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Posts Tagged ‘Syrian War’

Muslim Brotherhood’s Spiritual leaders declares Jihad on Hezbollah

by Phantom Ace ( 5 Comments › )
Filed under Al Qaeda, Headlines, Hezballah, Islamists, Lebanon, Muslim Brotherhood, Syria at June 1st, 2013 - 12:19 pm

The intense fighting at Qusayr between the forces of Bashar Assad and Hizballah vs. Al Nusra and the Free Syrian Army is igniting sectarian sentiment in the Islamic world. The influential cleric and spiritual leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood Qaradawi has called on Sunnis to go fight Jihad in Syria. He singled out Hezbollah in his call for Jihad.

Influential Muslim cleric Youssef al-Qaradawi has called on Sunni Muslims to join the rebels fighting the Syrian regime, as he lashed out at Lebanon’s Hizbullah for sending its men to fight the mostly-Sunni insurgents in Syria.

Qaradawi, a controversial figure in the West but who has millions of supporters, mostly from the Muslim Brotherhood, also hit out at Iran for backing the Syrian regime of President Bashar Assad.

“Every Muslim trained to fight and capable of doing that (must) make himself available” to support the Syrian rebels, the cleric said at a rally in Doha late Friday.

“Iran is pushing forward arms and men (to back the Syrian regime), so why do we stand idle?” he said, branding Hizbullah, which means the party of God in Arabic, as the “party of Satan”.

[….]

“The leader of the party of the Satan comes to fight the Sunnis… Now we know what the Iranians want… They want continued massacres to kill Sunnis,” Qaradawi said.

This gets better by the day!

The end of artificial Mideast countries; Hizb’Allah surprised by Al Nusra’s tactics

by Phantom Ace ( 89 Comments › )
Filed under Iraq, Israel, Lebanon, Middle East, Palestinians, Saudi Arabia, Syria at May 31st, 2013 - 10:00 am

sykespicot

If the Syrian War appears very similar to the post colonial African wars, it’s because they have a common origin. Like Africa, The UK and France carved up the region and created countries by lines drawn up by them. Many of the countries they created were artificial and did not reflect religious nor ethnic differences. Syria is perfect example of a nation drawn up without reflecting the reality. The war there reflects the crackup of these artificial Mideast nations.

Expect major tears in the map of the Middle East this summer and fall, as states created by outsiders a century ago finally rip apart.

“Nations” better understood as “tribes with flags” are unlikely to survive the two-year (and counting) bloodbath in Syria and the rising violence in Iraq. Or the turmoils in Bahrain and Yemen and the flood of refugees into Jordan — you name it. It even looks like we’ll see the emergence of independent Kurdistan.

[….]

About then, the Syria war seems likely to transition to partition, as the breakup of Sykes-Picot gets in high gear.

Sykes-Picot? Go back to 1916, when diplomats Sir Mark Sykes of Britain and Francois Georges Picot of France signed a secret agreement to divide the region after their nations won World War I.

The deal created national borders out of thin air, drawing lines to suit the needs and whims of the Europeans — and mostly ignoring on-the-ground ethnic, religious and sectarian realities.

The Brits and French withdrew by mid-century, replaced by Arab kings, dictators and tyrants. But the Sykes-Picot maps remained, defining the new states’ borders.

Until the Arab Spring moved from countries like Egypt and Tunisia (states not dreamed up by Sykes and Picot) to places like Bahrain and Yemen — where the upheavals triggered deeper internal religious, sectarian and tribal divisions.

Similar in-country sectarian unease had already started to undo the state of Iraq, as we left it to its own devices.

[….]

Armed stalement is still the most likely outcome — with a de facto breakup of Syria into Kurdish, Sunni and Allawite mini-states.

Moscow won’t mind: Assad will rule a Damascus-coastal corridor, where most Alawites live, so Russia will keep its influence and its naval base in Tartous.

Iran’s “Shiite crescent” will remain intact, too — from Lebanon through Assadistan into southern Iraq.

But Sunnis will control most of the rest of current Syria, giving the Turks, Saudis and Qataris their piece of the action. Kurdistan will be carved out of current Syria and broken Iraq.

Key Sykes-Picot borders will be gone — with Jordan likely teetering and “central” governments in states like Yemen and Lebanon largely impotent.

The Collapse of the Mideast is the best geostrategic gift to the US since the end of the Cold War. With the Islamic savages killing each other, they will not have time to bother us. The US has gained nothing out of the Mideast and lost much. There is a reason why part of my family left that region more than 100 years ago. The best course of action is to isolate that region and let it implode.

Addedum:

Hizb’Allahs’ forces are still stuck fighting at the Syrian border town of Al Qusasyr. The Lebanese Shia terror group assumed that it would be an easy victory. Instead the Syrian rebels led by Al Nusra has put up a surprising prepared the defense and the battle has turned into a quagmire for the Hezzies. Unlike fighting Israel who values human life, they have met an enemy in Al Nusra who love death more than them. The result is that Hizb’Allah is now in unafmailiar territory fighting a more ruthless enemy.

