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Syria opposition says rebels vying to retake key cities and supply routes east, south of Damascus

By , May 17, 2013 12:09 pm

Syria opposition says rebels vying to retake key cities and supply routes east, south of Damascus
By: CBS Zionist Propaganda on: 17.05.2013 [01:32 ] (201 reads)

Syria opposition says rebels vying to retake key cities and supply routes east, south of Damascus

In an image taken from video posted on YouTube by a Syrian opposition group on May 14, 2013, rebels clash with government troops near a checkpoint in the al-Matahen suburb of Damascus.

In an image taken from video posted on YouTube by a Syrian opposition group on May 14, 2013, rebels clash with government troops near a checkpoint in the al-Matahen suburb of Damascus. / YouTube

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BEIRUT Activists say Syrian rebels and Islamic fighters have joined forces in a push to reopen an arms supply route and retake a key town near Damascus that fell back to President Bashar Assad’s troops last month.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says Islamic units, including the al Qaeda-linked Jabhat al-Nusra, and Syrian opposition fighters are battling around the town of Otaybah, east of the capital.

The army regained control of Otaybah in late April, cutting an arms route for rebels trying to topple Assad’s regime.

Young brides’ dreams crushed amid civil war
Kerry: Syrian peace conference likely in June
Syria rebels lose control of key town between Jordan and Damascus

The Observatory said Wednesday that at least 23 rebel groups and Islamic fighter units that operated individually have joined the push to take back Otaybah and reverse government gains there.

Little evidence of the renewed fighting around Otaybah was available on the usual opposition Youtube channels Wednesday, so it was impossible to independently confirm the extent of the fighting.

Opposition forces have lost significant ground to Assad’s troops in recent weeks — being forced also from a key town in the southern Daraa province which sits on the primary highway between the Jordanian border and Damascus, Assad’s seat of power.

Regime forces retook Khirbet Ghazaleh on Sunday and rebels withdrew from the area, said Rami Abdul-Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory. Troops reopened the highway, restoring the supply line between Damascus and the contested provincial capital of Daraa, he said.

/ CBS

Free Syrian Army rebels have said they’re preparing a counteroffensive to reclaim Khirbet Ghazaleh. A local opposition source in the area told CBS News’ Khaled Wassef on Wednesday, however, that fighters in the area are short on weapons and ammunition — the flow of which has decreased significantly from Jordan this year — and he wasn’t optimistic about their chances.

Damascus, still overwhelmingly under regime control, is the ultimate prize in a largely deadlocked civil war.

More than 70,000 people have been killed since the revolt began in March 2011, according to a conservative estimate by the United Nations.

Also on Wednesday, the Syrian Observatory said Syrian rebels had detonated two car bombs outside the main prison in the northern city of Aleppo and were trying to storm the facility, where hundreds of regime opponents are believed to be held.

The Observatory said the car bombs exploded simultaneously outside the walls of the central prison Wednesday morning.

Abdul-Rahman said the blasts were part of a coordinated rebel assault on the prison, and clashes were ongoing between Assad’s troops and opposition fighters around the detention center.

Abdul-Rahman says Aleppo’s central prison is believed to be holding about 4,000 prisoners, around 250 are jailed for reasons related to the 26-month-old uprising against Assad’s regime.

There were no immediate reports of casualties.

© 2013 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Syria opposition says rebels vying to retake key cities and supply routes east, south of Damascus

By , May 17, 2013 3:59 am

Syria opposition says rebels vying to retake key cities and supply routes east, south of Damascus
By: CBS Zionist Propaganda on: 17.05.2013 [01:32 ] (117 reads)

Syria opposition says rebels vying to retake key cities and supply routes east, south of Damascus

In an image taken from video posted on YouTube by a Syrian opposition group on May 14, 2013, rebels clash with government troops near a checkpoint in the al-Matahen suburb of Damascus.

In an image taken from video posted on YouTube by a Syrian opposition group on May 14, 2013, rebels clash with government troops near a checkpoint in the al-Matahen suburb of Damascus. / YouTube

.

BEIRUT Activists say Syrian rebels and Islamic fighters have joined forces in a push to reopen an arms supply route and retake a key town near Damascus that fell back to President Bashar Assad’s troops last month.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says Islamic units, including the al Qaeda-linked Jabhat al-Nusra, and Syrian opposition fighters are battling around the town of Otaybah, east of the capital.

The army regained control of Otaybah in late April, cutting an arms route for rebels trying to topple Assad’s regime.

Young brides’ dreams crushed amid civil war
Kerry: Syrian peace conference likely in June
Syria rebels lose control of key town between Jordan and Damascus

The Observatory said Wednesday that at least 23 rebel groups and Islamic fighter units that operated individually have joined the push to take back Otaybah and reverse government gains there.

Little evidence of the renewed fighting around Otaybah was available on the usual opposition Youtube channels Wednesday, so it was impossible to independently confirm the extent of the fighting.

Opposition forces have lost significant ground to Assad’s troops in recent weeks — being forced also from a key town in the southern Daraa province which sits on the primary highway between the Jordanian border and Damascus, Assad’s seat of power.

Regime forces retook Khirbet Ghazaleh on Sunday and rebels withdrew from the area, said Rami Abdul-Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory. Troops reopened the highway, restoring the supply line between Damascus and the contested provincial capital of Daraa, he said.

/ CBS

Free Syrian Army rebels have said they’re preparing a counteroffensive to reclaim Khirbet Ghazaleh. A local opposition source in the area told CBS News’ Khaled Wassef on Wednesday, however, that fighters in the area are short on weapons and ammunition — the flow of which has decreased significantly from Jordan this year — and he wasn’t optimistic about their chances.

Damascus, still overwhelmingly under regime control, is the ultimate prize in a largely deadlocked civil war.

More than 70,000 people have been killed since the revolt began in March 2011, according to a conservative estimate by the United Nations.

Also on Wednesday, the Syrian Observatory said Syrian rebels had detonated two car bombs outside the main prison in the northern city of Aleppo and were trying to storm the facility, where hundreds of regime opponents are believed to be held.

The Observatory said the car bombs exploded simultaneously outside the walls of the central prison Wednesday morning.

Abdul-Rahman said the blasts were part of a coordinated rebel assault on the prison, and clashes were ongoing between Assad’s troops and opposition fighters around the detention center.

Abdul-Rahman says Aleppo’s central prison is believed to be holding about 4,000 prisoners, around 250 are jailed for reasons related to the 26-month-old uprising against Assad’s regime.

