are sheltered, attacked aid workers with sticks and stones after the tents collapsed in 35 mph (60 kph) winds, said Ghazi Sarhan, spokesman for the Jordanian charity that helps run the camp. Police said seven Jordanian workers were injured. After three days of rain, muddy water engulfed tents housing refugees including pregnant women and infants. Those who didn’t move out used buckets to bail out the water; others built walls of mud to try to stay dry. Conditions in the Zaatari camp were “worse than living in Syria,” said Fadi Suleiman, a 30-year-old refugee.

Israel reportedly told Pentagon about Syria poison gas Israel notified the Pentagon that Syria was preparing a chemical believed to be deadly sarin gas and loading it into dozens of 500-pound bombs destined for airplanes. Israel’s warning to the United States at the end of November, involving intelligence showing up on satellite imagery, brought together the U.S., Arab states, Russia and China to deal with Syria’s deadly civil war, The New York Times reported Tuesday.

Fears raised over Syria uranium stockpile Nuclear experts in the US and Middle East have raised concerns about the security of up to 50 tonnes of unenriched uranium in Syria amid fears that civil war could put the stockpile at risk. Since the start of the uprising against Bashar al-Assad two years ago, western governments have been heavily focused on the fate of Syria’s chemical weapons and worries that those stocks might be taken over by militant groups. But government officials and nuclear experts have also expressed fears to the Financial Times about what may be a significant stockpile of uranium inside Syria.

Study shows rise of al Qaeda affiliate in Syria A jihadist group with links to al Qaeda has become the most effective of the different factions fighting the regime, according to a new analysis, and now has some 5,000 fighters. The group is Jabhat al-Nusra, which was designated an al Qaeda affiliate by the United States government last month. It is led by veterans of the Iraqi insurgency “and has shown itself to be the principal force against Assad and the Shabiha,” according to the study.

Syrian minister: Enemies ‘brainwashed’ slain rebel son A Syrian Cabinet minister confirmed the death of his rebel son, and, without a trace of grief, coldly rejected the young man’s embrace of the opposition, according to a state news report. “I disapprove and condemn whatever my son did,” said Mohammad Turki al-Sayyed, minister of state for the People’s Assembly Affairs, who acknowledged the death of his son, Bassim. “I said it before and I disavow him again, fully even after his death.”

 

Special Reports

The Rebellion
The Long, Hard Slog That Is Syria
Syrians know this will be a long war. Most still believe in victory, but many know that victory is a distant dream that could take years to achieve. History is not on the side of expediency — civil wars through history have lasted an average of seven to fifteen years and the Lebanese Civil War (Syria’s neighbor with a similarly sectarian population) was one of those that lasted fifteen. The fact is, the Syrian Civil War is just getting started. Assad may fall in the next few years, perhaps faster with Western support or another dramatic development, but the war after the war could rage for several years more. But none of this matters, and it certainly doesn’t matter to that FSA commander who is questioning the revolution. These are academic discussions which belonged in the room when the decision to revolt was being made. It doesn’t matter now, there is no going back and the only path forward is victory at any cost. “We will fight or we will die. We have no choice now.” He’s right.

Hints of Syrian Chemical Push Set Off Global Effort to Stop It
The combination of a public warning by Mr. Obama and more sharply worded private messages sent to the Syrian leader and his military commanders through Russia and others, including Iraq, Turkey and possibly Jordan, stopped the chemical mixing and the bomb preparation. A week later Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta said the worst fears were over — for the time being. But concern remains that Mr. Assad could now use the weapons produced that week at any moment. American and European officials say that while a crisis was averted in that week from late November to early December, they are by no means resting easy.

In Syria, war is the new normal
After nearly two years of civil strife, neither side sees a reason to quit fighting… The regime does not seem to have lost its taste for bloodshed, and it may even believe that it can fight on indefinitely from Alawite bastions (mainly the coastal area between Latakia and Tartus) even if the opposition is able to take Damascus. The resistance, for its part, has gained battlefield experience the hard way and is a far better fighting force than it was in the early months of the war. It is now better-armed as well, and its international support is growing as Assad’s wanes. With neither side feeling pressure to negotiate a settlement involving power-sharing, the Syrian war grinds on.

The Opposition
Fred Hoff: Forming a Syrian Opposition Government: The Time is Now
… a functioning bureaucracy will be central to any transition plan due to the need for continuity of government.  Ministries, departments, and agencies—including the security services—employ people and provide services, albeit often ineffectively and corruptly.  The preservation of these organs, as imperfect as they are, can facilitate the rapid dispersal of international assistance post-Assad and reassure millions of Syrians who fear the chaos of revolutionary rule.  Reform will come in time.  It is important to distinguish government and its associated bureaucracy from the ruling clique, which has become a militia, willing and even eager to risk destroying Syria to try to save itself.

Radwan Ziadeh: Time for a Syrian transitional government
Many Syrian opposition political forces still refuse to form an interim government on the ground, claiming that to do so would be premature. This may once have been true, but no longer. The preconditions which certain opposition members have demanded before forming the transitional government will never come to fruition. Therefore, the transitional government or government-in-exile should be formed immediately … the longer the forming of the transitional government takes, the more chaotic the situation will be, the more difficult it will be to establish a central authority, and the more difficult it will be to provide the liberated areas with social services, judicial institutions, health services, and humanitarian assistance.

