Showing posts with label Syrian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Syrian. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

Exclusive: Syrian forces trying to secure border areas in Idlib province

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Exclusive: Syrian forces trying to secure border areas in Idlib province

Friday, March 28, 2014

Al-Qaeda Syrian Rebels To Receive Air Defense Aid From Obama Administration

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Al-Qaeda Syrian Rebels To Receive Air Defense Aid From Obama Administration

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Syrian Intervention: Just Another Brick in the Military-Industrial Complex

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Syrian Intervention: Just Another Brick in the Military-Industrial Complex

Monday, February 24, 2014

Saudi Arabia ‘seeking Pakistani arms for Syrian rebels’


Saudi Arabia is in talks with Pakistan to provide anti-aircraft and anti-tank rockets to Syrian rebels to try to tip the balance in the war to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad, a Saudi source said Sunday.


The United States has long opposed arming the rebels with such weapons, fearing they might end up in the hands of extremists, but Syrian opposition figures say the failure of Geneva peace talks seems to have led Washington to soften its opposition.


Pakistan makes its own version of Chinese shoulder-launched anti-aircraft missiles, known as Anza, and anti-tank rockets — both of which Riyadh is trying to get for the rebels, said the source, who is close to Saudi decision-makers, requesting anonymity.


Read More…




BlackListedNews.com



Saudi Arabia ‘seeking Pakistani arms for Syrian rebels’

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

(Translated) Jabhat Al Nusra build and repair water system for syrian civilians in deir ezzor

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(Translated) Jabhat Al Nusra build and repair water system for syrian civilians in deir ezzor

Monday, February 17, 2014

The Free Syrian Army fired Gen. Idriss over battleground failings





The Free Syrian Army has sacked its military chief after the Western-backed rebels suffered battlefield setbacks, amid signs the warring parties are escalating the fighting that has already killed more than 140,000 people.


Activists warned Monday that regime troops are preparing a ground offensive against the town of Yabrud, the last rebel stronghold in the strategic Qalamoun region near Lebanon‘s border, after days of aerial bombardments.


On the diplomatic front, US Secretary of State John Kerry slammed Russia on Monday for “enabling” Syria‘s President Bashar al-Assad to stay in power, after Geneva peace talks broke off without result over the weekend.


Moscow quickly dismissed the allegation and launched its own broadside, accusing the US of failing to ensure a “truly representative opposition delegation” attended the talks.


More from GlobalPost: Kerry blames Assad government of stonewalling latest Syria peace talks


The sacking of rebel military commander Selim Idriss was announced Sunday by the FSA, which said he was being replaced by Brigadier General Abdelilah al-Bashir, an army deserter.


Colonel Qassem Saadeddine of the rebel coalition said the decision was taken due to “the paralysis within the military command these past months” and the need to “restructure.”


A source inside the Syrian opposition told AFP that Idriss — who was appointed to the role in December 2012 — had faced criticism for failings on the battlefield.


These included “errors and carelessness in combat” and “poor distribution of weapons” among the rebels on the ground, the source said.


The FSA has taken a beating on the battlefield in recent months not only by regime troops but also by Islamist fighters who have joined the battle to unseat Assad.


Considered the “moderate” rebel group, the FSA was once the country’s strongest armed opposition force but is now increasingly marginalized by Islamists, including Al Qaeda-linked groups.


Analysts said that with the failure of the latest round of peace talks, Syria’s regime and rebels are likely to ratchet up military pressure on the ground.


“I fear that the failure of the Geneva talks will lead to military escalation — it will probably get worse before it gets better,” said Volker Perthes, director of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs.


“Both sides will try to show that they can change the balance on the ground in their favor, and that they aren’t forced to negotiate out of weakness.”


The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group reported a surge of fighting Monday around Yabrud, which lies on a strategic highway linking Damascus and the central city of Homs.


The head of the Britain-based Observatory, Rami Abdel Rahman, told AFP that the Syrian air force dropped explosive-packed barrels on the outskirts of Yabrud, and that fighting had erupted in the nearby rebel-held towns of Ras al-Maara and Al-Sahel.


Pro-regime newspaper Al-Watan reported that the troops were battling jihadists around Yabrud, including fighters from Al-Nusra Front, Al Qaeda’s branch in Syria.