There were no immediate reports of casualties.

© 2013 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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UN General Assembly Backs Regime Change in Syria

By , May 16, 2013 12:46 am

UN General Assembly Backs Regime Change in Syria
By: Jason Ditz on: 16.05.2013 [04:40 ] (69 reads)

UN General Assembly Backs Regime Change in Syria

Non-Binding Vote Shows Growing Concerns About Rebels

by Jason Ditz, May 15, 2013

The UN General Assembly has passed a non-binding resolution calling for the ouster of Syrian President Bashar Assad and backing the rebellion against him. The vote was opposed by Russia as well as a number of nations expressing concern about foreign intervention in Syria’s ongoing civil war.

Russia was particularly vocal in criticizing the timing of the resolution, coming just after a US-Russian agreement to work toward a negotiated settlement, and expressing concern that the resolution would damage the efforts to start new peace talks.

But perhaps the big news is not that the resolution passed, rather it is that the resolution passed with a fairly narrow majority, only 107 votes out of 193 nations, compared to 133 in a similar vote last year.

The loss of votes in favor of regime change likely reflects a growing concern about the behavior of Syria’s rebels, from attacks on civilians and al-Qaeda ties to a particularly shocking video earlier this week showing a rebel eating a soldier’s heart. While Assad has never had a lot of allies, there seems to be a lot of fear that post-Assad Syria is going to be a big problem for the region.

http://news.antiwar.com/2013/05/15/un-general-assembly-backs-regime-change-in-syria/

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Despite Horrific Repression, the U.S. Should Stay Out of Syria

By , May 15, 2013 2:11 pm

stephen-zunes-syria-interventionThe worsening violence and repression in Syria has left policymakers scrambling to think of ways the United States could help end the bloodshed and support those seeking to dislodge the Assad regime. The desperate desire to “do something” has led to increasing calls for the United States to provide military aid to armed insurgents or even engage in direct military intervention, especially in light of the possible use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime.

The question on the mind of almost everyone who has followed the horror as it has unfolded over the past two years is, “What we can do?”

The short answer, unfortunately, is not much.

This is hard for many Americans to accept. We have a cultural propensity to believe that if the United States puts in enough money, creativity, willpower, or firepower into a problem that we can make things right. However, despite the desires of both the right-wing nationalists and liberal hawks, this isn’t always the case.

Both the right and the far left seem to embrace the idea that United States—either for good or for ill—has the power to determine the outcome of virtually every conflict in the world. However, there are limits to power. The tens of billions of dollars’ worth of arms sent to the Shah and to Mubarak were not enough to keep these dictators in power against the will of their own people. Overwhelming U.S. military force could not prevent a Communist victory in Vietnam or create a peaceful, democratic, pro-American Iraq.

The Baath Party has ruled Syria for most of the past 50 years, from even before the 30-year reign of Bashar al-Assad’s father. Military officers and party apparatchiks have developed their own power base. Dictatorships that rest primarily on the power of just one man – like Libya’s Gaddafi, Egypt’s Mubarak, and Tunisia’s Ben Ali – are generally more vulnerable in the face of popular revolt than are oligarchical systems where a broader network of elite interests has a stake in the system. Just as the oligarchy that ruled El Salvador in the 1980s proved to be far more resistant to overthrow by a popular armed revolution than the singular rule of Anastasia Somoza in neighboring Nicaragua, it is not surprising that Syria’s entrenched ruling group has been more resilient than the personalist dictatorships toppled in the wave of largely nonviolent insurrections in neighboring Arab countries.

A large minority of Syrians—consisting of Alawites, Christians, and members of other minority communities; Baath Party loyalists and government employees; the professional armed forces and security services; and the (largely Sunni) crony capitalist class that the government has nurtured—still cling to the Assad regime. There are certainly dissidents within all of these sectors, but altogether regime supporters number as much as one-third of the population.  

What this means is that even large-scale direct foreign intervention will not lead to a quick collapse of the regime.

The Nature of the Opposition

The initial popular uprising against the Assad regime, which began in March of 2011, was overwhelmingly nonviolent, broad-based, and non-sectarian. Since turning to primarily armed resistance by early the next year, however, an increasing percentage of the armed opposition appears to consist of hardline Salafi Islamists, including some who are affiliated with al-Qaeda. Even the so-called “moderate” Free Syrian Army consists of literally hundreds of separate armed militias, some of which are just as extreme, and operate without a central command. A shoulder-fired missile that could defend a village from a Syrian helicopter gunship could also take down a civilian airliner.

Proponents of arming the rebels claim the United States could somehow differentiate between “moderate” and “extremist” elements of the opposition, but it is hard to imagine how this could be done in practice. It’s important to remember that most of the U.S. arms sent to Afghan rebels in the 1980s ended up in the hands of Hizb-i-Islami, the most hardline of the half dozen or so mujahedeen groups fighting the Soviets and the Soviet-backed Afghan regime. After the Soviets withdrew and Afghanistan’s Communist government was overthrown, Hizb-i-Islami forces killed thousands of Afghan civilians and are now allied with the Taliban fighting American forces. As with the fall of the Communist regime in Afghanistan, there is no guarantee that Assad’s overthrow would actually bring peace. And as Iraq showed us, opposition to an oppressive Baathist regime does not mean support for the United States, nor does military intervention guarantee a peaceful and democratic post-Baathist government.

Syria is very different from Libya, where NATO air power supported an armed rebellion that toppled the Gaddafi regime in a bloody civil war. The Syrian population is more than three times the size of Libya’s, and the terrain far more challenging. The liberated zones controlled by the rebels are tiny and non-contiguous, and the Syrian armed forces—and their anti-aircraft capabilities—are far superior. Another critical difference is that by the time the Libyan uprising began in 2011, Gaddafi had virtually no popular support, although it still took six months of heavy NATO bombardments and fierce fighting by foreign-armed rebel forces to dislodge him.

It is also important to remember that, despite the ouster of Gaddafi and a relatively fair and free vote that elected moderates to lead the new government, Libya has not actually turned out that well. In addition to the summary execution of Gaddafi and many hundreds of his supporters, over 200,000 people in that country of barely 6 million have joined armed militias not controlled by the government, which have been creating havoc throughout the country. Some of these include al-Qaeda-aligned groups, like the one responsible for the deaths of four U.S. officials, including the ambassador, last August. Furthermore, weapons from Libya have proliferated throughout North Africa, playing an important role in the uprising by Tuareg nationalists and Islamist extremists in Mali and the resulting conflict.