Those, like Mahdi, who have fought in Syria, acknowledge that the Syrian rebels have been capable fighters and that for the first time, Hezbollah is facing an enemy of the same ideological caliber and with the same kind of training.

“One must say that they are very well trained and very well-equipped,” Mahdi said. “They own state-of-the-art sniper guns; this is how they’ve hunted down our fallen comrades.”

The frequency of funerals for Hezbollah fighters who have died in Syria significantly increased after the battle of Qusair. Countless posters of “Hezbollah martyrs” line the north-south Bekaa Valley highway that leads to Baalbek.

[….]

Jawad maintained that the rebel Free Syrian Army was “totally powerless,” arguing that the extremist Nusra Front was leading the fighting.

“They [rebels] are powerful not only because they apparently have very good training and very sophisticated weaponry,” Jawad said, citing the brutality of Chechen fighters among the ranks of the Nusra Front.

“Nusra is strong because [the fighters] are fearless. I can sense that from the way they launch raids against us,” Jawad continued. “It’s like they really don’t care if they die. They are ruthless and fearless.”

Both Jawad and Mahdi confirmed that many of their comrades were killed in ambushes that were strikingly similar to tactics Hezbollah originally devised when it fought the Israeli army in south Lebanon during the occupation and later on during the 2006 summer war.

“There’s a kind of irritating familiarity,” Jawad noted. “Hezbollah taught Hamas all those tactics to fight the Israelis. Hamas apparently decided to transfer their experience to takfiri groups.”

[….]

When they were in Qusair, the Hezbollah fighters, who were interviewed separately in Beirut and Hermel, said some of the practices of the Nusra Front fighters left them “speechless.”

Besides the booby-trapped hideouts they leave behind, Nusra fighters have a disconcerting night-time ritual, they said.

“At night they burn the corpses that have accumulated during the day,” Abbas said.

[….]

“Takfiris have no respect for the land or for human dignity. They are doing monstrous things,” Jawad said. “At least Israelis put our martyrs in coffins and number them.”

Israel should pay attaention at the developmenets of the battle of  Al Qusasyr. Al Nusra is giving the blueprint of how to defeat Hizb’Allah. ALso, the tactics and skills of Al Nusra should be studied in case the IDF ever has to face this organization in battle. One thing for certain, Hizb’Allah is not an offensive force and can’t even do a seige correctly. Rebels from the FSA and Al Nusra have broken through the seige and have reinforceed their positions in that town.

May they continue to kill each other.

Palestinian Refugees burn aid from Hizb’Allah

by Phantom Ace ( 1 Comment › )
Filed under Hamas, Headlines, Hezballah, Lebanon, Palestinians at May 30th, 2013 - 11:18 pm

Hizb’Alah is rapidly becoming a pariah in the Arab world. Through their intervention in Syria, the organization has exposed itself as what Israelis and Lebanese Christians have known all along. Hezbollah are nothing but Iranian puppets who do Tehran’s bidding. Even the Palestinian who once supported them have turned on them. Yesterday the Lebanese Shia terror group threatened their former ally Hamas. Today Palestinians burn the aid Hizb’Allah gave to their refugee camps.

A number of Palestinian refugees who fled the war in Syria on Thursday set ablaze aid offered to them by Hizbullah in protest at the party’s military intervention in the neighboring country, state-run-National News Agency reported.

The refugees at the Palestinian Ain el-Hilweh camp in Sidon called on Hizbullah to withdraw its fighters from Syria and not to interfere in Syrian affairs, NNA said.

The military support of Hizbullah has helped Syrian regime forces gain the upper hand in the battle for control of Qusayr, a key town for both the regime and the insurgents, where a fierce army assault began 12 days ago.

This gets better by the minute.

Hizb’Allah tells Hamas to leave Lebanon

by Phantom Ace ( 1 Comment › )
Filed under Hamas, Headlines, Hezballah, Islamists, Lebanon, Palestinians at May 29th, 2013 - 5:55 pm

Hamas has thrown its support behind the Syrian rebels. This should come as a shock no one, since Hamas comes from the Muslim Brotherhood and is an ideological twin of al-Qaeda. They are now armed and funded by Qatar, not Iran. Their former ally Hizb’Allah is not happy with this and is now telling them to leave Lebanon.

BEIRUT – The powerful Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah called on Hamas members and officials who are still present in Lebanon to leave the country ‘immediately and within hours.’ The decision comes as a response to the Palestinian Islamist movement’s role in the ongoing war in Syria against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.

Media sources close to the Palestinian national liberation movement Fatah in Lebanon said a Hezbollah senior security official informed Hamas representative in Lebanon, Ali Baraka, that all of those related to Hamas on the Lebanese territory became have become unwelcome.

The military unit of Hamas has broken ties with former ally Syrian President Bashar Assad and has begun training members of the opposition’s Free Syrian Army in Damascus, according to a report by The Times of London.

Anonymous diplomatic sources told the Times, earlier this month, that members of the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades were training Free Syrian Army units in the rebel-held neighborhoods of Yalda, Jaramana and Babbila in the Syrian capital.

Let them kill each other.