Re: What's going on in Syria?
Posted: Wed Aug 03, 2011 9:57 am
Assaad is killing everybody :(
Largest online Somali community!
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who are the alawi sxb what have they done is it a syrian qabiil? or a political party?Shirib wrote:Down with the Alawi's
Its a shia sect (kinda shia's don't claim them, but they claim shia) that live in Syria, the Al Assad family are Alawiabdisamad3 wrote:who are the alawi sxb what have they done is it a syrian qabiil? or a political party?Shirib wrote:Down with the Alawi's
If that's true, its absolute kufr and they aren't MuslimGrant wrote:http://www.shaikhsiddiqui.com/alawi.html
Talk about a Trinity! And I always thought the Catholics were confusing....
Ok Mr "I want all attention on meGaajoUnit wrote:udun wrote:Oxidant wrote:The general census is that majority of Syrians support their government. Only a few are still high on the “Arab” revolution and are undermining the current government. The Syrian community in Australia held a protest and astonishingly they were pro-Assaad
Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Israel, and Jodan are all destabilizing Syria because it is the last Arab nationalist government that is standing. Most of the killings were done by the so-called 'Salafist' agents, who are extended arm of the proxy mukhabaraat of these anti-muslim countries, who are in turn controlled by the western governments. This is a plan to dismantle all independent Arab and Muslim governments one by one. Syrian security forces are given no choice but to stand up to this aggression imposed on them by foreign countries and their agents inside Syria. Th hypocrisy of Turkey was exposed big time in this tragedy in Syria as Turkey can no longer play as a muslim country who care about their other fellow Muslim countries. They are constantly threatening Syria, and many of the perpetrators of this tragedy are taking shelter in Turkey.
Mr conspiracy theorist,Just like Oxidant you are making gigantic` claims, yet you bring no proof. Most of the killings being done by Salafi agents? O miyaa arkasey? Ya ku sheegay?ICan you proof the rubbish you just spewed above?t's unbelievable the way some of yuy guys make these claims about countries you probably have never visited with asbosulte certainity. The internet is indeed an amazing tool; everyone become experts and eyewitnesses.
Former Mossad Chief Discounts Arab Spring, Welcomes Prospect of a Sunni Syria
Meir Dagan, who until February ran Israel's overseas intelligence agency for nine pretty successful years, has been making a new name for himself as outspoken retiree. Earlier this month he warned from a Tel Aviv stage that bombing Iran to stop its nuclear program was "a stupid idea," and suggested that with the recent departure of himself and two other top security officials paid to see the world clearly -- former military chief of staff Gabi Ashkenazi and Shin Bet (internal security) director Yuval Diskin -- hawkish prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and defense minister Ehud Barak might do something rash.
The remarks caused a sensation and cost Dagan a courtesy usually afforded retired Mossad directors, the continued use of a diplomatic passport, revoked by Netanyahu's office. On Tuesday he was on stage again, advising graduates of Israel's Netanya College ("At least I didn't need a passport to get here!") against being overwhelmed by the Arab Spring.
"Difficult times are destabilizing regimes all around us. They have received labels such as 'Arab Spring' and 'Democratic Tsunami', but I would recommend not making too much of labels and definitions because a deeper look reveals rifts and conflicts that existed before, and which have been swept under the rug, but are now bursting out in the form of protests and in many places purposeful violence," Dagan said in remarks reported by the online Y-net news service.
He expressed the usual concern from the Israeli perspective about the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt but added that "Israel is not alone" in working to counter it. In any event, on the chessboard of the Middle East, the Jewish State prefers the advance of Sunni pieces against the dark king that is Iran. Which brings us to Syria, still on fire after weeks of protests.
Israeli intelligence sources quoted in the Hebrew press lately are predicting that officers in the minority Alawite sect of President Bashar Assad will soon be making deals with counterparts in the Sunni majority. That prospect does not appear to bother Dagan. The status quo, after all, has been a concrete alliance between Syria and Iran, which together arm the Shi'ite militia Hizballah, which has some 40,000 missiles pointed at Israel from neighboring Lebanon, where both Syria and Iran wield great influence.
