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#1 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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Houla Massacre, Syria: What If?
What if the Syrian government's recent investigation and their consistent claims of no role in the Houla massacre is not all a "blatant lie?" (Susan "Viagra" Rice)
The question matters. Let's say intervention happens ala Libya, triggered by this plus the follow-on murders of random people at remote state-run factories (clearly done by the regime). Let's say Russia and China relent in the face of pressure, jets and drones, no soldiers, but lots of weapons and foreign volunteers funneled in, all kinds of sanctions and blockades, etc. Maybe without the air part, whatever. Regime overthrown after a six-month-to-three-year war. The opponents, whichever are most armed, are now in charge. If the regime was behind the heinous crime, as the Anglo-American establishment is certain by design, we have saved a people from rule by such madmen. The cost might be pretty steep in numerous ways, but I'd say that's a good thing. If not, then the regime opponents were behind it, to provoke said war, and get themselves in charge. We wouldhave handed Syria and its population over the false-flagging child-slashing terroristsof a pretty foul character. It could get quite ugly once they start their revenge purges, especially to punish harshly the regime "criminals" they blamed for Houla. And that's AFTER the war, after "we" crushed all efforts of the demonized regime and its mant, many supporting citizens to resist. But with the Libya example, maybe they'll fold quicker, let the purge, and the destabilization of Iran begin fairly soon. Really the answer to anyone willing to engage the OP question at all would be "well, that would suck," usually followed bit a "however..." So that can't go far. We should discuss then how likely it is, from available evidence, that it does suck, we are on the latter path and should stop and turn back before it's too late. Let's start here: How do we know - with the certainty fitting such grave matters as the future of a nation of millions - that the Syrian regime or militias were responsible for either phase of attack? The shelling of the town, is government-done because it was done with pro weapons while the activists/rebels only have sticks and a few old guns, right? But after was the up-close slaughter of men, women, and children including, reportedly, rape and sodomy, eye-gouging, throat-slitting, head-hammering, and forcing families to watch any and all of it. See here: http://americansyrians.com/syria/pos...ry-forces.aspx The government doesn't deny that these things happened-they draw attention to it, saying it looks like the work of hardcore Islamo-nihilists like seen in Algeria, mid-1990s, or Libya, 2011. Anyway, what's gotten most of the convinced people here convinced it's the Syrian government we need to be pressuring/punishing over this, as opposed to finally helping them or just letting them help defend their own? Do we even have any reports on the names and affiliations of the families targeted? |
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#2 |
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Ewige Blumenkraft
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Ivory Tower
Posts: 7,833
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A new SANA article from today goes into more details and cites witnesses.
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According to a victim list published by an internal opposition human rights group (could be a temporary link), the majority of the murdered people including most children belong to the second named family, Abdelrazzaq. Problem is of course that none of this investigation, truthful or not, will be given any credibility by the autistic western media which have distorted the situation for so long. And validating the governments claims about "affiliations" is of course next to impossible. Let's hope the UN observers will do a thorough job at finding out what they really were more or less witnessing. |
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#3 |
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Guest
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Kansas (Australia)
Posts: 14,750
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There was an interesting discussion on CNN a few days ago. One of the major talking points was the lack of knowledge about the opposition. It seems no one is really sure who they would be backing if they did arm the rebels in any significant way
Syria unlike Libya has managed to not allow herself to be isolated, she still has powerful friends in the world, and if any intervention by the west was to be attempted I have little doubt the conflict would widen. I dont believe much of what comes out of Assad's mouth and I have little reason to be confident about anything being reported from the rebel's side. There is clearly a propaganda war here - so it is just going to take a little more examination than normal to decide a right side and a wrong side - If either even exists |
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#4 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 2,180
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As well the rebels apparently not having any heavy artillery, these satellite pictures seem to provide some evidence of the government's role in the shelling at least:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-18274542 I think using disproportionate force, like perhaps the shelling in this case, would be a war crime but not necessarily a crime against humanity. As for the massacre proper (i.e. the executions), it's hard to apportion blame for certain with the information we have. Both the government's version (people killed for not supporting rebels) and the rebel version (shabiha militia) seem credible enough. I do get the impression that sectarian violence, and violence in general, by the rebel side is being underplayed in a lot of what I read. |
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Evolution a poem As luck would have it, people. |
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#5 |
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Guest
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Kansas (Australia)
Posts: 14,750
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#6 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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@C.E.:
Ah, yesterday I saw they were identified as pro-regime, but names witheld to prevent further retaliation. It's possible their plan was to chase out loyalists and make it a purely rebel area and pretend regime supporters don't existin the populace. Already the West acts as if that's true, saying wehope to rescue "the Syrian people." The list gives no case-by-case death details, and some of the translations come through weird, but it has 107 names, including several army officers. They say these positions came under fire, killing soldiers, at the same time Houla was shelled. Agreed on the difficulty of getting the truth accepted if it's along these lines. It would mean admitting they were wrong and backing a pretty vile force for the takeover. Won't happen easily, probably not at all. I think we're well locked on course, morally. Physically, pragmatism might be able to force a postponement of regime change. If someone can make that the pragmatic choice. @ MG1962 Reasonable assessment. The truth really does matter enough that we shouldn't even settle for "more than likely" or "apparently." A serious team is needed, including all kinds of skeptics and hard science and all possibilities considered. The main one for me, in both phases of attack, is WHO STANDSTO BENEFIT from a panic-inducing slaughter of children just ahead of Kofi Annan's visit, to underline what the rebels have been saying - the peace plan should be declared dead, the cease-fire called off. They seem ready to fire now, perhaps being better armed than we thought. |
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#7 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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Artillery used in an attack with no benefits for the government (attack could backfire on Assad, one news story ingeniously notes) suggests they're just better armed now than we thought.
