In Syria, a country that continues to enjoy a difficult relationship with present-day Turkey, masses were held in Damascus and Aleppo.
Syrian Armenian scouts carry a Syrian and an Armenian national flags as they march in the old city of Damascus, April 23, 2015, to mark the 100th anniversary of the mass killing of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1915. Picture taken April 23, 2015. (Reuters/Omar Sanadiki)
If Damascus falls, Europe won’t be far behind – US senator
“If Damascus falls, the dreaded black and white flag of ISIS will fly” over Syria, Virginia state Senator Richard Black told RT. “Within a period of months after the fall of Damascus, Jordan will fall and Lebanon will fall,” he said, adding that the self-proclaimed Islamic State would then target Europe next.
Black is no stranger to the Syrian crisis. Last year, he wrote a letter thanking the government in Damascus for a “gallant and effective campaign” to liberate Christian villages on the border with Lebanon. Most Americans are not aware that Christianity started in present-day Syria, he pointed out.
Years of US interventions in the Middle East and elsewhere have resulted in vast numbers of displaced Christians in Syria, Iraq and the Balkans. “If you look at the history of American involvement,” since the first Iraq war, Black told RT, “the one central theme has been that in each instance we’ve purged Christians from various countries.” Christians who lived in Kosovo for over a thousand years “are gone, completely annihilated.”
During the four-day pogrom in Kosovo 11 years ago, more than 4,000 Christian Serbs were driven out of six towns and nine villages. Over 900 houses and 39 churches were also destroyed by ethnic Albanian rioters.
As a new report details the devastation wrought upon Syria by four years of rebellion, a Virginia state senator who once thanked the Syrian government for defending Christians is worried about the fate of Damascus, the Middle East and Europe.
“If Damascus falls, the dreaded black and white flag of ISIS will fly” over Syria, Virginia state Senator Richard Black told RT. “Within a period of months after the fall of Damascus, Jordan will fall and Lebanon will fall,” he said, adding that the self-proclaimed Islamic State would then target Europe next.
Black is no stranger to the Syrian crisis. Last year, he wrote a letter thanking the government in Damascus for a “gallant and effective campaign” to liberate Christian villages on the border with Lebanon. Most Americans are not aware that Christianity started in present-day Syria, he pointed out.
Years of US interventions in the Middle East and elsewhere have resulted in vast numbers of displaced Christians in Syria, Iraq and the Balkans. “If you look at the history of American involvement,” since the first Iraq war, Black told RT, “the one central theme has been that in each instance we’ve purged Christians from various countries.” Christians who lived in Kosovo for over a thousand years “are gone, completely annihilated.”
During the four-day pogrom in Kosovo 11 years ago, more than 4,000 Christian Serbs were driven out of six towns and nine villages. Over 900 houses and 39 churches were also destroyed by ethnic Albanian rioters.
11th Anniversary of the March pogrom of Serbs in #Kosovo pic.twitter.com/9qBChPRsDj
— Serbian Embassy, US (@SerbiaEmbWashin) March 17, 2015
According to a recent report by the Syrian Centre for Policy Research, six percent of the country’s population has been killed or wounded in the fighting in Syria. Life expectancy went from 79.5 years in 2010 to 55.7 years. More than 5 million Syrians became refugees or migrated in search of work, while 40 percent of the remaining 17.65 million are internally displaced. The country has lost over $200 billion through destruction, looting, capital flight and GDP loss; unemployment is officially at 58 percent; and most of those who have jobs work for the government.
The current conflict in Syria began in 2011, when the US-backed opposition began an armed rebellion against President Bashar Assad’s government during the Arab Spring. By 2013, large portions of eastern Syria and western Iraq had fallen under control of militants known as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (IS, or ISIS/ISIL). While declaring the need to fight ISIS, Washington has continued to demand the overthrow of Assad in favor of “moderate opposition.”
Black, who served in the US Marine Corps and retired as a Colonel in the Judge Advocate General (JAG) corps before getting elected to the Virginia legislature, maintains that the Assad government is effectively fighting against the Islamic State and protecting the remaining Christians of Syria. Its fall, he says, would let ISIS quickly seize Jordan and Lebanon, and continue its drive westward.
“I look at Syria as the center of gravity… for Western civilization,” Black said, using the military strategists’ term for a place or event that can determine the outcome of a war. “If it falls, we’ll begin to see a very rapid advance of Islam on Europe.”
Assad prove Syrian people supporting him, Four years on, some in Europe support talking to Assad
REUTERS / BEIRUT
Some European Union countries which withdrew their ambassadors from Syria are saying privately it is time for more communication with Damascus even though Britain and France oppose it, diplomats said.
Those states have become more vocal in internal meetings about the need to talk to the Syrian government and have a presence in the capital. London and Paris reject this, saying President Bashar al-Assad has lost all legitimacy.