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/syria/140217/the-free-syrian-army-fired-gen-idriss-battleground-fa




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The Free Syrian Army fired Gen. Idriss over battleground failings

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Al-Qaeda calls to its Syrian affiliate to fight Assad only remained unanswered - expert


Hello, Sir. Thank you for joining us. First of all, why al-Qaeda decide to publicly announce the break just to feel exposed or is there any other reason behind this statement for the Western press? What is your impression?


Well, animosity has been growing between the al-Qaeda affiliate in Syria, known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria or ISIS and other rebel groups, and that has fueled deadly infighting. That has also harmed the movement against President Assad, the infighting has trapped their ability to launch an effective campaign against the Syrian regime. Now al-Qaeda Central lead by Ayman al-Zawahiri has spoken in the past of the fact that the al-Qaeda affiliate needs to focus its aims more against the Assad regime rather than fight other Syrian rebel groups. And the fact is that those calls have fallen unanswered which is party why now Al-Qaeda Central is taken this move against its affiliate.


Now, in related issue, many say al-Qaeda is gradually loosing its control over the territory mid arising in fighting in Syria? Is that really so?


The main area of concern internationally has been that the al-Qaeda affiliate in Syria have been very actively engaging in recruiting British, German and French nationals to fight for their cause. And that has been of major concern for Western governments because of the potential blowback where their citizens could become radicalized ideologically as well as be equipped militarily. And with those skills they would return home, to their countries of origin, and in a position to plot and plan deadly mass casualty attacks, very similar to what we saw in the aftermath of 9/11 right up till 2006, where British nationals were trained in Pakistan by al-Qaeda and then come home to plan major mass casualty plot. Al-Qaeda’s ability to recruit in Syria has not diminished or shown any sign of weakening, it actually has been quite consistently active and that itself is another concern.


Now, Sir, let’s talk a little bit about ISIL. Initially, ISIL was the al-Qaeda branch in Iraq. Then why did it expand its operations into Syria. What is it fighting there for? What are their interests in Syria?


Al-Qaeda in Iraq has been a group that grew in the aftermath of the US led operations in Iraq from 2003, led by individuals like Abu Musab al-Zarqawi although he was killed, the group itself still conducted a number of attacks against the US soldiers as well as carrying the attacks against Iraqis but most importantly developing sectarian conflict inside Iraq itself. It was inevitable once the battle against the Assad regime began, that those elements in Iraq would align themselves with individuals of a similar ideological lining in Syria. Iraq and Syria are very closely intertwined in many ways. At one point both countries had Ba’ath Party president. There is often been people transferring from either country for jobs or economic reasons. Historically, the connections between Syria and Iraq are very strong. So it was inevitable that even that terrorists and extremists would use e connections to align themselves. It illustrates the fact that the al-Qaeda franchise continue to expand and to proliferate and the group itself is very much following the same ideological pattern as other al-Qaeda factions, which is to create an Islamic state based on Sharia law opposed to manmade laws, opposed to any type of form of democracy, a very stringent rigid doctrine.


The views expressed here are solely those of the interviewee and may not represent the views of the Voice of Russia editorial team




The Voice of Russia, News



Al-Qaeda calls to its Syrian affiliate to fight Assad only remained unanswered - expert

Saturday, February 1, 2014

‘No direct US-Syria talks unless Kerry apologizes’ – Syrian FM

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem (AFP Photo / SANA)
Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem (AFP Photo / SANA)


The Syrian FM claims to have rejected a US offer of direct talks without the involvement of the opposition “tools” during the Geneva conference over John Kerry’s refusal to apologize for his biased speech. US officials denied seeking such a meeting.


On his way back to Syria, the country’s foreign minister Walid Muallem was asked why hadn’t the Damascus delegation spoken directly with the US without intermediaries from the opposition delegation.

“Frankly, the Americans have asked for that in Montruex and I refused unless Kerry apologizes for the speech he made in the conference,”
Walid Muallem told Syrian state media on board a plane bound for Damascus.


Syria’s foreign minister was apparently referring to the opening remarks of US Secretary of State John Kerry’s speech made in Montreux, Switzerland on January 22, who said that President Bashar Assad lost all legitimacy and cannot be a part of any transitional government.


“There is no way, not possible in the imagination, that the man who has led the brutal response to his own people could regain legitimacy to govern,” Kerry said in that speech. Walid Muallem rebuffed him at the time, saying no outside force had the right to “withdraw legitimacy” from the president or government except for the people of the country.