Another tragic consequence of the NATO intervention in Libya is that Syrian opposition members may have decided to abandon their impressive nonviolent struggle in the hope that it would prompt Western military intervention.

Problems with “Humanitarian Intervention”

Indeed, as with Libya, there are often serious unintended consequences from foreign intervention. Empirical studies have repeatedly demonstrated that international military interventions in cases of severe repression actually exacerbate violence in the short term and can only reduce violence in the longer term if the intervention is impartial or neutral. For example, the wholesale ethnic cleansing in Kosovo by Serbian forces in 1999 began only after NATO’s decision to launch air strikes. Other studies demonstrate that foreign military interventions actually increase the duration of civil wars, making the conflicts longer and bloodier, and the regional consequences more serious, than if there were no intervention. Military intervention in Syria would likely trigger a “gloves off” mentality that could dramatically escalate the violence on both sides, since the regime would find that it no longer had anything to lose and the opposition would feel no need to negotiate or compromise.

Foreign intervention tends to exacerbate nationalist resistance. The 1999 NATO intervention in Yugoslavia, rather than force Milosevic from power, initially strengthened the regime as people rallied around the flag in the face of more than 11 weeks of bombing by foreign forces. The leaders of Otpor, the youthful pro-democracy movement that would eventually lead the struggle that toppled the regime nonviolently, strongly opposed the bombing and recognized that it set back their cause.

This nationalist reaction is exacerbated by the understandable tendency to question the motivations – sometimes justifiably and sometimes not – of those who advocate the so-called “responsibility to protect.” Indeed, most foreign interventions by the United States which were viewed by most of the international community as acts of imperialism – Vietnam, Iraq, the Dominican Republic, Grenada, and Panama, among others – were rationalized on humanitarian grounds.

Even when imperialism does not appear to be the primary motivation, there is the problem of perceived double standards. For example, President Clinton justified the 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia because “we cannot allow this kind of repression to happen on NATO’s doorstep” when very comparable repression was at that time going on within NATO itself, namely in the Kurdish region of Turkey, using primarily U.S.-supplied weaponry. Similarly, while U.S. officials have cited calls by Amnesty International and other human rights groups in calling on Russia to stop sending helicopter gunships to Syria, the United States has ignored similar calls by Amnesty International and others to stop sending helicopter gunships to Colombia, Turkey, and Israel, which—like the Syrian regime—have also used these weapons to attack civilians.

Some have called for unilateral military intervention in Syria, arguing that the Russian and Chinese vetoes of UN Security Council resolutions have paralyzed the United Nations from exercising its responsibilities, despite the illegality of such intervention without UN authorization. However, the Syrian regime could also observe that since joining the United Nations 42 years ago, China has used its veto power only eight times and, during that same period, Russia (and previously the Soviet Union) has used its veto power only 18 times. By contrast, the United States has used its veto power 83 times, mostly to protect allies like Israel from accountability for violations of international humanitarian law.

It’s rather revealing that the leading intellectual architect of the so-called “responsibility to protect” is none other than Gareth Evans, a former Australian foreign minister who for more than a decade served as head of the International Crisis Group. He was an outspoken supporter of military intervention in Libya following the killing of between 200and 300 civilians by Gaddafi’s forces. However, as Australian foreign minister, he was also an outspoken supporter of Indonesia’s brutal occupation of East Timor, which took the lives of more than 200,000 East Timorese. Indeed, he headed the only foreign ministry in the world that recognized Indonesia’s illegal annexation of the former Portuguese colony. (When I had the temerity to bring this to his attention at an academic conference in Melbourne last year, he started screaming at me, tore off my badge, and threatened to punch me in the face. Apparently, he felt a responsibility to protect his reputation.)

Meanwhile, the U.S. government remains, by far, the world’s primary military, economic, and diplomatic supporter of the world’s remaining authoritarian regimes and occupying armies, openly defending allies engaged in military operations that, like those of the Syrian regime, have resulted in the widespread killing of civilians. For example, during the three-week Israeli military campaign in the Gaza Strip in early 2009, both the U.S. Congress and the Bush administration—using the same kind of language as apologists for the Syrian regime—insisted that the Israeli attacks on civilian neighborhoods were “legitimate self-defense” against “terrorists” placed responsibility for the civilian deaths solely on armed Islamists, and dismissed reports by the UN Human Rights Council, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and other reputable groups documenting the atrocities as “biased.”

Until the United States is willing to take a principled stand against all war crimes, regardless of the relationship of the perpetrator with the United States, the Obama administration will have a hard time convincing Syrians and others that its intentions in supporting the armed opposition are actually humanitarian.

Provoking Assad’s Nationalist Card

Indeed, the intentions of Western governments, particularly the United States, are highly suspect in the eyes of many Syrians, even among those opposed to Assad’s dictatorship. U.S. military intervention would simply play into the hands of the regime in Damascus, which has decades of experience manipulating the Syrian people’s strong sense of nationalism to its benefit. The regime can point out that the United States is the world’s primary military supplier to the region’s remaining dictatorships and disingenuously used the “promotion of democracy” and fabricated claims of “weapons of mass destruction” to justify its illegal and disastrous invasion of its neighbor Iraq which, like Syria, happens to oppose Washington’s designs on the region.

The United States has also been the primary military, financial, and diplomatic supporter of the government of Israel, which has occupied much of Syria’s southwestern Golan province since it seized the territory in a military assault in the closing hours of the 1967 war, ethnically cleansing most of its residents. Indeed, in 2007, the United States successfully blocked progress towards Israel-Syria peace out of concern that the return of the Golan Heights could bolster Assad’s standing at home.

Well prior to the popular uprising against the regime, the United States had been seeking the downfall of the Syrian government, with the Bush administration actively considering options for toppling the regime. The United States imposed major unilateral sanctions on the country in 2003. In addition to repeated U.S. attacks against Syrian positions in Lebanon in 1983-84, the United States bombed Syria itself as recently as 2008, killing eight civilians. Syrians know this history and, among the large numbers who support neither the regime nor the armed opposition, further U.S. involvement is more likely to move them closer to the regime.

Indeed, Western intervention could unwittingly trigger the mobilization of hundreds of thousands of Syrians to resist foreign invaders. Hundreds of Syrians have quit the Baath party and government positions in protest of the killings of nonviolent protesters, but few defections could be expected if Americans and Europeans attacked their country.

