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Posts Tagged ‘Bashar Assad’

Syrian Islamists have Chemical Weapons; Cory Booker thinking of challenging Chris Christie

by Phantom Ace ( 139 Comments › )
Filed under Al Qaeda, Democratic Party, Islamists, Leftist-Islamic Alliance, Muslim Brotherhood, Progressives, Republican Party, Syria at December 10th, 2012 - 12:00 pm

There have been reports that Bashir Assad is planning to use chemical weapons against the Syrian Islamist rebels. It will not be a one sided affair. The Islamists now claim they have WMD as well. If true this will be the first time an Al-Qaeda affiliate had access to WMDs. To prove they have weapons the Syrian rebels put out  a video showing them gassing bunnies in a warning to Alawites.

The video is too revolting and I will only link to it.

The West’s nightmare has come to pass. Al-Qaeda now has WMD. This turn of events are our own doing. The Obama Regime, with the support of the Republican Establishment, has given support to these rebels. Their success is due to the support Qatar, Turkey and Saudi Arabia is giving them with our encouragement. The US is once again enabling the Caliphate.

One of the biggest allies of the emerging Caliphate is NJ. Governor Chris Christie. He has appointed Muslim Brotherhood connected judges and is a supporter of the Islamist agenda. The corpulent wannabe Guido is also a political snake who betrayed Mitt Romney. He is up for re-election next year and there is only one NJ politician who can give him a run for his money. NJ Mayor Cory Booker is contemplating running for NJ Governor in 2013.

Mayor Cory Booker is an honorable man unlike the loud mouth phoney Guido. Many Conservatives and Libertarians will send him money to help him defeat Christie.

Assad preparing to use Chemical Weapons against Islamist rebels

by Phantom Ace ( 13 Comments › )
Filed under Al Qaeda, Islamists, Muslim Brotherhood, Special Report, Syria at December 5th, 2012 - 11:52 pm

Syria has a large stockpile of Chemical weapons. In recent weeks, the Islamist rebels (Muslim Brotherhood/al-Qaeda) have been making gains against Assad’s forces, Iranian Revolutionary Guards and Hizb’Allah. There is no question that Assad’s regime is on its last legs. No there are reports that Assad is preparing to use Chemical weapons against the Islamists in a last stand.

The Syrian military is prepared to use chemical weapons against its own people and is awaiting final orders from President Bashar Assad, U.S. officials told NBC News on Wednesday.

The military has loaded the precursor chemicals for sarin, a deadly nerve gas, into aerial bombs that could be dropped onto the Syrian people from dozens of fighter-bombers, the officials said.

As recently as Tuesday, officials had said there was as yet no evidence that the process of mixing the “precursor” chemicals had begun. But Wednesday, they said their worst fears had been confirmed: The nerve agents were locked and loaded inside the bombs.

The Obama Regime and the Wilsonian Progressive wing of the Republican Party led by Muslim Brotherhood agent John McCain, would love Assad to use Chemical weapons. It would give them the pretext for military intervention in Syria and to install another Islamist regime in the region.

Personally I could care less if Assad kills a bunch of Islamists. I will be blunt, I don’t care about dead Muslims. Most Americans don’t either, but the Republican Party always support any military action. Code Pink and the Left will be silent since it will be a Democrat starting another war. The Obama regime will have no organized opposition to any military action.

When it comes to foreign policy, there is only party. It’s the Transnationalist Wilsonian Progressive nation building kiss Islamic ass party. I hope one day to see someone in American politics offer an alternative foreign policy based on national interest and opposition to Islamic interest. I bet pigs will fly before that happens. Maybe the debt going up to 21 Million will change things? Nah, who am I kidding since 16 trillion hasn’t changed anything!

Sit back an enjoy the Syrian fireworks. There’s nothing better than 2 evil factions killing each other.

 

Former Syrian PM says Assad’s rule is crumbling

by Mojambo ( 1 Comment › )
Filed under Headlines, Syria at August 14th, 2012 - 11:37 am

How soon before Bashar Assad winds up like Mussolini?