The article and images don't prove anything. Cat tracks at a "suspected" artillery site don't prove the tracks were made by gov. artillery on that day. "All the images were taken on the morning of Saturday 26 May, within hours of the massacre ending." We could presume the tracks weren't there the day before. But that would be stupid. In fact, when was the Google Maps imagery taken? Anyone with Google Earth could say (I don't have it). Same exact tracks there at that time. The Syrians say their positions came under fire too, and I think that soldiers were in one case captured and tortured to death by militants. If true, what odds that the opposition was shelling the troops as the troops shelled the city, and then someone swarmed into Taldou. WHERE'S THE SATELLITE IMAGERY OF THE ACTUAL WEAPONS? FIRED IN DAYLIGHT, SOMEWHERE AROUND THERE, WHY CAN'T SE SEE THE ACTUAL WEAPONS, THE PEOPLE FIRING THEM, AND THEIR LOCATION? WHY ZOOM IN ON OLD TRACKS? (caps lock accidental but fits) So I challenge the convention apparently agreed to even by the Russians, per Lavrov “We are dealing with a situation in which both sides obviously had a hand in the deaths of innocent people, including several tens of children"
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Agreed. More than likely, one side or the other was responsible for both phases of attack. |
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#8 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Osaka, Japan
Posts: 8,507
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I don't know. It's a real tough one but I should think the weight of suspicion for the shelling should fall on the Syrian military because they are the only people who surely have the means of achieving that level of shelling. If they targetted that town then it seems reasonable to think the shabiha were the ones who followed up with the massacre of people at close quarters.
I think it may also be a reasonable question to the extent that Assad is in control of his own forces. I doubt he controls the shabiha but then again I really don't know. I don't favour any kind of military action because I haven't seen enough evidence that anyone really knows what is going on. I also think that once full-scale civil war occurs we are going to see some ruthless and barbaric massacres on all sides. Good post, Caustic Logic. ETA: I think, however, an important plan of action is for the UN observers to thoroughly investigate this because if Assad or his military are responsible for this then it is important that he doesn't get away with flagrant acts of murder on the basis of "Who knows who did this?" This may seem to contradict what I have just said but whether Assad did this or not some pressure needs to be put on his regime to fulfill some of the original terms of the ceasefire which he definitely did ignore. |
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#9 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Osaka, Japan
Posts: 8,507
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There's a good article by Patrick Cockburn which I broadly agree with and which shows that even he and his sources don't know exactly what is going on in Syria as a whole:
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#10 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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You want to blame the regime because you're sure they have such weapons while the other side only maybe does. But this decision is tough. Noted.
I don't find it too difficult to make the opposite argument. The rebels stand to benefit, and they could well be more armed than we think. Anyone catch this? http://jcpa.org/article/alqaeda-jiha...syrian-regime/ One shipment from Tripoli, 150 tons of weapons, stopped short by the Lebanese. Other shipment, who knows? http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/20...09/212988.html
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#11 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Osaka, Japan
Posts: 8,507
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As Cockburn notes in one of the articles I linked to, Assad was bound to other terms of the agreement with Annan that he seems to have simply ignored. I think if he had carried out those other terms then there may be more reason to think Assad is behaving in good faith.
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#12 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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1)because the wepons are mobile and the syrian millitary isn't entirely composed of idiots (they probably assume they are going to be bombed by NATO at some point so are acting acordingly).
2)The satilites aren't that good. Spotting weapons in action would be tricky. |
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#13 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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That could be. They say they're complying, but maybe not. I'm not even sure of the terms and if they're fair and make sense. I'm not at 100% steam on this, as I'm stuck trying to finish a big report on a Libyan false-flag massacre that really needs done soon.