Opposing U.S. support for the armed resistance in Syria has nothing to do with indifference, isolationism, or pacifism. Nor is it indicative of being any less horrified at the suffering of the Syrian people or any less desirous of the overthrow of Assad’s brutal regime. With so much at stake, however, it is critical not to allow the understandably strong emotional reaction to the ongoing carnage lead to policies that could end up making things even worse.

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Iraqi Kurds Reportedly Fighting Among Jihadists in Syria

By , May 15, 2013 2:44 am

In the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, the debate continues in the Kurdish press over the involvement of young Kurds in the Syrian revolution. This comes four months after the announcement of the death of a young Kurdish man — a resident of Sulaimaniyah, a city located in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq — in Aleppo. The press is currently reporting that Syrian Kurdish parties captured a number of Kurdish youths after they went there to wage jihad.

In February, the Kurdish newspapers published news of the death of a young Iraqi Kurdish man studying pharmacology at an Indian university who left his studies and went to Syria to assist fighters against the Syrian regime. His name was Howkar Muhammed Kurdi. According to the blog of foreigners in the Syrian revolution, he was “a 25-year-old martyr from Sulaimaniyah in Iraq and a student of pharmacology at the Rajiv Gandhi University. He decided to abandon his studies, go to Syria to join the ranks of his brethren and provide them with medical assistance. He was martyred in a raid on Aleppo on Feb. 12 [2013].”

More than three months after this incident, the official website of the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD), an armed Syrian Kurdish party, said that in the village of Ain al-Abd near the Syrian-Turkish border, they had captured five militants from Jabhat al-Nusra, including three Kurds from the city of Kirkuk.

It said that 11 individuals were killed in clashes in the village and five members from Jabhat al-Nusra were captured, one of which being a Saudi national, another European and the other three Kurdish Sorani from the city of Kirkuk.

The PYD is a Syrian Kurdish leftist opposition party that follows a similar ideology to the anti-Turkey Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK). The PKK is led by Abdullah Ocalan, who is currently serving a life sentence in a Turkish prison.

Jabhat al-Nusra is considered a jihadist group. It is a Salafist jihadist organization formed in late 2011 during the Syrian conflict. Its capabilities quickly grew, making it a leading revolutionary and strong force against the army of the regime of President Bashar al-Assad in a matter of months. This is due to the fighting experience and training of its members. The group has claimed responsibility for several suicide attacks in Aleppo and Damascus.

Islamist parties in Iraqi Kurdistan avoid delving into this topic or saying that young Kurds have gone to Syria for jihad. However, their close associates deny that the issue is a systematic problem.

A set of Islamist parties currently exists in the Kurdistan Region, the most active of which is probably the Kurdistan Islamic Union, which was founded in 1994. A moderate party, it holds six out of 111 seats in the Kurdish parliament. It opposes the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) alongside the Islamic Group in Kurdistan, which was founded in 2001, and has four seats in parliament. The group is led by Ali Bapir, who was arrested by US forces on charges of terrorism after the fall of the former Iraqi regime.

Sheikh Ali Bapir was arrested by US forces on July 10, 2003, while on his way to the hotel Ishtar in the Dukan summer resort in an ambush near the village. He was arrested with three other leaders of the group and ten of his bodyguards. They were immediately moved by three helicopters to Mosul, then to a prison at Baghdad airport.

Bapir spent 22 months in detention, and his companions served various sentences ranging between several days and weeks, and 11 months.

The Islamic Movement of Kurdistan also has a presence in the Kurdistan Region. It was founded in 1987, has two seats in Kurdistan’s parliament and a minister in the KRG.

In a statement to Al-Monitor, the Islamic researcher Mohammed Baziani, head of the al-Huda Center for Strategic Studies, founded in 1998, said that there is a number of young Kurds in the ranks of the Syrian opposition. He stressed that their participation is based on defending the rights of the oppressed after the Syrian uprising has continued for so long.

He added, “The Kurds’ suffering throughout history is the main reason behind the participation of the youth in this war. They understand the suffering of the Syrian people as a result of the injustice against them.”

Nevertheless, he minimized the importance of their participation, and added, “According to our information, there is a small percentage of youth who embrace jihadist thinking and who would like to wage jihad against the Syrian regime; they can be counted on the fingers of one hand.”

He also indicated that the Kurds in Kirkuk are influenced by Salafist and jihadist groups, which are active there. This is in addition to their proximity to Arab Sunni areas, where the Naqshbandi group is active.

It should be noted that the Naqshbandi group, or the Army of the Men of the Naqshbandi Order, is a group that was announced after 2003, and appointed Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, vice president of the former regime, as its emir. This group is believed to be linked to armed operations taking place in some of the disputed areas between the central government in Baghdad and the KRG in Erbil. The group is active in the provinces of Kirkuk, Diyala and Saladin.

Yassin Aziz, a political analyst interested in Islamic groups and a former leader of the Islamic movement of Kurdistan, stressed the need for Kurdish leaders in the Kurdistan Region to give greater attention to the issue of young Kurds from Iraq going to wage jihad in Syria.

He told Al-Monitor, “We need to know that there are different ideologies in Iraqi Kurdistan, and the KRG needs to rationally deal with that. Yet they only care about the nationalist side in the Kurdistan Region, knowing that there are many other movements, particularly Islamic movements, in Syria.

“The KRG is interested in the Kurdish parties in Syria. More than 100,000 displaced Syrians and refugees have fled to the region. They are all from the Syrian Kurdish areas, which they call Western Kurdistan, considering it to be a part of Greater Kurdistan, which is split between its southern part in Iraq, eastern part in Iran and northern part in Turkey.”

Massoud Barzani, president of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, is said to have trained Syrian Kurdish militants in order to enable them to protect their areas in that country.

Aziz reiterated: “It is humanitarian sympathy on the part of the young Kurds, after the rule of Bashar al-Assad has continued for so long, and has hit the opposition with all types of weapons. This has caused the world to have sympathy for those who are being oppressed and has given the Syrian opposition an Islamic character.”

According to Aziz, the jihadist idea dates back to 1978 in Iraqi Kurdistan, when a Kurdish group formed the Army of the Quran and Muslim League. The group lasted for a very limited time, during which military conflicts erupted between it and secular parties, until the Islamic Movement of Kurdistan was established in 1987.

By Abdel Hamid Zebari
AL Monitor

Assyrian International News Agency

Syria Denies Involvement in Turkey Car Bombs

By , May 13, 2013 10:50 am

Syria on Sunday rejected Turkey’s allegations that it was behind two car bombs that killed 46 people in Turkey and wounded dozens more.