This makes a change in EU policy unlikely, but the debate underlines a predicament for Western states which ostracized the government at the start of the crisis, imposed sanctions, and four years on still find Assad in power.
Diplomats say the calls have come from or would be supported by countries including Sweden, Denmark, Romania, Bulgaria, Austria and Spain, as well as the Czech Republic, which did not withdraw its ambassador. Norway and Switzerland, which are outside the EU, are also supportive.
Although Europe has long faced divisions on Syria, the calls have increased since Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) advanced in Syria and Iraq last summer and US-led strikes started against the group.
US officials say there is no shift in their policy regarding Assad, even as their focus is fighting ISIL, which is also an enemy of Damascus.
“Some states say: Bashar is a reality, we have to take this into account if there are threats to Europe,” one European diplomat said, referring to the risk of attacks at home by jihadists returning from Syria.
The EU first imposed sanctions on Assad and his circle in 2011 as authorities cracked down on protests. The crisis has spiraled into a civil war, killing more than 200,000, a level of suffering that some diplomats see as justifying contacts with Damascus in pursuit of a political solution.
While it is generally understood that there will have to be negotiations, diplomats said, Britain and France see Assad’s departure as a precondition. But the collapse of his government has become less likely as the war rolls on.
“We’ve been waiting for it to fall like a house of cards, but the problem is that we’ve been waiting for that for four years and that isn’t happening,” a senior EU diplomat said.
Full circle
The United Nations Syria envoy said on Tuesday the Syrian government was willing to suspend its bombing and shelling of Aleppo so a local ceasefire could be tested, a plan EU foreign ministers had backed in December.
“It is important the European Union support the UN mediator and his effort to create a ceasefire,” Denmark’s Foreign Minister Martin Lidegaard told Reuters. “In relation to that, we cannot avoid to talk to the regime in Damascus since they represent an element of power.”
European diplomats point to what they see as the shift in the US stance on Syria. US officials say they have not relented in their goal of Assad leaving power but see no policy likely to achieve this at an acceptable cost.
As a result, for months they have tacitly lived with Assad staying in his post and have made clear their focus is to combat ISIL.
“We don’t know what this coalition wants and the United States is not deciding,” said Bassma Kodmani, director of the Paris-based Arab Reform Initiative and a former member of the main Syrian opposition in exile.
“That’s leading to calls in Europe that Assad is the lesser of the two evils. The debate has come full circle.”
In public, EU foreign ministers have ruled out dealing with Damascus. After a meeting in October they said “the Assad regime cannot be a partner” in the fight against ISIL.
For its part, the United States, along with Turkey, reached a tentative agreement to train and equip non-jihadist Syrian fighters who oppose Assad.
The EU has imposed sanctions on officials, businessmen, institutions and trade and bans the import of Syrian oil or petroleum products. It has 211 people under sanctions and 63 companies or other organizations.
In October it expanded sanctions to include 12 government ministers, two senior military figures and a United Arab Emirates company it accused of helping supply oil.
“Bashar al-Assad has been murdering his people for years,” French Defense Minister Jean Yves Le Drian said last week when asked whether France should resume intelligence sharing with Damascus in the fight against ISIL.
“He is not part of the solution for Syria so we don’t need to choose between a bloody dictator and a ruthless terrorist army. The two should be fought,” he said.
Assad is keen for the West to reopen embassies, diplomats say, ruling this out for now. Some see a middle ground: talking to Damascus but condemning violence and pressing for aid access.
“I would hesitate to use the word engage, it is about communicating again,” a third diplomat said. “We lack visibility.”
Even in Paris there are some misgivings about the way the crisis was handled. Closing the embassy was a mistake, said a senior French diplomat who had called for more dialogue with the Syrians and their ally Iran.
Several EU countries have diplomats who travel to Damascus but are not based there officially. “Others who kept them open were able to have eyes on the ground and keep a relationship with Assad,” the French diplomat said.
“We don’t have a clear idea of what’s going on. Within intelligence circles the will to renew the dialogue is there.”
Rebel Jaysh al-Islam 4 killed as rockets rain down on Syrian capital: monitor
BEIRUT – Agence France-Presse
Four civilians were killed and dozens wounded when rebels fired a barrage of rockets and mortar rounds Jan. 25 at central Damascus, a monitoring group said.
The rebel attack came two days after they threatened to retaliate for deadly air raids by the Syrian regime against an opposition-held area on the edge of the capital.
“Four civilians have been killed and dozens more wounded, as rebels in the Eastern Ghouta area fired more than 43 locally made rockets and mortar rounds at several areas of central Damascus,” the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Among the areas hit were the Al-Maliki and Mazzeh neighbourhoods, as well as Arnus and Sabaa Bahrat squares, said the Britain-based group.
AFP journalists in Sabaa Bahrat square could hear the blasts, while ambulances and fire trucks rushed to the area.
State news agency SANA said the army fired back at the source, blaming rebels in the Eastern Ghouta area, without giving any initial report of casualties or naming the residential areas hit.