The US officials were quick to deny claims by Syria’s foreign minister that US diplomats were seeking direct negotiation with the Syrian delegation.


“At no point did the United States offer to negotiate directly with the Syrian regime,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said, though clarifying that the US indeed offered to connect with Syrian officials “on a staff level” through the United Nations and Joint Special Representative Lakhdar Brahimi.


Psaki added that the State Department will never apologize for the views expressed by the top US diplomat. “At no point will Secretary Kerry ever apologize for speaking the truth about the brutality the Assad regime has inflicted on the people of Syria,” she said.


US Secretary of State John Kerry (AFP Photo / Fabrice Coffrini)
US Secretary of State John Kerry (AFP Photo / Fabrice Coffrini)


The peace talks that ended in Geneva on Friday producing no concrete results and no official commitment from Damascus delegation to return to the negotiation table on February 10. The government and opposition were unable to bridge their differences on ceasefires, humanitarian corridors or the question of a transitional governing body.


In a security conference in Munich, the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said that he urged Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and US Secretary of State John Kerry “to use their influence to ensure the talks proceed as scheduled on February 10.”


Lavrov insisted that “Russia can do nothing alone” as he asked the US to apply their influence on the Syrian opposition.


Muallem, meanwhile, warned the opposition will eventually suffer a “reality shock” unless they abandon their “illusions” and drop unrealistic demands.


The Assad delegation has sought to focus the discussions on brutal acts of terrorism, and Muallem accused the opposition delegation for refusing to sign a declaration condemning such activity in Syria.

“This rejection is a smirch on the forehead of the coalition’s delegation, and as I said yesterday that any person in the world who suffered from terrorism would adopt this draft statement,”
Muallem said, adding that the foreign-based coalition who “live in 5-star hotels” knowing nothing about the Syrian reality.


The Syrian foreign minister also lashed out against the “unjust” international community that impose sanctions on a war-torn country.


“It is an ‘international community’ that adopts double standards policy and mostly dominated by the US… they dominate the UN Security Council and the UN,” Muallem said.

“When they say ‘international community’ we laugh as they do not represent the international community, for if we take into consideration the population of Russia, China, India and the BRICS countries, we find that they are the international community.”

Muallem questioned how could the West want to be involved Geneva dialogue and at the same time “impose sanctions on the Syrian people and children?” He asked European Union’s foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton to explain how can the West can sanction a ban on food products yet at the same time discuss the issue of humanitarian aid shipments.


The foreign minister concluded by saying that in the negation process, Syria will refuse anything that contradicts the constitution.

“This constitution was reached by a referendum and no one can reach or even think that the presidency is a topic of discussion.”


Source: RT




End the Lie – Independent News



‘No direct US-Syria talks unless Kerry apologizes’ – Syrian FM

Friday, January 24, 2014

Syrian government warns it will leave Geneva talks if no "serious sessions" are held before Saturday





Syria‘s government and opposition have agreed to meet in the same room on Saturday and accept that their talks will be based on a 2012 communique which called for a transitional governing body to be set up, mediator Lakhdar Brahimi said on Friday.


“Tomorrow we have agreed that we shall meet in same room,” Brahimi told a news conference after he held separate meetings with government and opposition delegations in Geneva.


“The discussions I had with the two parties were encouraging,” he said. ”I think the two sides understand that very well and accept it,” Brahimi said, in reference to the Geneva I communique that calls for the establishment of a transitional body.


Opposition delegate Anas al-Abdah told Reuters: ”We are satisfied with Mr. Brahimi’s statement today and that the regime has accepted Geneva 1 (communique).


“And on this basis we will meet the Assad delegation tomorrow morning. It will be a short session in which only Brahimi will speak, to be followed by another session, a longer session in the afternoon,”


The talks nearly faltered before they began, with opponents of President Bashar al-Assad refusing to meet his delegation unless it first signed up to a protocol calling for a transitional government.


Plans for the two sides to sit down to talk face-to-face on Friday were ditched at the last minute. Instead, they each met separately with Brahimi, at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva.


“We have explicitly demanded a written commitment from the regime delegation to accept Geneva 1. Otherwise there will be no direct negotiations,” opposition delegate Haitham al-Maleh told Reuters.


Earlier, Syria’s Information Minister Omran Zoabi said the government would not accept demands for the establishment of a transitional governing body.