Information Minister Omran al-Zoubi told a news conference that “Syria did not and will never do such an act because our values do not allow this. It is not anyone’s right to hurl unfounded accusations.” Zoubi’s comments were the first official Syrian response since Saturday’s bombings in the Turkish border town of Reyhanli, near Syria.

The Syrian minister alleged that Turkey is responsible “for all that happened in Syria and what happened in Turkey yesterday,” but did not explain.

He also launched one of the harshest personal attacks on Turkey’s prime minister by an Syrian official so far, demanding that Recep Tayyip Erdogan “step down as a killer and as a butcher.”

Turkey’s interior minister said authorities have detained nine people in connection with the car bomb attacks. Muammer Guler says the attacks were carried out by a group linked to Syria’s intelligence service, but did not name the group.

Deputy Prime Minister Besir Atalay said all nine people detained over the bombings are Turkish citizens.

Also on Sunday, Syrian rebels released four Filipino UN peacekeepers they abducted last week, a military spokesman in the Philippines said.

The four, seized Tuesday, were apparently unharmed, but will undergo a medical checkup and stress debriefing, said Brig. Gen. Domingo Tutaan.

The peacekeepers are part of a UN contingent that patrols a buffer zone between Syria and the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights, a plateau Israel captured from Syria in 1967.

It was the second abduction of Filipino peacekeepers since March, when 21 were held for three days by rebels fighting the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

The Philippine foreign secretary has said he would recommend withdrawing Filipinos from the peacekeeping contingent in Syria, but the final decision is up to the country’s president.

Nearly 1,000 UN peacekeepers are patrolling the Golan Heights. Other major contributors are India and Austria. Croatia has recently withdrawn its contingent.

The buffer zone between Syria and the Israeli-controlled Golan had been largely quiet for four decades, but tensions have risen there since the outbreak of the revolt against Assad more than two years ago.

The uprising escalated into a civil war that has claimed tens of thousands of lives and displaced millions of Syrians. The two sides have been largely deadlocked on the battlefield.

In the latest violence in the capital, Damascus, six mortar shells struck a neighborhood causing damage and casualties, a Syrian official said on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to brief reporters.

The mortars hit the predominantly Alawite district of Mazzeh 86 during morning rush hour, he said. Sunday is the first day of the work week in Syria.

Alawites, including Assad, are followers of an offshoot of Shiite Islam, and have dominated government under Assad family rule. Rebels and regime forces have been fighting in parts of Damascus, and have fired mortars at neighborhoods seen as pro-Assad.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an activist group, confirmed that mortars struck Mazzeh 86, but said it had no immediate reports of casualties.

http://www.ynetnews.com

Assyrian International News Agency

Al-Assad Army Continues Crackdown on Terrorist Groups In Syria. Hundreds of Obama Rats (OR) kicked their respective buckets, pretty high! That’s terrible!

By , May 13, 2013 10:11 am

Al-Assad Army Continues Crackdown on Terrorist Groups In Syria. Hundreds of Obama Rats (OR) kicked their respective buckets, pretty high! That’s terrible!
By: Bulov on: 13.05.2013 [03:12 ] (151 reads)

Al-Assad Army Continues Crackdown on Terrorist Groups In Syria. Hundreds of Obama Rats (OR) kicked their respective buckets, pretty high! That’s terrible!
http://sana.sy/eng/21/2013/05/12/481785.htm

May 12, 2013

PROVINCES, (SANA) – Units of the Armed Forces on Sunday carried out operations against terrorists’ dens and gatherings in Harasta, al-Shefounia, Joubar, Barzeha and al-Qaboun in Damascus and its countrytside, killing and injuring several terrorists, in addition to destroying a warehouse full of explosive devices.
An official source told SANA that an Army unit clashed with an armed terrorist group near Samsam School, killing and injuring several terrorists, while another Army unit destroyed a warehouse for weapons and ammunition along with terrorists inside it in al-Shefounia in Douma. Among the dead terrorists was Adnan al-Arbo, leader of an armed terrorist group.
The source added that other Army units destroyed scores of explosive devices and large amounts of weapons and ammunition inside the cork factory in Jobar, causing a fire with dense smoke in the area.
The source pointed out that other Army units clashed with several armed terrorist groups near Teachers Tower in Jobar, killing and injuring a number of terrorists. Mahmoud Darwish and Hisham al-Allo were identified among the dead terrorists.
Meanwhile, other Army units destroyed a terrorists’ den along with the weapons and ammunition inside it at Hermala tunnel to the west of Zamalka.
In the same context, another Army unit destroyed a terrorists’ den in Barzzeha neighborhood, killing Zead al-Sagher, leader of an armed terrorist group called “Qamar Bin Hashem Brigade” and members of its group.
In al-Qaboun, an Army unit killed and injured several terrorists. Among the dead terrorists was one of the armed terrorist groups’ leader.
A military source said that the army destroyed terrorists’ gatherings in the area of Adra and killed and injured all the terrorists.
The source added that an army unit targeted a terrorists’ gathering affiliated to Jabhat al-Nusra terrorist organization, killing and injuring scores of them.
An official source told SANA reporter that the army encircled the towns of Jarba and al-Baharyeh and continued pursuing the terrorists in these areas, adding that scores of them were killed and amounts of their weaponry and vehicles were destroyed or seized.
Army Units Seize Weapons Warehouse in al-Faiha Neighborhood in Hama
A unit of the Armed Forces seized a warehouse full of weapons and ammunition for “Jabhat al-Nusra” in al-Faihaa neighborhood in Hama.
An official source told SANA that among the confiscated weapons were missiles, automatic rifles, RPG launchers, PkC machineguns, a Nato sniper, communication sets and large amounts of ammunition.
Army Units Eliminate Terrorists in Aleppo and its Countryside
Units of the Armed Forces carried out operations and clashed with the armed terrorist groups in several areas of Aleppo and its countryside, killing and injuring a number of terrorists, in addition to destroying their equipment.
An official source told SANA that the Army units destroyed a mortar and a number of terrorists’ dens along with the weapons and ammunition inside them in al-Layramoun and Handarat in Aleppo countryside.
The source added that another Army unit clashed with terrorists near Minnegh Airport, killing and injuring several terrorists, while another Army unit destroyed 23 calibar an anti-air craft gun in al-Maslamiyeh.
The source pointed out that other Army units clashed with terrorists who were perpetrating acts of terrorism against citizens in al-Sheikh Maqsoud area in Aleppo, inflicting heavy losses upon them.
Meanwhile, other Army units repelled the armed terrorist groups who were attempting to infiltrate to Suleiman al-Halabi and Karm al-Jabal areas, inflicting direct strikes upon them.
Terrorists Eliminated in Homs
A military source said that an army unit eliminated the members of a terrorist group in the area of Jeb al-Jarrah and destroyed their weaponry and ammunition.
The source said that the army completed the encirclement of al-Qseir area from its southern side, adding that an army unit dismantled several explosive devices planted by terrorists on the road between Joseh and Ribleh.
Meanwhile, An army unit killed and injured scores of terrorists that tried to attack the Dedeman Hotel in Palmyra, terrorist Waled al-Shu’eel was identified among the dead.
In Homs city, the army continued pursuing the armed terrorist groups in Bab Hud neighborhood and destroyed many terrorists’ gatherings in the area.
Army Eliminates Non-Syrian Terrorists in Deir Ezzor
The Armed Forces clashed with terrorist groups in the neighborhoods of al-Sina’a and al-Hwaiqa in Deir Ezzor and killed and injured scores of the terrorists.
An official source told SANA reporter that an army unit destroyed terrorists’ gatherings and hideouts in the towns of al-Mare’yeh and al-Bu Omar and killed the terrorists in them, among them were Ramadan al-Marghani, of the Libyan nationality, and Yousef Hussein al-Sayer.
Several Citizens Injured by rockets in hilfaya, Hama countryside
A number of citizens were injured today when two rockets, launched by terrorists of Jabhat al-Nusra, fell on the residential houses in Hilfaya, Hama countryside.
A military source told SANA that one rocket hit a house, while the other one fell near al-Mustakbal institute in the town.
Army Units Kill Terrorists in Idleb Countryside
A unit of the Armed Forces clashed with an armed terrorist group, affiliated to “Jabhat al-Nusra” whose members were perpetrating acts of terrorism in Sarmin city in Idleb countryside, inflicting heavy losses upon them.
A military source told SANA that the clashes resulted in destroying a mortar and large amounts of ammunition, in addition to killing a number of terrorists, including Kutaiba Mahmoud al-Hamid.
The source added that terrorists detonated an explosive device planted near al-Byrein factory on Sarmin- Idleb road, causing material damage in the site without casualties.
A military source told SANA reporter that many terrorists’ gatherings were destroyed in the areas of Jabal al-Arba’een and al-Neirab in Idleb countryside, adding that scores of terrorists, some of them of non-Syrian nationalities, affiliated to al-Qaeda and Jabhat al-Nusra terrorist organizations were eliminated in the area of Areha.
The source added that terrorists Abu Qatada al-Tunisi, member of al-Qaeda and leader of a terrorist group, Munzer Mamoun Haj Mousa, Iyad Abdul-Razzaq Banshi, Khaled Safwan Habasho and Mustafa Safwan Habasho were identified among the dead.
English Bulletin