But already I think I've exposed a joint lie by the BBC and that "military analyst" pointing to old tank tracks as proof. What kind of analyst cannot check previous imagery to see when the tracks were laid? A stupid one, or a lying one whose interest is in getting military action rolling, analysis be damned? |
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#14 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Osaka, Japan
Posts: 8,507
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I'm not entirely certain about it either but I tend to have a high level of trust in Patrick Cockburn and I tend to think he's nobody's stooge.
The problem is that there are propagandists on both sides (as always) so I've been asking around for some help in finding the best disinterested sources. I had thought that some of my friends from the Middle East would know some good sources but they tend to send me some of the most ludicrously unbalanced reports. The same guy sent me both a video of a pro-Assad woman claiming that everyone is behind Assad against a few foreign-backed terrorists and also an article claiming that everyone is behind the opposition trying to depose a bloodthirsty dictator. The same article had a large banner advertisement across the top reading, "Join the CIA!" (seriously!) I pointed out to him that I find neither source credible for particular reasons but thanks anyway, and does he know who the shabiha are. He responded:
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#15 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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Wouldn't it be smarter ... hold on for this... to just NOT indiscriminately shell a city and then slaughter 20 women and 30 children? As if moving the weapons around helped any -everyone's blaming them anyway just be default.
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Serious investigation needed. My money's on it not happening, but I hope it's wrong. |
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#16 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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A friend with Google Earth and the date info on various images gives a very broad but adequate time frame: the tracks appeared between August 20th 2010 and
February 22nd 2012. At the very least three months before the events in question. |
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#17 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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The point of moving weapons is not to avoid credit but to prevent them from becoming targets themselves. This has been a basic tactic from well the napoleonic era.
I doubt the shelling was entirely indiscriminate shells cost enough that its always worth doing at least some aiming. Killing 20 women and 30 children is just a rather dirrect way of making it clear that opposition has a price. The syrian regime knows what it is doing. This isn't the first rebellion it has needed to crush. Killing families is a fairly standard tactic in such situations. Just consider Matabeleland or Chechnya.
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#18 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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Still no answer though why they point to these "tell-tale tracks." The tracks meander all over that small tree-farm looking area - why? They're at least three months old. What basis is there for thinking they're connected to the shelling a few days ago as opposed to lumber removal? None, as far as I can tell. Dishonest wishful thinking by a war-hungry professional "analyst" passed on uncritically by a war-hungry media outfit.
Have we looked yet? ![]() Are JREF members smarter than BBC and more level than Forbes McKenzie?
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#19 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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Again thats pretty normal when moving a short distance to firing positions.
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Probably just some small time bussinessman looking to make a name for themselves. The private "Intelligence" industry is littered with such folk but very few of them are worth much (Jane's Information Group and some of the equipment nerds might be exceptions).
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#20 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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Maybe you're right, but it looks like they're driving all over in fairly random directions, as if the goal was to cover the whole area with as many random tracks as possible. Logging roads tend to work kind of like that. Maybe artillery roads too.
And of course, when was this artillery driving on these roads? McKenzie makes it sound like Friday the 25th. BBC makes a big deal of the images being taken on the 26th, as if that flippin' matters.
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With no meaningful investigation, of course.
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And I forgot to respond to this.
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a) the regime (or affiliates) is insane/stupid as well as evil or b) the opposition (or affiliates) is smart and savvy and evil |
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#21 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Osaka, Japan
Posts: 8,507
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#22 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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Yeah, but not without some reason. I may also be projecting my frustration with the unquestioning complete war-zombie mindset evidenced by governments, media, etc. Apologies if I've offended anyone or turned them off, but hey, what can you expect, you darn NWO shills?
![]() Another way of looking at it is I'm dishing the caustic on certain ideas and arguments - or even hints of them - and not the people. But in fact, I'm not getting ridiculed as an apologist for tyrants quite like I expected. The skepticism here is slightly encouraging. So keep it up, just in case it can ever grow to where it matters and helps in the world. |
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#23 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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I don't know. The logging around here tends to result in large scale tree clearence rather than the result we see in the pic.
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#24 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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Fair enough, although I'd have to go back and look closer. Maybe they lay the roads in advance, and/or use the roads for the water truck to water the trees. At any rate, they look like organically dense tree-access roads. Possibly also tracks where artillery regularly drives amongst the trees at random. Proof that happened on the 25th and they fired? Nil.
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Here's a thought - I've asked for evidence how we know what happened. No one's yet cited the eyewitness accounts that prove it with amazing clarity. The blood-smeared boy, especially. Why is that? |
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#25 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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Bottom line is that armatures trying to interpret satellite images doesn't end well. Forbes McKenzie at least has the excuse that he has a company to drum up business for. "who now works for the commercial company that analysed the images" kinda cute don't you think? Suggests the company has employees.
