Wednesday, May 7, 2014

The Syrian People and their Freedom Fighters Deserve More than the World's Words, They Need Help

A new and deplorable milestone has been reached in the Syrian civil war. Hundreds of Syrian rebels, worn out from a year-long siege, left their last remaining bastions in the heart of the central city of Homs on Wednesday, under a ceasefire deal with government forces, according to opposition activists and the city's governor. The rebellion in the battered city, which was one of the first places to rise up against President Bashar al-Assad's rule, earned it the nickname "the capital of the revolution." Retaking the third largest city in Syria is a major win for al-Assad on multiple levels. Militarily, it solidifies his regime's hold on important territory in central Syria, linking the capital Damascus with regime strongholds along the coast and giving a staging ground to advance against rebel territory further north. Politically, gains on the ground boost al-Assad's hold on power as he seeks to add a further claim of legitimacy in the presidential elections he has set for June 3. According to AP, by early afternoon Wednesday, over 400 fighters had boarded several batches of buses that departed for the north from a police command center on the edge of Homs' rebel-held areas, opposition activists said. Many of the rebels were wounded, and it was unclear how many civilians were among them. A rebel spokesman told AP that the remaining 2,000 soldiers and any civilians would leave the city before the end of the day. According to the deal, the rebels were being taken a few kilometers (miles) north to the rebel held towns of Talbiseh and al-Dar al-Kabira on the northern edge of Homs province. Each rebel fighter was allowed to take a sack of his belongings and his personal weapon. Each bus was permitted one rocket launcher and a machine gun under the agreement, the rebel spokesman said. He said the rebels had asked for international aid, but none came, adding that the rebels "have lost more than 2,000 martyrs in nearly two years of siege." AP reported that the evacuation was taking place in an organized manner with no violations by either side. Homs governor Talal Barazi confirmed that the rebels had already started leaving the old districts. State TV said regime forces would enter the evacuated neighborhoods once rebels leave entirely. Fighters in the Waer district, just outside Homs' Old City, have so far refused to join the evacuation. But, activists said negotiations were underway for a similar deal there. The evacuation was a bitter day for the rebels who had been dug in inside and around the historic quarters of Homs where they had been under siege for more than a year. Some fighters had said they would rather die than give up the city. Homs, with a prewar population of 1.2 million was among the first to rise up against al-Assad in early 2011 in waves of anti-Assad protests. As Syria's conflict turned into outright civil war, rebels took control of 70% of the city, whose population represents Syria's mix - with a largely pro-rebel Sunni majority and a pro-Assad Alawite minority, along with Christians and other religious and ethnic minorities. In the Syrian civil war, Homs and its historis district became a battleground that left entire blocks and much of its historic quarters in ruins. Thousands of people were killed and almost all its residents have long since fled. Tit-for-tat sectarian killings rose, reflecting the increasingly religious dimension of the civil war. Rebels were slowly pushed back for well over a year, as regime forces besieged rebels in a dozen districts around its ancient bazaars. The siege caused severe shortages of both food and medicine, and heavy regime bombing blasted the rebel-held areas. A first major group - around 1,400 people, including fighters and residents - evacuated earlier this year in a U.N.