“No, we will not accept it,” Zoabi told Reuters.


Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem was quoted by state television earlier on Friday telling Brahimi that if no serious work sessions were held by Saturday, the government delegation would leave peace talks in Geneva.


“If no serious work sessions are held by (Saturday), the official Syrian delegation will leave Geneva due to the other side’s lack of seriousness or preparedness,” state television quoted Moallem as saying, citing a United Nations source.


A UN spokeswoman confirmed Brahimi was meeting the delegates separately: “There are no Syrian-Syrian talks at the moment,” said Alessandra Vellucci. “I cannot tell you anything about what will happen in the next few days.”


Even before the announcement that the direct talks were canceled, the outlook was dim.


“The objective is for the first round of talks to last until next Friday, but expectations are so low we’ll see how things develop day by day,” a Western diplomat said.


“Every day that they talk is a little step forward.”


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/syria/140124/syrian-government-warns-it-will-leave-geneva-talks-if




GlobalPost – Home



Syrian government warns it will leave Geneva talks if no "serious sessions" are held before Saturday

Monday, January 20, 2014

Syrian opposition issues ultimatum on peace talks








FILE – In this Friday, June 10, 2011 file photo taken during a government-organised visit for media, Syrian army soldiers standing on their military trucks shout slogans in support of Syrian President Bashar Assad, as they enter a village near the town of Jisr al-Shughour, north of Damascus, Syria. Nearly three years after the crisis began, Syria’s government and opposition are set to meet in Geneva this week for the first direct talks aimed at ending the conflict. With stakes high and expectations low, Syria’s government and its opponents sit down face-to-face at an international peace conference this week for the first time _ muscled to the negotiating table by foreign powers that fear the bloodiest of the Arab Spring uprisings may engulf the entire region in sectarian war. (AP Photo/Bassem Tellawi, File)





FILE – In this Friday, June 10, 2011 file photo taken during a government-organised visit for media, Syrian army soldiers standing on their military trucks shout slogans in support of Syrian President Bashar Assad, as they enter a village near the town of Jisr al-Shughour, north of Damascus, Syria. Nearly three years after the crisis began, Syria’s government and opposition are set to meet in Geneva this week for the first direct talks aimed at ending the conflict. With stakes high and expectations low, Syria’s government and its opponents sit down face-to-face at an international peace conference this week for the first time _ muscled to the negotiating table by foreign powers that fear the bloodiest of the Arab Spring uprisings may engulf the entire region in sectarian war. (AP Photo/Bassem Tellawi, File)





FILE – In this Monday, March 21, 2011 file photo, A Syrian army soldier steps out from the burned court building that was set on fire by Syrian anti-government protesters, in the southern city of Daraa, Syria. It began innocently enough in March 2011, with a short phrase spray-painted on a schoolyard wall by teenagers in the southern Syrian city of Daraa: “Your turn is coming, doctor.” The doctor referred to President Bashar Assad, a trained ophthalmologist, and the implication was that he too would fall from power like his counterparts in Tunisia and Egypt who had recently been toppled in popular revolts. Nearly three years after the crisis began, Syria’s government and opposition are set to meet in Geneva this week for the first direct talks aimed at ending the conflict. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla, File)





FILE – In this Wednesday, March 23, 2011 file photo, anti-Syrian government protesters flash Victory signs as they protest in the southern city of Daraa, Syria. It began innocently enough in March 2011, with a short phrase spray-painted on a schoolyard wall by teenagers in the southern Syrian city of Daraa: “Your turn is coming, doctor.” The doctor referred to President Bashar Assad, a trained ophthalmologist, and the implication was that he too would fall from power like his counterparts in Tunisia and Egypt who had recently been toppled in popular revolts. Nearly three years after the crisis began, Syria’s government and opposition are set to meet in Geneva this week for the first direct talks aimed at ending the conflict. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla, File)





FILE – In this Tuesday, March 29, 2011 file photo, Pro-Syrian President Bashar Assad supporters gather to demonstrate their support for their president, in Damascus, Syria. It began innocently enough in March 2011, with a short phrase spray-painted on a schoolyard wall by teenagers in the southern Syrian city of Daraa: “Your turn is coming, doctor.” The doctor referred to President Bashar Assad, a trained ophthalmologist, and the implication was that he too would fall from power like his counterparts in Tunisia and Egypt who had recently been toppled in popular revolts. Nearly three years after the crisis began, Syria’s government and opposition are set to meet in Geneva this week for the first direct talks aimed at ending the conflict. (AP Photo/Muzaffar Salman, File)