"They may not be lovers of Israel," Dagan said of Syria's Sunnis, "but there is is no doubt this would harm Hizballah, weaken it, harm the strategic backing it receives from Syria, minimize the Iranian influence in the field, increase the influence of Saudi Arabia and Gulf States on it, and increase the chances it would open up to the West."
That assessment offers not confirmation but at least helpful context for another report in the Israeli press today: a front-page report in Haaretz alleging that Iran's Revolutionary Guard are in the thick of Assad's efforts to suppress protests inside Syria, complete with reports of bearded officers speaking bad Arabic to Syrians and Persian between themselves.
http://www.worldtribune.com/worldtribun ... _08_01.aspIran issues tough warning to Turkey on Syria
NICOSIA — Iran, stressing its strategic interests, has warned Turkey to end intervention in Syria.
Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has issued a harsh warning to Turkey to end activities in Syria. In an article in IRGC's weekly Sobh'eh Sadegh, the elite military force asserted that Turkish forces were crossing into Syria as part of a Western campaign to destabilize the regime of President Bashar Assad.
"They entered through the Turkish border with Syria," the article, authored by R. Grumabdri, said.
On July 31, up to 150 Syrians were said to have been killed in an army assault on the northern city of Hama. Western diplomats said the Assad regime wanted to crush the revolt in Hama, a leading stronghold of the Muslim Brotherhood, before the onset of Ramadan.]
The article published in July, titled "Iran's Serious Stance in the Face of Syrian Events" and said to reflect IRGC thinking, warned that Syria would remain a strategic asset of Iran. IRGC said Ankara was playing a double game, pretending to support democratic change while working to undermine Syria.
IRGC said Turkey was trying to exploit the revolt in Syria to press on long-held border claims. The author warned that Iran would stand with Syria against any Turkish intervention.
"The whole world is aware of Iran's relationship with Syria and Iran should not keep this hidden," the article said. "Should Turkish officials insist on their contradictory behavior and if they continue on their current path, serious issues are sure to follow. We will be put in the position of having to choose between Turkey and Syria. Syria's justification in defending herself along with mirroring ideological perceptions would sway Iran toward choosing Syria."
The article was published after Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei relayed a warning to President Barack Obama against U.S. intervention in Syria.
Teheran has also warned Turkey against helping Washington in a NATO-led missile defense umbrella aimed to stop Iranian attacks on Europe. Khamenei raised the prospect that Turkey could be a target of Iran's huge missile arsenal.
"From Iran's standpoint, the Syrian leadership is in the midst of resolving its problems, and as soon as foreign meddling stops, the Syrians will be able to revert back to normal," the IRGC article said.
President Basher Assad's wife is sunni and he prays in Sunni mosques. I doubt we can judge what is in people's hearts.Shirib wrote:If that's true, its absolute kufr and they aren't MuslimGrant wrote:http://www.shaikhsiddiqui.com/alawi.html
Talk about a Trinity! And I always thought the Catholics were confusing....
I am anti Assad for the same reason that I am anti Mubarak, Salah, Saud, Gaddafi etc. not because he is Alawi, but because they are ruthless dictators that need to disposed of.udun wrote:President Basher Assad's wife is sunni and he prays in Sunni mosques. I doubt we can judge what is in people's hearts.Shirib wrote:If that's true, its absolute kufr and they aren't MuslimGrant wrote:http://www.shaikhsiddiqui.com/alawi.html
Talk about a Trinity! And I always thought the Catholics were confusing....
One should also know the biggest backstabber to Muslim and Arabs are the Saudi monarchy and those who are allied with them. Iran is part of the problem but one should have no illusions Saudi and those groups allied to it are the biggest obstacle.
Disposed of and then install puppet "leaders" that will bow down to the Imperialist pigs.Shirib wrote:I am anti Assad for the same reason that I am anti Mubarak, Salah, Saud, Gaddafi etc. not because he is Alawi, but because they are ruthless dictators that need to disposed of.
do these guys not for the most part do the same thing today?Beenaale_No1 wrote:Disposed of and then install puppet "leaders" that will bow down to the Imperialist pigs.Shirib wrote:I am anti Assad for the same reason that I am anti Mubarak, Salah, Saud, Gaddafi etc. not because he is Alawi, but because they are ruthless dictators that need to disposed of.