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In Mideast Version of ‘American Idol,’ Region’s Troubles, Syria War Often Commandeer the Stage

By , May 13, 2013 5:08 am

In Mideast Version of ‘American Idol,’ Region’s Troubles, Syria War Often Commandeer the Stage

BEIRUT (AP) — TV singing contests around the world tend to serve up light, glitzy entertainment with a dash of emotional drama. But in the Middle East’s version of “American Idol,” it’s the region’s troubles that often take center stage.

Two contestants are from civil war-ravaged Syria, including a singer-composer whose bus was ambushed by gunmen en route to her audition and a music student who brought judges to tears with a song lamenting the devastation of his hometown of Aleppo. A performer from the Gaza Strip has become an audience favorite for singing about the plights of Palestinians under Israeli rule.

“The show has become a platform for Arab Spring youth to express themselves artistically and show the region that there’s hope for the future,” said Mazen Hayek, the spokesman for the Dubai-based, Saudi-owned MBC Group that broadcasts “Arab Idol” from a studio in the Lebanese capital, Beirut.

The show’s producers say political expression is allowed. But in a region where tribal, religious and political affiliations often define identity, performers walk a fine line — especially in a contest where winning is based on popularity.

“It’s live and people around the region, and Arabs around the world, follow it in real time, posting praise or criticism on Twitter and Facebook, before they even vote for their favorites,” Hayek said.

Now in its second season, the show has jumped in the ratings in part because of an eclectic mix of contestants, including several from nations wracked by conflict, such as Syria, as well as those still reeling from the fallout of the Arab Spring.

The current season began in March with 27 contestants from across the Arab world, including Tunisia, Egypt, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Syria and the Palestinian territories. The group has been whittled down to 10, and two will compete in the June 21 final.

Several contestants bring political baggage to the Beirut stage from which young singers in evening gowns and smart suits dazzle a TV audience of millions with a repertoire running from Arab classics to modern pop songs.

But the Syria crisis, now in its third year, has loomed largest. More than 70,000 Syrians have been killed and millions displaced since an uprising against President Bashar Assad’s regime erupted in March 2011. Now a civil war, the conflict has taken an enormous toll on the country.

Farrah Youssef, 23, a singer and composer from the Syrian port city of Tartous, was nearly killed on her way to Beirut in October. Syrian gunmen fired on the bus she was traveling in and robbed the passengers.

She said several of her friends have been killed in bombings in Damascus, the capital, where she’s been studying English. A younger brother was gravely wounded in a shooting attack and four of her girlfriends were kidnapped, raped and killed, their bodies dumped on the side of a deserted road outside the capital, she said.

“I’ve been so sad that I can’t grieve any longer,” Youssef said in a recent interview. “I ask myself all the time, ‘what on earth happened?’ Everything was so calm and then suddenly my country was on fire.”

While Damascus has been largely spared the destruction that has hit other cities, Aleppo has not been so fortunate.

Ten months of street fighting have devastated Aleppo, Syria’s largest urban and commercial center, leveling entire neighborhoods and leaving landmark mosques, the ancient souk and other historic treasures in ruins. Once one of Syria’s most beautiful cities, Aleppo is now scarred, carved up into rebel- and government-held areas.

Abdelkarim Hamdan, who grew up poor in a traditional Muslim family in Aleppo’s walled Old City before becoming a contestant on the show, refuses to choose sides in the conflict.

“I sing for Syrians regardless of their opinions and their political affiliations,” Hamdan said in an interview in Beirut.

The 25-year-old did not join anti-government protests when the uprising broke out. He has expressed his opposition to violence in his own lyrics about his hometown, set to a popular folk tune. His performance on a recent episode brought the four-judge panel to tears and prompted patriotic cheers in the audience.