AMMAN/ALEPPO – President Bashar Assad controls less than a third of Syria and his power is crumbling, his former prime minister said on Tuesday, in his first public appearance since he defected to the opposition this month.

Riyad Hijab told a news conference in Jordan that the morale of Syrian authorities was low after grappling for 17 months to crush a popular uprising and an armed insurgency against Assad.

“The regime is collapsing, spiritually and financially, as it escalates militarily,” he said. “It no longer controls more than 30 percent of Syrian territory.” Hijab, a Sunni Muslim, was not in Assad’s inner circle. But as the most senior civilian official to defect, his flight after two months in the job looked embarrassing for the president.

Meanwhile, the United States on Tuesday lifted financial sanctions against former Syrian Prime Minister Riyad Hijab after his decision to leave Bashar Assad’s government.

The US Treasury is ending its freeze on assets Hijab may have held under US jurisdiction, the department said in a statement. Nearly 30 senior officials in Assad’s government are on the US Treasury’s list of persons hit with asset freezes, including Syria’s new prime minister, Wael Nader Al-Hal

Hijab did not explain his estimate of the territory still controlled by Assad, whose military outnumbers and outguns the rebels fighting to overthrow him. The army is battling to regain control of Aleppo, Syria’s biggest city, after retaking parts of Damascus that were seized by insurgents last month.

Curbs on media access make it hard to know how much of Syria is in rebel hands, but most towns and cities along the country’s backbone, a highway running from Aleppo in the north to Deraa in the south, have been swept up in the violence. Assad has also lost swathes of land on Syria’s northern and eastern border.

While the military focuses on Damascus and the business hub of Aleppo, rebels have slowly made gains in Syria’s tribal heartland to the east, where a ferocious fight is under way for Deir al-Zor, capital of the country’s main oil-producing region.

Army gunners shell Deir al-Zor, an impoverished Sunni city near the Iraqi border, from fortified outposts in the desert.

A Western diplomat who follows the Syrian military said rebel forces in Deir al-Zor were fragmented but that the military lacked the numbers and supply lines to defeat them, in a region producing all Syria’s 200,000 barrel a day oil output.

Jubilant rebels said they had shot down a Syrian jet fighter southeast of Deir al-Zor and captured its pilot on Monday. The government blamed the crash on technical problems.

Islamic Cold Shoulder

Assad also faced deeper diplomatic isolation over his violent crackdown on opposition with the planned suspension of Syria from the Saudi-based Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), a step opposed by his Shi’ite ally Iran.

He will view the OIC decision, to be adopted at a summit of the 57-member body in Mecca, as the work of supporters of the Syrian opposition such as Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey.

Splits among big powers and regional rivalry between Iran and Saudi Arabia have stymied diplomatic efforts to halt the bloodshed in Syria, where opposition sources say 18,000 people have been killed. The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said more than 45 died on Tuesday and 180 the day before.

The violence, now focused on the city of Aleppo but flaring in many other areas, has displaced 1.5 million people inside Syria and forced many to flee abroad, with 150,000 registered refugees in Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon and Iraq, UN figures show.

UN emergency relief coordinator Valerie Amos arrived in Syria to discuss aid for civilians trapped or uprooted by the fighting, which has frequently prevented the delivery of food and medical supplies.

“She’s there to express her grave, grave concern over the situation,” spokesman Jens Laerke said. “She will look at the situation on the ground and discuss with the government and humanitarian partners how to scale up the response in Syria.” Efforts to arrange ceasefires to let relief convoys through have rarely worked. A UN official said last month the Syrian authorities had often denied visas to Western aid workers.

In Aleppo, Syria’s biggest city and its economic dynamo, food is running short and has become far more expensive. State-run groceries that sold heavily subsidised staples have shut. In the Bustan al-Qasr district, hundreds of men lined up for bread.

“Catching my tomatoes”

At a makeshift hospital, one doctor said some people were arriving seeking food rather than medicine.

Another doctor described a man who had been shot in the foot while carrying home food for his family. He was more worried about losing his groceries than about his wound. “He started crying: ‘My food, my food, someone catch my tomatoes’.” Amos went to Syria in March to seek unhindered access for aid workers to badly-hit areas. Damascus agreed to a joint but limited humanitarian assessment, but bureaucracy and insecurity have foiled UN efforts to launch a significant aid operation.