The Country
Syria on Video
Whether people can forgive and live together again has been a contested issue in the recent history of many countries, from South Africa to Rwanda, the former Yugoslavia, Chile, Cambodia, Lebanon and Iraq. There is no universal solution, and while the blood is still flowing even to ask the question may seem premature. It can probably only find an answer once a minimum of justice has been achieved. But it has to be raised, and the sooner the better. Once Syrians emerge from the present nightmare – in one, three or ten years – they will be forced to look into one another’s eyes. They will have seen and heard things they wish they hadn’t.

The Humanitarian Front
UN Can’t Help 1 Million Going Hungry (WHAT YOU CAN DO)
The World Food Program said Tuesday it is unable to help an estimated 1 million Syrians who are going hungry, blaming a lack of security in the war-stricken country. This month, the agency aims to help 1.5 million of the 2.5 million Syrians whom the Syrian Arab Red Crescent says need food aid, spokeswoman Elisabeth Byrs said. The poor security and the agency’s inability to use the Syrian port of Tartous for shipments means that a large number of people in the some of the country’s hardest hit areas will not get help, she said. “Our main partner, the Red Crescent, is overstretched and has no more capacity to expand further,” Byrs said.

Aleppo misery eats at Syrian rebel support
As government forces fight on in parts of Aleppo, in large areas that have been under rebel control for six months or more complaints are getting louder about indiscipline among the fighters, looting and a general lack of security and necessities like running water, bread and electricity in districts that have been pounded by tanks and hit by Assad’s air force. Recognizing that mistrust, rebel units have set up command and policing structures they see forming a basis of institutions which might one day run the whole country and which, meanwhile, they hope can show Arab and Western supporters that they have the organization to handle aid in the form of money and weapons. For those who fear the worst for Syria now that the revolt has unleashed long suppressed ethnic and sectarian rivalries, however, evidence in Aleppo that these new institutions have had little practical impact on often rival rebel groups is ominous. And all the while relations grow testier between the rebels and Aleppines, for whom many fighters harbor some disdain after the urbanites’ failed to rise up on their own against Assad.

Safety first for Syria’s teachers and pupils
The 29-year-old teacher opened his makeshift school in the abandoned palace after Syrian rebel fighters took over previous, official schools in the northern city as their barracks and headquarters, resulting in all becoming targets for government shelling. Dozens of children study in the improvised classrooms set up around the building’s courtyard as the chatter of light weapons and the boom of artillery shells and mortars echo from not far away.

How I survived Syria’s killing fields
Before the revolution, Mohammed, 29, was working as a tailor in Beirut, but last August returned to his home in the rebellious town of Harithan, a few kilometres northwest of Aleppo, for Ramadan. On August 22 he went into the city to buy a mobile phone SIM card, but the regime’s shabiha thugs stopped him at a checkpoint in Sadala Square, discovered that he came from Harithan and arrested him.

Geopolitics 
Assad and the U.S. are blind to reality in Syria
The tragedy is that there is scant sign that Mr. Assad will be compelled to face reality any time soon. Despite their gains, Syria’s rebels continue to lack the heavy weapons necessary to break the regime’s hold over Damascus or to stop the artillery, missiles and planes Mr. Assad is using to pummel cities. With the United States and other Western governments refusing to help, recent reports have said that rebel arms supplies are drying up.

Syria’s regime and a populist left
Syria under the rule of Hafez al-Assad acquired the image of a bastion of intransigent anti-imperialism that made it attractive to a section of the western left. The process reflected changes in regional politics whose effects are felt to this day, say Hazem Saghieh & Samer Frangie.

The Electronic Front
Apple Rejects iOS Game Exploring Syria’s Civil War
U.K. game developer Auroch Digital launched Endgame: Syria as part of its Game The News project, which aims to get the public interacting with and reconsidering the concept of gaming, with politically and socially relevant topics infiltrating a medium usually reserved purely for fiction. The latter, says Auroch Digital’s creative director Tomas Rawlings, is a trend that we should not be afraid to challenge.

As Syria Worsens, Art.sy Changes Unique URL
Last Friday, the high-profile art startup Artsy changed its primary URL from Art.sy to Artsy.net, prompted by tensions in the Middle East and a 36-hour site outage Wednesday. The .sy top-level domain was a large part of the site’s identity, even factoring in the company logo, which suggests a line before the last two letters of the name. But while the Manhattan-based company has prominent investors from around the world, Wendi Murdoch and Dasha Zhukova among them, the change means they’ll be losing ties to one country they’d probably just as soon do without: Syria, which hosts the .sy web suffix and whose recent problems, server-related and otherwise, accounted for the site’s going down.

 

Video Highlights

Leaked video shows pro-Assad Alawite militias beaten a prisoner to death in revenge for their fallen colleagues http://youtu.be/3l-cW_WB2_Y

Syrian opposition members and expatriates celebrate the launch of a new hospital at Bab el-Hawa, a border crossing between Syria and Turkey http://youtu.be/gQWJhbo3Yj0 , http://youtu.be/gQWJhbo3Yj0

Rebels in Basr Al-Harir, Daraa take possession of a tank http://youtu.be/ta3TuyasysE Scenes from the clashes http://youtu.be/vR_umr9KwhU , http://youtu.be/LUxaIny56II ,http://youtu.be/sKwjr-cvvPw

Rebels in Damascus take control of the Political Security headquarters inHarasta Suburb in Eastern Ghoutah http://youtu.be/OZqT3n4GVXE In Mazzeh, the regime uses missile launchers station in the Mazzeh Military Airport to target restive suburbs in the south http://youtu.be/4EPoLNDpXvs

Scenes from the clashes in Taftanaz Military Airport http://youtu.be/BjPv25gQFCA , http://youtu.be/VSkcw8bzMBs ,http://youtu.be/G2qFSeJ97a8