“Aleppo, you are a spring of pain in my country,” he sang. “So much blood has been shed in my country. I cry and my heart is burning for my country and my sons who have become strangers in it.”

His ode to Aleppo instantly went viral on the Internet, but with praise came criticism from Muslim hardliners, who consider the talent show un-Islamic.

Some people urged Hamdan to go fight or not sing. Others posted comments online saying Hamdan and Youssef should not be engaging in frivolous entertainment when so many people back home are suffering.

The two contestants shrug off the criticism. They say they don’t regret being on the show and will stay unless voted off.

“I believe that if God gave you a nice voice that you should use it,” Hamdan said.

One of 14 children from his father’s two marriages, Hamdan put himself through school by working at gas stations and construction sites since he was 15. His goal is to win and use any earnings from the show to get his degree in music and help support his elderly parents.

Youssef, who spent most of her childhood in Europe, was already a known composer and singer in Syria before the conflict erupted. With a voice that one of the judges described as reminiscent of the Egyptian diva Umm Kalthoum, Youssef has gained a huge following.

As a Muslim woman, she has been criticized for wearing revealing gowns and heavy makeup on the show. She takes such comments to heart, but refuses to indulge those who have labeled her an Assad supporter because she comes from Syria’s coastal region, the heartland of the president’s Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

“People are very emotional because the situation in our country is just horrible,” Youssef said. “I don’t sing for myself, but for all people in Syria, to make them happy just a bit and to make people forget the reality for just one moment.”

The two Syrians are not the only contestants who bring regional politics to the show.

In an early episode, an Iraqi contestant from the autonomous Kurdish region in the north of the country stirred emotions after listing her country of origin as “Kurdistan.”

One of the judges admonished her, noting that the panel and the audience consider Kurdish provinces of Iraq as an integral part of the country. After that, Barwas Hussein listed her country as Kurdistan, Iraq, and performed in Arabic, instead of Kurdish, the language of her first song.

And a Palestinian singer from the Khan Younis refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, which is ruled by the Islamic militant group Hamas, was a favorite from the start because of the obstacles he had to overcome to reach Beirut.

Mohammed Assaf, 23, first had to plead with Hamas to let him leave. He then had to bribe Egyptian border guards to let him cross into Egypt, and from there applied for his Lebanon visa, he said. A fellow Palestinian eventually gave up his slot for Assaf during the audition phase because he believed Assaf — already a minor celebrity in Gaza as a wedding singer — had a better chance of winning.

Assaf often sings about the plight of Palestinian refugees and those imprisoned by Israel.

“I wanted so badly for the Arab world to hear my voice,” said Assaf.

In Gaza itself, Assaf’s image is posted on some seaside restaurants, where people gather on Friday nights to watch the show on big screens, and the Palestinian cell provide Jawal is allowing customers to send free text messages in order to vote for Assaf.

Not everyone has welcomed the excitement, though, including Hamas.

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum noted on his Facebook page that the singer has experienced the hardship of life in Gaza and comes from a “decent and respected” family. But at the same time, he said, “we don’t share the same ideas.”

“My complaint is with the name of the show,” Barhoum wrote. “No one is an idol. God is the idol for us.”

Associated Press writer Ibrahim Barzak in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, contributed to this report.

Assyrian International News Agency

Al-Assad Army Continues Crackdown on Terrorist Groups In Syria. Hundreds of Obama Rats (OR) kicked their respective buckets, pretty high! That’s terrible!

By , May 13, 2013 4:45 am

Al-Assad Army Continues Crackdown on Terrorist Groups In Syria. Hundreds of Obama Rats (OR) kicked their respective buckets, pretty high! That’s terrible!
By: Bulov on: 13.05.2013 [03:12 ] (95 reads)

Al-Assad Army Continues Crackdown on Terrorist Groups In Syria. Hundreds of Obama Rats (OR) kicked their respective buckets, pretty high! That’s terrible!
http://sana.sy/eng/21/2013/05/12/481785.htm