FILE – In this Monday, Oct. 21, 2013 file photo, which AP obtained from Syrian official news agency SANA and which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, President Bashar Assad gestures as he speaks during an interview with Lebanon’s Al-Mayadeen TV, at the presidential palace in Damascus, Syria. With stakes high and expectations low, Syria’s government and its opponents sit down face-to-face at an international peace conference this week for the first time _ muscled to the negotiating table by foreign powers that fear the bloodiest of the Arab Spring uprisings may engulf the entire region in sectarian war. (AP Photo/SANA, File)













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(AP) — Syria’s main Western-backed opposition group said Monday that Iran must commit publicly within hours to withdraw its “troops and militias” from Syria and abide by a 2012 transitional roadmap, or else the U.N. should withdraw its invitation for Tehran to take part in a peace conference this week.


The Syrian National Coalition said if those conditions are not met by 7 p.m. GMT, then it will not attend the so-called Geneva 2 talks that are scheduled to begin Wednesday. The U.N. issued a last-minute invitation late Sunday to Iran, a close ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad, prompting the Coalition to threaten to skip the peace negotiations and throwing the entire Geneva conference into doubt.


The negotiations, which are intended to bring together the Syrian government and its opponents for the first face-to-face talks in the three-year uprising, aim to broker a political resolution to a conflict that has killed more than 130,000 people and touched off the worst humanitarian crisis in decades. Diplomats and political leaders acknowledge that the prospects of achieving such a lofty goal any time soon are slim at best.


Both the government and the opposition have suffered enormous losses, but even now, neither side appears desperate enough for a deal to budge from its entrenched position. At this point, just getting the antagonists into the same room to start what is expected to be a long process that could drag on for years would be perceived as a success.


But those hopes of at least getting the two sides to talk were up in the air again Monday over the invitation extended to Iran.


In its statement, the Coalition called on Iran to make a “clear public commitment” to withdraw all of its troops and militias from Syria and commit to all the terms of a 2012 roadmap for Syria agreed to by world powers that includes a transitional government with full executive powers. That roadmap is the basis for the Geneva talks.


“In case of failure to obtain the pledge, we ask Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon to withdraw the invitation to Iran. Otherwise, the Syrian Coalition will not be able to attend the Geneva 2 conference,” the Coalition said.


Iran is Assad’s strongest regional ally, and has supplied his government with advisers, money and materiel since the 2011 Syrian uprising began. The Islamic Republic’s allies, most notably the Lebanese Shiite militant Hezbollah group, have also gone to Syria to help bolster Assad’s forces.


The invitation to Tehran from the U.N. secretary-general came after the U.N. chief said he had received assurances from Iran that it accepted the premise of the talks — to establish a transitional government for Syria, which has been led by the Assad family since 1970.


Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Marzieh Afkham, was quoted by the official IRNA news agency Monday as saying that Iran will attend the Geneva 2 conference after it was invited, adding that it will not accept any preconditions. She did not elaborate.


Afkham later said doesn’t recognize the transitional roadmap, known in diplomatic circles as Geneva I, because it was not part of the conference that drew it up.


“Given that Iran was not present and had no role in the Geneva I conference final statement, it doesn’t recognize it,” Afkham said in comments posted on Iranian state TV’s website.


Saudi Arabia, a main backer of the Syrian opposition and a bitter regional rival of Tehran, said Iran should first approve the 2012 roadmap before being allowed to take part in the peace talks. “Iran is not qualified to attend because it did not declare this (accepting Geneva 1) and has forces on the ground,” state-run Saudi Press Agency quoted an unnamed official as saying.


Invitations to the one-day meeting of foreign ministers at a Montreux hotel had been subject to approval by the initiating states, Russia and the United States, but the two countries had been at an impasse over Iran. The negotiations between the Syrian government and the opposition are slated to start Friday in Geneva.


The last-minute decision to invite Iran appeared to take the U.S. and its European allies by surprise.


In comments to a Security Council meeting on the Middle East, U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power noted only that “as of this morning, Iran has yet to demonstrate its willingness to specifically and publicly subscribe to” the terms of the Geneva Communique.