Reuters journalists in Aleppo heard shelling and explosions in Saif al-Dawla district, next to the Salaheddine neighborhood which has seen some of the heaviest fighting in the last two weeks. One rebel fighter was killed by tank shelling, his bloodied body dragged out of the line of fire by comrades.

“We received some simple amounts of ammunition but it is not enough,” said rebel fighter Hossam Abu Mohammad, a former army captain. “We need specific kinds of (anti-tank) weapons.” “We are about 600 Free Syrians fighting in Salaheddine and it is not enough,” he told Reuters.

Assad is struggling to keep power, relying on military and security forces led by members of his minority Alawite sect, an esoteric offshoot of Shi’ite Islam. They are combating a deadly insurgency that emerged after a crackdown on peaceful anti-Assad protesters mostly from Syria’s 70 percent Sunni majority.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is likely to take up the cudgels on Assad’s behalf at the two-day Mecca summit that may highlight the rift between the Shi’ite Islamic Republic and Sunni-ruled nations that want the Syrian leader to step down.

Saudi Arabia and Qatar are believed to be paying for arms that reach Syrian rebels via Turkey to try to counter the superior firepower of Assad’s mostly Russian-armed military.

Russia and China, which have blocked any UN Security Council action on Syria, firmly oppose any outside intervention in Syria, but Beijing is trying to show a “balanced” approach by developing contacts with the opposition as well as Damascus.

Bouthaina Shaaban, a senior adviser to Assad, arrived in Beijing but did not speak to reporters. She will meet Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi, the foreign ministry said.

“China is also considering inviting Syrian opposition groups in the near term to China,” ministry spokesman Qin Gang said.

Shi Yinhong, a professor of international relations at Renmin University, said China’s willingness to meet Syrian opposition groups differed markedly from Russia’s attitude.

“The Syria government is more vulnerable than before. The opposition groups have gained new found support from the West, but they’re also fragile. China has a pressing need to talk to the two sides. The situation now is nearing an end,” he said.

Turkey masses troops on the Syrian Border

by Phantom Ace ( 146 Comments › )
Filed under Islamic hypocrisy, Islamic Supremacism, Syria, Turkey at June 26th, 2012 - 2:00 pm

If there is one positive aspect on Dar al Islam, it is that they turn on their own. In response to the downing of a Turkish plane, the Neo-Ottoman Muslim Brotherhood affiliated leader of Turkey, Erdogan, is now openly threatening Syria. The Turks have mobilized Troops on the Turkish border.

The Turkish military mobilized large numbers of reinforcements from its eastern provinces to the Syrian border on Tuesday, amid rising tension with Damascus, after the downing by Syria of a Turkish Air Force jet on Friday, Turkish media reported.

Large numbers of Turkish troops — including at least 15 long-range artillery pieces and tanks – moved to the Syrian frontier from the eastern city of Diyarbakir. A video published by the Turkish Cihan News Agency showed Turkish tanks being transported by carrier trucks toward the

The mobilization followed statements by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan that the Turkish military will respond to any future violation of its border by Syrian military elements.

“As awe-inspiring as Turkey’s friendship is, Turkey’s wrath is equally awe-inspiring,” Erdogan told the Turkish parliament on Tuesday.

“The rules of engagement of the Turkish Armed Forces have changed,” Erdogan said. “Any military element that approaches the Turkish border from Syria posing a security risk and danger will be regarded as a threat and treated as a military target.”

Erdogan closed his remarks with an especially harsh condemnation of Syrian President Bashar Assad: “Turkey and the Turkish people will continue to provide all support until the people of Syria have been saved from this tyrannical, murderous, bloody dictator and his gang.

This is awesome. Get the popcorn and some fruit punch. I think we about to see some Jihadi vs. Jihadi action brewing! Clearly the Turks sent that F-4 to provoke Syria and have a pretext for a fight. This is typical Islamo-Fascist tactic. Personally I hope the Turks and Syrians kill each other!