May 12, 2013

PROVINCES, (SANA) – Units of the Armed Forces on Sunday carried out operations against terrorists’ dens and gatherings in Harasta, al-Shefounia, Joubar, Barzeha and al-Qaboun in Damascus and its countrytside, killing and injuring several terrorists, in addition to destroying a warehouse full of explosive devices.
An official source told SANA that an Army unit clashed with an armed terrorist group near Samsam School, killing and injuring several terrorists, while another Army unit destroyed a warehouse for weapons and ammunition along with terrorists inside it in al-Shefounia in Douma. Among the dead terrorists was Adnan al-Arbo, leader of an armed terrorist group.
The source added that other Army units destroyed scores of explosive devices and large amounts of weapons and ammunition inside the cork factory in Jobar, causing a fire with dense smoke in the area.
The source pointed out that other Army units clashed with several armed terrorist groups near Teachers Tower in Jobar, killing and injuring a number of terrorists. Mahmoud Darwish and Hisham al-Allo were identified among the dead terrorists.
Meanwhile, other Army units destroyed a terrorists’ den along with the weapons and ammunition inside it at Hermala tunnel to the west of Zamalka.
In the same context, another Army unit destroyed a terrorists’ den in Barzzeha neighborhood, killing Zead al-Sagher, leader of an armed terrorist group called “Qamar Bin Hashem Brigade” and members of its group.
In al-Qaboun, an Army unit killed and injured several terrorists. Among the dead terrorists was one of the armed terrorist groups’ leader.
A military source said that the army destroyed terrorists’ gatherings in the area of Adra and killed and injured all the terrorists.
The source added that an army unit targeted a terrorists’ gathering affiliated to Jabhat al-Nusra terrorist organization, killing and injuring scores of them.
An official source told SANA reporter that the army encircled the towns of Jarba and al-Baharyeh and continued pursuing the terrorists in these areas, adding that scores of them were killed and amounts of their weaponry and vehicles were destroyed or seized.
Army Units Seize Weapons Warehouse in al-Faiha Neighborhood in Hama
A unit of the Armed Forces seized a warehouse full of weapons and ammunition for “Jabhat al-Nusra” in al-Faihaa neighborhood in Hama.
An official source told SANA that among the confiscated weapons were missiles, automatic rifles, RPG launchers, PkC machineguns, a Nato sniper, communication sets and large amounts of ammunition.
Army Units Eliminate Terrorists in Aleppo and its Countryside
Units of the Armed Forces carried out operations and clashed with the armed terrorist groups in several areas of Aleppo and its countryside, killing and injuring a number of terrorists, in addition to destroying their equipment.
An official source told SANA that the Army units destroyed a mortar and a number of terrorists’ dens along with the weapons and ammunition inside them in al-Layramoun and Handarat in Aleppo countryside.
The source added that another Army unit clashed with terrorists near Minnegh Airport, killing and injuring several terrorists, while another Army unit destroyed 23 calibar an anti-air craft gun in al-Maslamiyeh.
The source pointed out that other Army units clashed with terrorists who were perpetrating acts of terrorism against citizens in al-Sheikh Maqsoud area in Aleppo, inflicting heavy losses upon them.
Meanwhile, other Army units repelled the armed terrorist groups who were attempting to infiltrate to Suleiman al-Halabi and Karm al-Jabal areas, inflicting direct strikes upon them.
Terrorists Eliminated in Homs
A military source said that an army unit eliminated the members of a terrorist group in the area of Jeb al-Jarrah and destroyed their weaponry and ammunition.
The source said that the army completed the encirclement of al-Qseir area from its southern side, adding that an army unit dismantled several explosive devices planted by terrorists on the road between Joseh and Ribleh.
Meanwhile, An army unit killed and injured scores of terrorists that tried to attack the Dedeman Hotel in Palmyra, terrorist Waled al-Shu’eel was identified among the dead.
In Homs city, the army continued pursuing the armed terrorist groups in Bab Hud neighborhood and destroyed many terrorists’ gatherings in the area.
Army Eliminates Non-Syrian Terrorists in Deir Ezzor
The Armed Forces clashed with terrorist groups in the neighborhoods of al-Sina’a and al-Hwaiqa in Deir Ezzor and killed and injured scores of the terrorists.
An official source told SANA reporter that an army unit destroyed terrorists’ gatherings and hideouts in the towns of al-Mare’yeh and al-Bu Omar and killed the terrorists in them, among them were Ramadan al-Marghani, of the Libyan nationality, and Yousef Hussein al-Sayer.
Several Citizens Injured by rockets in hilfaya, Hama countryside
A number of citizens were injured today when two rockets, launched by terrorists of Jabhat al-Nusra, fell on the residential houses in Hilfaya, Hama countryside.
A military source told SANA that one rocket hit a house, while the other one fell near al-Mustakbal institute in the town.
Army Units Kill Terrorists in Idleb Countryside
A unit of the Armed Forces clashed with an armed terrorist group, affiliated to “Jabhat al-Nusra” whose members were perpetrating acts of terrorism in Sarmin city in Idleb countryside, inflicting heavy losses upon them.
A military source told SANA that the clashes resulted in destroying a mortar and large amounts of ammunition, in addition to killing a number of terrorists, including Kutaiba Mahmoud al-Hamid.
The source added that terrorists detonated an explosive device planted near al-Byrein factory on Sarmin- Idleb road, causing material damage in the site without casualties.
A military source told SANA reporter that many terrorists’ gatherings were destroyed in the areas of Jabal al-Arba’een and al-Neirab in Idleb countryside, adding that scores of terrorists, some of them of non-Syrian nationalities, affiliated to al-Qaeda and Jabhat al-Nusra terrorist organizations were eliminated in the area of Areha.
The source added that terrorists Abu Qatada al-Tunisi, member of al-Qaeda and leader of a terrorist group, Munzer Mamoun Haj Mousa, Iyad Abdul-Razzaq Banshi, Khaled Safwan Habasho and Mustafa Safwan Habasho were identified among the dead.
English Bulletin

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Syria Chemical Weapon ‘Proof’ Not Enough

By , May 11, 2013 6:56 pm

AMSTERDAM/DAMASCUS — Assertions of chemical weapon use in Syria by western and Israeli officials citing photos, sporadic shelling and traces of toxins do not meet the standard of proof needed for a UN team of experts waiting to gather their own field evidence.

Weapons inspectors will only determine whether banned chemical agents were used in the two-year-old conflict if they are able to access sites and take soil, blood, urine or tissue samples and examine them in certified laboratories.

That type of evidence, needed to show definitively if banned chemicals were found, has not been presented by governments and intelligence agencies accusing Syria of using chemical weapons against insurgents.

“This is the only basis on which the OPCW would provide a formal assessment of whether chemical weapons have been used,” Michael Luhan, a spokesman for the Hague-based Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) said.

The White House and western diplomats at the UN said they believe Syria had “probably” fired chemical munitions, but failed to name the chemical in question.

President Barack Obama is awaiting a “definitive judgment” on whether the Syrian regime used chemical weapons against rebel fighters before taking action, the White House said on Friday.

In response to a question, Carney said that Obama would consider a range of options including, but not exclusive to, military force, should it be determined that Syria has used chemical weapons.

The White House said it was continuing to study evidence that the Syrian government has used chemical weapons and would not set a timetable for corroborating reports.

“I’m not going to set a timeline, because the facts need to be what drives this investigation, not a deadline,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said.

“We are continuing to work to build on the assessments made by the intelligence community, that the degrees of confidence here are varying, that this is not an airtight case,» he said.

Turkey said any use of chemical weapons by Syria would “take the crisis to another level”, but remained cautious about any foreign military intervention in the conflict on its border.

Syria denies firing chemical weapons and accuses anti-Assad rebels of using them. Ralf Trapp, an independent consultant on chemical and biological weapons control, said “there is a limit to what you can extract from photograph evidence alone. What you really need is to get information from on the ground, to gather physical evidence and to talk to witnesses as well as medical staff who treated victims.”

A team of 15 experts, put together in response to a request from UN to investigate the claims, has been on standby in Cyprus for nearly three weeks.

Separately, Syrian opposition urged the UN Security Council to act immediately, possibly even by imposing a no-fly zone, after the US said for the first time the regime has probably used chemical weapons. The call came as British Prime Minister David Cameron said growing evidence of chemical weapons use by President Bashar Al Assad was “extremely serious” and called for increased foreign pressure on his regime.

“It is time for the UN Security Council to act on Syria, an official from the main opposition National Coalition said. “This is a massive issue, and the Security Council›s paralysis over Syria is no excuse.

Separately, fresh fighting broke out on the edges of Damascus, as troops took on rebels in the north, south and east, backed in some areas by tanks and militia, a watchdog said.

“Fierce clashes are raging in Barzeh district pitting rebels against troops and members of the pro-regime popular committees,” the watchdog said.

http://www.omantribune.com

Assyrian International News Agency