Those echoed comments from senior U.S. officials in Washington, who also said that the United Nations must rescind the invitation unless Iran changes its stance on the conference. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter by name. But, their comments were similar to a statement the State Department issued on Sunday.


France, another strong supporter of the opposition Coalition, took the same line, with the country’s U.N. ambassador, Gerard Araud, saying “the ball is in Iran’s camp” and Iran “must accept explicitly” the terms of the 2012 roadmap.


In New York, Russia’s U.N. ambassador Vitaly Churkin said “of course” both the U.S. and Russia were consulted about the Iran invitation, and he said that if the Syrian opposition boycotts the talks, “that would be a big mistake.”


Syria’s crisis began in March 2011 in the heyday of the Arab Spring uprisings that swept away authoritarian leaders in Egypt, Tunisia and Yemen. Unlike the others, Syria’s leadership responded to largely peaceful protests for political reform with a withering crackdown. That slowly forced the opposition to take up arms and gave birth to a civil war that has also spawned a proxy battle between regional Shiite Muslim power Iran and Sunni heavyweight Saudi Arabia.


The cumulative effect of the war over nearly three years has been disastrous. Syria lies in ruins, its economy shattered, its rich social fabric shredded.


A staggering list of figures testifies to the immensity of the conflict: 130,000 dead; 2.3 million registered refugees; an additional 6.5 million displaced inside the country; and at least 17 confirmed cases of polio, a crippling disease that was eradicated from the country more than a decade ago.


The rebels now control much of northern Syria along the border with Turkey, while the government has a firm grip on the capital and the corridor running north through the city of Homs to the Mediterranean coast.


The rebels seem incapable of conquering the rest of the country, while the government doesn’t appear strong enough to reclaim the territory it has lost. At the same time, neither side is exhausted to the point that it feels it has to cut a deal, analysts say.


___


Associated Press writers Bassem Mroue in Beirut, Lori Hinnant in Paris, Matthew Lee in Washington, Ali Akbar Dareini in Tehran, Iran, and Cara Anna at the United Nations contributed to this report.


___


Follow Ryan Lucas on Twitter at www.twitter.com/relucasz


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Syrian opposition issues ultimatum on peace talks

Monday, January 13, 2014

Syrian peace talks yield potato diplomacy







U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, standing left, gives a pair of Idaho potatoes as a gift for Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the start of their meeting at the U.S. Ambassador’s residence in Paris, France, Monday, Jan. 13, 2014. Kerry is in Paris on a two-day meeting on Syria to rally international support for ending the three-year civil war in Syria. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)





U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, standing left, gives a pair of Idaho potatoes as a gift for Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the start of their meeting at the U.S. Ambassador’s residence in Paris, France, Monday, Jan. 13, 2014. Kerry is in Paris on a two-day meeting on Syria to rally international support for ending the three-year civil war in Syria. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)





U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, standing left, gives a “thumbs-up” sign after giving a pair of Idaho potatoes as a gift for Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the start of their meeting at the U.S. Ambassador’s residence in Paris, France, Monday, Jan. 13, 2014. Kerry is in Paris on a two-day meeting on Syria to rally international support for ending the three-year civil war in Syria. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)





U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry holds up a pair of Idaho potatoes as a gift for Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, standing right, at the start of their meeting at the U.S. Ambassador’s residence in Paris, France, Monday, Jan. 13, 2014. Kerry is in Paris on a two-day meeting on Syria to rally international support for ending the three-year civil war in Syria. For some watchers of international diplomacy, the somber road to Syrian peace was overrun Monday by potatoes and furry pink hats. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)













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(AP) — For some watchers of international diplomacy, the somber road to Syrian peace was overrun Monday by potatoes and furry pink hats.


A swapping of delegation gifts between U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov served as a distraction from predictions of elusive success in Syria.


The usually stern-faced Lavrov came to the meeting armed with at least two ushankas, a traditional Russian fur hat with earflaps that tie to the top of the hat. Both hats went to women on Kerry’s press staff — including a bubblegum-pink one for State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki.


The more bizarre bout of diplomacy came over a pair of Idaho potatoes.


After pictures of Kerry handing Lavrov the tubers during talks Monday morning surfaced on the Web, reporters pressed both leaders for an explanation hours later.