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#26 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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Holy crap, sorry Geni. Maybe nothing, but I just had a holy crap moment. How many terrorist fighters did the Syrians say launched this whole shell-the-soldiers, shell-the-city, slaughter families operation? around 800, right?
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Belhaj, of course, onetime military warlord of Tripoli, previously LIFG founder, negotiator of onetime merge with Al Qaeda, supposedly cancelled after Seif's reformation efforts that had them all rehabilitated and released, swearinf off terrorism - until the uprising last year. Now he's in Syria, allegedly, with a fair amount of weapons and a force the same basic size as the one cited here. Hmmm... Oops, sorry, Iranian sources. Probably lying. Belhaj will be rebutting this - from Libya - any day now, right? |
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#27 |
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Ewige Blumenkraft
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Ivory Tower
Posts: 7,833
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Don't know if you followed it but in all humility I think that my months long coverage in this thread about Russia's and China's veto of UN resolutions, and taking a lot of flak as "Assad lover", kind of prepared the ground. It went from "conspiracy blogs" reporting about the foreign-financed and trained mercenaries/jihadis - while "everybody knew" that "Assad is killing his own people" - to Amnesty International condemning their activities and Clinton "worrysome" admitting Al-Qaeda involvement with overlapping goals to the US. In the process I also heard the term "Shabiha" for the first time in some SPIEGEL horror stories, which they put out daily at the time. It appeared when it became undeniable that there are other forces than the Syrian army and "good rebels" active. I searched a bit and did not find too many sources for the term. IIRC - don't think I posted about it - it originated with a New York Times story from late last year. Could be that this "Assad thugs militia" is not exactly based in reality, but hard to tell. |
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#28 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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#29 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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LOL on the last. As an ameteur that's pretty good at making basic assessments that don't require specialization, just logic, I kind of contest the first sentence.
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#30 | |||
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Ewige Blumenkraft
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Ivory Tower
Posts: 7,833
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As to the weaponry of possible other actors, I searched the thread for a certain post of mine:
This is from February 27th. The video I linked has disappeared from YT but I found another copy. The day before:
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#31 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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Nah. Goes back further than that. Fundimentaly it boils that that they can count. Non kurd Sunns make up about 65% of the population have spent the last few decades being oppressed by the Alawite minority. Its not unreasonable to expect that they seak a certian degree of recompense.
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#32 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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Good work then, and I salute the bullets you took for the cause. ETA: Sorry I salute you, not the bullets.
I've been hearing around that the Shahiba only emerged as a story recently -the shadow army of Alawites capable of anything, like this. Suggestion they are a made-up ghost story. I don't know, myself. Hearing lots of things for the first time. @ Geni: Do note the weapons you list are from the intercepted shipment they never got. We don't know how many other shipments got through or what was in them. Possibly zero, possibly ten, including tanks and artillery. How you smuggle those, dunno, but it's possible. That's why I get annoyed with people who say it had to be the regime since the rebels don't have this or that, as if anyone knows, or would tell if they did. |
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#33 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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#34 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,979
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Okay, I'll start then. This kid sounds pretty convincing right?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012...ivor-boy-syria |
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#35 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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The only known case of smuggling tanks in the 21st century involves the South Sudanese.
Thing is machine guns and RPGs are the kind of thing that you can travel light with and don't require much of a logistics train. Artillery does. As well as being little more than great big "shoot me here" sign in the hands of people who don't know what they are doing. |
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#36 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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Its hardly war, its not as if there is likely to be much tactical or strategic innovation so I really don't see why you are taking an interest. I mean if you are really that into gore I understand a few videos came out of chechnya as well as various more recent stuff. For the more historicaly minded I sugest the blue book covering german east africa.
The Syrian government are fighting an anti insurgency war in the conventional manner without any of this western PR stuff. So yeah sometimes they shoot up a house full of people. Sometimes they grab people off the street and introduce them to the contents of the black & decker catalogue. If this in any way surprises you you probably haven't been paying much attention to the last few thousand years of warfare. |
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#37 |
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Ewige Blumenkraft
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Ivory Tower
Posts: 7,833
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#38 |
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Ewige Blumenkraft
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Ivory Tower
Posts: 7,833
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After a week of silence, there's a statement of the russian foreign ministry about the massacre.
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Although not mentioned, it's likely that they also base their conclusion on the report of an Abkhazian journalist team which was in the region and has interviewed witnesses independently of the Syrian authorities. Their original Russian report including videos of the interviews is here, and an English translation of a German translation is here. This is all quite detailed, including names of some (the locals, presumably) of the terrorists involved. Bad chinese whispers translation slightly improved by me, from the German one:
Originally Posted by Marat Musin of Abkhazian Network News Agency
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#39 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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#40 |
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Ewige Blumenkraft
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Ivory Tower
Posts: 7,833
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