-mediated operation. But they agreed Friday to the cease-fire deal, leading the way to a final evacuation. While the agreement represents a demoralizing event for opposition forces, it can also be seen as a face-saving deal for both sides. The rebels did not admit defeat, they were permutted to go farther north where rebels still control wide areas of territory, and the al-Assad regime can retake Homs without the loss of more manpower and weapons and can claim it was able to retake the last rebel bastions without spilling more blood. Part of the Homs deal was an agreement that rebels would also release up to 70 pro-regime gunmen and an Iranian woman they hold captive in the northern city of Aleppo, activists said. It was not clear if this included a group of people captured in the coastal province of Latakia, a regime/Hezbollah stronghold, where opposition fighters seized dozens of women and children in an offensive in August. Rebels reportedly also released 15 soldiers they were holding in Aleppo province. ~~~~~ Despite the lack of military help provided by the West to the Syrian rebel forces, they continue to ask for western support. Today, rebel leaders said the insurgents need weapons that could "neutralize" aerial raids by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's air force in order to change the balance of power on the ground and pave the way for a political solution to the crisis. Ahmad al-Jarba, president of Syria's main opposition bloc, spoke in Washington on the day that rebel forces surrendered the important stronghold of Homs. He said the war is not about gaining or losing a city, but about the whole conflict, which has lasted more than three years. Rebels have been asking the US for lethal aid for some time, but the Obama administration has refused, with the explanation that it fears such aid could fall into the hands of terrorists and other militants who have joined the battle but remain outside the opposition forces. Al-Jarba, who plans to meet with President Barack Obama during his visit, thanked the US for its humanitarian aid and political support at the United Nations. He said the Syrian people do not want the US or other countries to send troops or warships, but that opposition forces need weapons that could effectively "neutralize the air force." He called the crisis in Syria "the most dramatic human catastrophe in our modern time" and a tragic "calamity being played out by Assad and his cronies." He said : "The crisis has become more (than) we Syrians can handle," adding that even if the opposition completely controlled Homs, no one would be secure because of al-Assad's air raids. Al-Jarba's trip to Washington comes as the Obama administration is boosting its support for the Syrian Opposition Council. The State Department announced Monday that it would give the opposition's offices in Washington and New York formal diplomatic status and increase non-lethal assistance to the opposition by $27 million. The administration recognized the opposition council as the legitimate representative of the Syrian people in December 2012, but its US offices had been recognized only as informal liaison bureaus until this week. The Obama administration is considering taking additional steps in the coming days, including the possibility of levying new sanctions on the al-Assad government before the June elections. US sanctions on al-Assad and his associates have had little impact in stemming the bloody civil war that has stretched into a fourth year. More than 150,000 people have been killed n the clashes between rebels and forces loyal to al-Assad, with millions of others displaced by the war. The White House has denounced the upcoming Syrian elections as a farce aimed at giving al-Assad the veneer of legitimacy. Al-Jarba said the international community must take a strong stance now against al-Assad, whom he depicted as a "blood-thirsty tyrant." Al-Assad should not be allowed to run for re- election "over the dead bodies of Syrians." He compared al-Assad's rule to that of North Korea's dynasty. ~~~~~ Dear readers, the words are always the same -- the US is helping, the US rejects the legitimacy of the al-Assad regime, the US supports the Syrian people. But, we must ask when words will be followed by meaningful action. If Barack Obama is afraid of going it alone in helping the Syrian rebels with desperately need anti-aircraft defenses and weapons, he could at least pull together a UN force to carry out the needed aid. The Syrian people and their freedom fighters deserve more than the world's words. They deserve our help.