Kerry quickly sought to disavow any deep diplomatic meaning from the spuds, explaining that he was in Idaho over the holidays when he and Lavrov spoke by phone. The Russian, it seemed, associated Idaho with potatoes.


“He told me he’s not going to make vodka. He’s going to eat them,” Kerry said of Lavrov, who was next to him at an otherwise grim news conference on militant threats to humanitarian aid for Syria.


Kerry added: “I really want to clarify: There’s no hidden meaning. There’s no metaphor. There’s no symbolic anything. … He recalled the Idaho potatoes as being something that he knew of, so I thought I would surprise him and bring him some good Idaho potatoes.”


The mention of vodka put Lavrov on a brief rhetorical bender.


“In Poland, they make vodka from potatoes,” Lavrov said. “I know this. But that’s in Poland.”


Kerry tried to steer the discussion back to Iran or Syria, but Lavrov plowed on.


“We used to do this in the Soviet Union,” he said. “Now we try to do it from wheat.”


A few minutes later, Lavrov awkwardly tried to tie the potato diplomacy to the Syrian negotiations.


“The specific potato which John handed to me has the shape which makes it possible to insert potato in the carrot-and-stick expression,” he said to laughter from reporters. “So it could be used differently.”


___


On Twitter: https://twitter.com/larajakesAP


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Syrian peace talks yield potato diplomacy

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Syrian govt evacuates 5,000 from town besieged by Islamist rebels

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Syrian govt evacuates 5,000 from town besieged by Islamist rebels

Sunday, December 22, 2013

CrossTalk: Syrian Collapse

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CrossTalk: Syrian Collapse

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Militants" Massacre: Syrian rebels execute civilians as govt forces close in

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Militants" Massacre: Syrian rebels execute civilians as govt forces close in

Friday, November 29, 2013

Sea Hosting 100-Million Year-Old Species to be Site of Syrian Chemical Weapons Stockpile Dump


(Photo: Wikimedia Commons)Intellihub – by  Shepard Ambellas


The OPCW is now claiming they have a “technically feasible” plan to dump chemical weapons into the Mediterranean Sea reports say.


In what can only be described as a really bad idea, the organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) is planning to destroy at least 1000 tones of the confiscated Syrian chemical weapon stockpile out at sea, which some fear will destroy delicate eco systems vital to sea and human life alike.   


The OPCW claims the plan is “technically feasible” and is apparently willing to risk ecological disaster to destroy the toxic contents of the weaponry in or above the sea. Members of the press were told, the “group is considering whether to destroy the chemical weapons in the ocean, either on a ship or by loading them onto an offshore rig”, reported,RT.[1] If the operation is approved for a green light, the Mediterranean Sea appears as if it will be the drop point. The MV Cape Ray would be conducting the transport, according to reports.


Most of the Syrian’s chemical weapons supply is expected to be removed from the country into international custody by the year’s end. All of the remaining contents are scheduled to be removed by mid-2014.


RT.com also reported, “OPCW Director General Ahmet Umzucu said in a statement that the plan was a “clear road map” to meet the aforementioned deadline.


This next phase will be the most challenging, and its timely execution will require the existence of a secure environment for the verification and transport of chemical weapons,” he said. “Continuing international support and assistance for this endeavor will remain crucial.”


When Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama said no to the request – citing “no capacity of any kind pertaining to the transport and technological processes involved” – he outlined many of the same problems that the OPCW and UN must now consider.


Any action will certainly need to be more intricate than when the Japanese government destroyed weapons leftover from World War II in 2004-2006. In doing so, the Japanese set up a disposal plant on a floating platform.


The Syrian weapons will produce liquid waste that those Japanese weapons did not. It also makes hydrolysis, a neutralization process that involves adding water to the chemical, much less likely.


If you use hydrolysis or incineration, there will be liquid waste,” Ralf Trapp, an independent chemical disarmament specialist, told Reuters. “So there will be problems with regard to environmental pollution that need to be addressed.”[1] 


Which ever way you slice it, the eco systems of the Mediterranean Sea would be at risk if the chemical stockpile was indeed destroyed in the waters. According to the World Wildlife Federation (WWF) “The Mediterranean is an enclosed sea with the world’s second highest percentage of endemic species, including the Posidonia sea grass and the critically endangered Mediterranean monk seal.


Species also include 28 cetaceans, the 100-million year old loggerhead turtle, and the commercially important blue-fin tuna and swordfish. 