The attack comes two days after Zahran Alloush, head of the rebel Jaysh al-Islam (Army of Islam), warned on Twitter that his forces would launch a “rocket campaign against the capital” from Sunday.
“The rockets’ brigade is preparing for a rocket campaign against the capital, which will see rockets rain down every day… in retaliation for the regime’s savage air raids… against our people in the… Eastern Ghouta area,” Alloush wrote.
Government aircraft on Friday carried out a string of deadly raids against rebel-held Hammuriyeh in the besieged Eastern Ghouta area, located east of Damascus.
The Observatory said 56 people were killed, among them six children. Only five of the dead were fighters, said the group close to the Syrian opposition that relies on a network of activists and medics on the ground.
Alloush’s Jaysh al-Islam is the most powerful rebel group in Eastern Ghouta.
Tens of thousands of civilians trapped in the area suffer extreme shortages of food and medicine, activists say.
Syria’s war began as a peaceful revolt demanding democratic change, but later morphed into a brutal civil war after President Bashar al-Assad’s regime unleashed a massive crackdown against dissent.
More than 200,000 people have been killed since March 2011, and half the population has been forced to flee their homes.
January/25/2015
1 killed, 60 wounded as Armenian school in Damascus comes under fire
According to preliminary data, one was killed and 60 wounded as an Armenian catholic school in the Syrian capital Damascus came under fire, RA Foreign Minister said in Facebook post.
More detailed information will be provided soon, the ministry said.
“Three or four Armenians were injured, a teacher and students. The killed student was not Armenian,” Novosti-Armenia quoted Armenian Catholic Community’s Prelate, Bishop Hovsep Arnaoutian, as saying.
The shells exploded as the students were walking in the yard.
“Presently, those injured are in hospital and have received the essential medical assistance. We visited them together with the Education Minister,” Arnaoutian said.
Meanwhile, Asbarez reported that dozens of rockets and mortar shells hit Nor Gyugh district in Aleppo, killing 2 and wounding 6 ethnic Armenians.
Armenian MPs meet with Syria’s Assad in Damascus
The Armenian parliamentary delegation, headed by Republican lawmaker Samvel Farmanyan, met on Thursday with the Syrian president in Damascus.
Bashar al-Assad warned, during the talks, of the terrorism and extremism threats which he said receives backing from the West and several countries in the region, the SANA News Agency reported.
He told the Armenian MPs that the extremist ideology is a serious challenge to the region which has been historically known for its cultural and social diversity.
Mr Farmanyan conveyed to the Syrian leader a message from President Serzh Sargsyan in which the latter condemned Turkey-backed terrorist groups’ attacks against the Armenian populated town of Kassab.
“We have discussed the situation at the meetings, as well as the condition of our compatriots. After the return to Yerevan, we will share more details of both the outcomes of the fact-finding mission and the impressions with the president, prime minister and the National Assembly,” said the Republican MP.
For his part, President al-Assad appreciated the Armenian leader’s objective position on Syria, considering it supportive of the country’s stability. He highlighted parliamentarians’ role in revealing threats of terrorism and extremism.
At the end, the Armenian lawmakers expressed solidarity with the Syrian government, underling that the country will manage to resume its reputation as a crossroad of different cultures.
The delegation headed to Syria on a fact-finding mission Wednesday. They had plans to visit other Armenian-populated areas but weren’t recommended to for security considerations.
#savekessab
#kessab
Syria forces ambush, kill scores of militants, near a historic Christian village north of the capital, Damascus.
Syrian army forces have killed scores of militants, including members of the al-Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front, near a historic Christian village north of the capital, Damascus.
Syrian troops on Friday ambushed the Takfiri militants near Ma’loula at dawn with government sources saying that as many as 150 militants were killed in the attack.
The so-called Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the incident occurred between Ma’loula and the town of Yabroud, where government forces have been fighting foreign-backed militant groups for weeks.
Ma’loula lies on the edge of the mountainous Qalamoun region, about 60 kilometers (40 miles) northeast of the capital.
Syrian troops have stepped up their mop-up operations in the strategic region, whose full liberation will give the government forces a significant edge over the militants.
The al-Nusra Front, along with other Takfiri militant groups, captured Ma’loula in late November for the second time this year.
The militants kidnapped 12 Syrian and Lebanese nuns from a Greek Orthodox convent in Ma’loula in early December. They also abducted two bishops and a priest.
The Takfiri terrorists beheaded two handcuffed Christians in the western city of Homs in June, months after they decapitated a Muslim cleric in the northern city of Aleppo and dragged his lifeless body on the streets.
Syria has been gripped by unrelenting violence since 2011. According to reports, the Western powers and their regional allies — especially Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey — are supporting the militants operating inside Syria.
According to the United Nations, more than 100,000 people have been killed and millions displaced in the foreign-backed militancy.