10 comments:

  1. Concerened CitizenMay 7, 2014 at 3:52 PM

    More sanctions, more words = more dead Syrian freedom fighter.

    Obama is a cowardice, want-a-be leader of the free world. He speaks for NO other country as our presidents use to. He doesn't even speak on behalf of well over 50% of the American voters. Obama speaks for only Obama wishes and wants. So it would seem that what Obama wants and wishes for is more suffering and death for the non-Assad faction of the Syrian people

    ReplyDelete
  2. A Tool 4 FreedomMay 7, 2014 at 6:19 PM

    Obama has the gull to call other countries elections a farce? Why does he know about fictitious elections based on lies, lies, and more lies

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Concerened CitizenMay 8, 2014 at 6:38 AM

      The reality is that numerous former intelligence officials have long known most of the story surrounding the on-again off-again intervention by the United States and others in Syria Department. In a sense it was a secret that wasn’t really very well hidden but which the mainstream media wouldn’t touch with a barge pole because it revealed that the Obama Administration, just like those who preceded it, has been actively though clandestinely conspiring to overthrow yet another government in the Middle East. One might well conclude that the White House is like the Bourbon Kings of France in that it never forgets anything but never learns anything either.

      Delete
  3. Syria, Libya, Turkey, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Egypt, Afghanistan, Ukraine, South Korea, Philippines, Thailand, Cambodia, Malaysia, CAR, Nigeria, Mali,, Ghana, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Digibouti, Sudan, had, Somalia, Algeria, and nearly all the rest of African nations all have one common denominator?

    They all need help and it is just not forth coming from the United States and president Obama, because to help them all is impossible. So what few do you pick? Well if you’re Obama you don’t pick any – that’s the safe route to take and that is the only path Obama will take. The safe route is best for Obama – who cares about the hundreds of thousands of innocent victims – Obama doesn’t.

    Obama has so gutted our military that we have so very little instant strike capabilities left. Obama couldn’t/wouldn’t help 4 of our own civil servants in Benghazi, Libya as they 2 were killed and some 7 hours later the other two were killed by marauding gangs of Islamic terrorists.

    ReplyDelete
  4. "If you have men who will exclude any of God's creatures from the shelter of compassion and pity, you will have men who will deal likewise with their fellow man." - attributed to St. Francis of Assisi (1182-1226 C.E.)

    ReplyDelete
  5. De Oppressor LiberMay 7, 2014 at 8:57 PM

    The destiny of the United States use to be characterize by what Ronald Reagan described as the “shining city on the hill” (from the parable of Salt and Light in Jesus's Sermon on the Mount). He saw our destiny as a matter of choice and desire, not accidental chance or circumstance. He believed that destiny was something to be achieved, not something that would come along if we just would sit down and wait for it long enough.

    In contrast Mrs. Obama said on January 20, 2009 at after her husband was inauguration that she was “never proud to be an American until today.”

    President Reagan (with the help of PM Thatcher & Pope John Paul II) ended the Cold War, brought down the Berlin Wall, set millions free from communistic control, broke up the USSR, generally made the world a safer place for “oppressed populaces” to live in.

    President Obama has failed in everything that he has attempted right down to his promise in his first inauguration address to “make government more responsive and more transparent.” Obama ignores his promises as easily as he does his lies.

    ReplyDelete
  6. As we had seen in the 2008 election, and again in the 2012 election, Obama is all about the fundamental transformation of America and rooting out those things which made America exceptional. The desirability of such a transformation—which would entail the wiping away of as many more traces of American exceptionalism as it will take to turn this country into a replica of the social-democratic regimes of western Europe—is the issue at the heart of our politics today.

    The world is in depth of a philosophy of “leading from behind.” There are paleoconservatives like Pat Buchanan (who has lately came to this belief) and libertarians like Ron Paul (who has been steadfast on this issue) who agree on this point, but most conservatives do not believe that a radical lessening of American power and influence would be good for us or for the world.

    But as much respect that I have for both Buchanan & Paul and all like them, can’t they see that the Islamic terrorists, the Middle East contention, the African nations lawless nearly everyone is all due to the loss of American Exceptionalism and all the fear that brought to the souls of the Kremlin and the leadership in Beijing.

    Somebody’s exceptionalism must stop this ravenous movement of evil.

    ReplyDelete
  7. De Oppressor LiberMay 8, 2014 at 7:04 AM

    The West and anyone else that thinks Turkey is on the "rebels" side in this Syrian conflict needs to consider the role that the Tomb of Suleiman Shah (in Syria, but considered to be owned by Turkey) plays in respect to Turkey's real interests here.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. We should not forget The war on freedom, The War on Terrorism, or the Axis of Evil. They are all alive and well and enjoying the confrontation.

      Delete
  8. I hate to say it but I think Syria has been forgotten... And that is Barack Obama's fault and his Democrat White House and Cabinet.

    ReplyDelete