Currently, less than 1% of the Mediterranean Sea is protected.


We are working to establish marine and coastal protected areas to protect the most important regions for biodiversity. We promote fisheries management systems which do not adversely affect marine productivity. We also try to ensure that measures against pollution agreed in international conventions, such as the Barcelona Convention, are endorsed and implemented.


WWF Mediterranean works at a pan-Mediterranean level, and also focuses efforts on marine regions in Croatia , Libya , Morocco , Tunisia and Turkey. [...]


The Mediterranean hosts several endangered marine species:


  • the monk seal (Monachus monachus), of which about 350 – 400 now survive in the world.

  • the green turtle (Chelonia mydas) and the 100-million year old loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta), which nest on Mediterranean beaches.

  • 18 cetacean species, of which seven can be observed throughout the year: the pilot whale, fin whale, sperm whale, common dolphin, striped dolphin, bottlenose dolphin and the Risso’s dolphin.

  • the endemic sea-grass Posidonia oceanica , which plays a crucial role in coast protection by acting as a buffer to currents and waves.[4]

Environmental activists will likely soon emerge protesting the proposed actions of the OPCW.



Sources:


[1] Syrian chemical weapons likely to be destroyed at sea – report – RT.com


[2] US Could Destroy Syria’s Chemical Arms In Med – NewsSky.com


[3] Mediterranean Sea large marine ecosystem – EOEarth.org


[4] Marine environment: the Mediterranean sea and its coasts - Mediterranean.Panda.org/


http://intellihub.com/2013/11/29/sea-hosting-100-million-year-old-species-to-be-site-of-syrian-chemical-weapons-stockpile-dump/






Sea Hosting 100-Million Year-Old Species to be Site of Syrian Chemical Weapons Stockpile Dump

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Syrian Kurds Plan Autonomous Government



Syrian Kurds Plan Autonomous Government


Pro-Rebel Faction Opposes Move


by Jason Ditz, November 12, 2013




Multiple Kurdish factions have agreed in principle to create a “transitional” government for Western Kurdistan, covering northeastern Syria, to rule autonomously for the duration of the Syrian Civil War.


The plan had been raised before, but seems practical now as Kurdish militias have ousted al-Qaeda from much of their territory, and have virtually de facto control over the region.


Not everyone is on board, however, as the Kurdish National Council (KNC), a faction closely affiliated with the rebel Syrian National Coalition (SNC), has called the move an “obstacle” to the broader rebellion, and one which threatens to alienate the rebels.


Yet the Kurds aren’t by and large involved in the civil war itself, and are instead finding themselves trying to keep foreign Islamists from overrunning their towns with no help from either the Assad government or moderate rebels, leaving the region as a practical matter independent.


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Syrian Kurds Plan Autonomous Government

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Kidnapped Syrian Girls Used as Sex Slaves: Report

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Kidnapped Syrian Girls Used as Sex Slaves: Report

Monday, November 4, 2013

Syrian Gulf of Tonkin Resolution?

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Syrian Gulf of Tonkin Resolution?

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

CrossTalk: Syrian Sequel (Pepe Escobar vs. Stephen Schlesinger)

CrossTalk: Syrian Sequel (Pepe Escobar vs. Stephen Schlesinger)
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Would American direct intervention in Syria be about justice? Can its purpose be clearly defined? Is this a way to send a message to Iran? And has President …
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Saturday, October 19, 2013

Syrian army kills over 100 militants

Syrian army kills over 100 militants
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Syrian forces have killed over a hundred foreign-backed militants fighting against the government of President Bashar al-Assad in Homs countryside.


The army said the militants died after attempting to attack security checkpoints in the area, adding, most of them were non-Syrians.


The army units also destroyed several hideouts of the foreign-sponsored militants in the neighborhoods of al-Warsha and al-Hamidieh in the strategic city of Homs.


The government troops have recently conducted successful clean-up operations across the country, inflicting heavy losses on the militants.


Last week, Syrian forces took control of the key town of al-Bweida, south of the capital Damascus, after pushing out foreign-sponsored militants and destroying their equipment.


Syria has been gripped by deadly unrest 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 due to the violence.


On October 7, the UN said over four million other Syrians will be forced out of their homes in 2014 by the escalating conflict in the country.


Two million Syrians are expected to take refuge outside the country while another 2.25 million are predicted to be internally displaced next year.


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