teqniq
DisMembered
Suspected? It was completely obvious, at least to anyone with more than a passing interest in events in Syria what was going on.It was always suspected
Suspected? It was completely obvious, at least to anyone with more than a passing interest in events in Syria what was going on.It was always suspected
I don't agree.It just turns the perpetrators into monsters and it serves no purpose.
It's effectively desecrating and mutilating corpses and all that does is dehumanise those who carry out such pointless acts.
I think it does their own cause a disservice.I'm the same, but with the atrocities the Assads have committed on people, it's not the time or place to judge imo.
Yeah, completely discredits the removal of the dictatorial regime.I think it does their own cause a disservice.
Trashing someone's grave is normally an anti-social thing to do, but it doesn't make the perpetrators monsters per se. Assad was the monster here, one of the monsters, and I see no reason why he should be venerated any more than, say, our old mate Adolf Hitler. He's long dead anyway, and if anyone is upset by this 'desecration' they are probably nasty fuckers.It just turns the perpetrators into monsters and it serves no purpose.
It's effectively desecrating and mutilating corpses and all that does is dehumanise those who carry out such pointless acts.
... do people think Syria's initial and first steps forward, post Assad, are likely to produce a democratic and peaceful government?
It just turns the perpetrators into monsters and it serves no purpose.
He was never pro PKK/YPG as I remember, but shifted to ultra anti as they began to accomodate more towards Assad and I think this fitted with him ending up seeing Turkey as the only means of preserving the 'revolution' after his hopes of US intervention were disappointed.Article with a round-up of events by Robin Yassin-Kassab, one of the authors (with Leila Al-Shami) of Burning Country. I have reservations about it as he does sound rather uncritical of HTS and doesn't say anything about the Turkish backed offensive in the north.
Free Syria's first days: The good, the bad, and the ugly
A free Syria is a blessing after Assad's fall. And though the future is uncertain, Syrians are determined to shape their destiny, says Robin Yassin-Kassab.www.newarab.com
eta: He's now describing the SNA taking Manjib as it being liberated.
Trashing someone's grave is normally an anti-social thing to do, but it doesn't make the perpetrators monsters per se.
Syrian Islamist fighters destroyed & set fire to the mausoleum of Hafez al-Assad in the Alawite town of Qardaha
A resident said fighters kept streaming in, sometimes cursing & intimidating locals who had announced their full cooperation with Syria’s news rulers on Monday.
He was never pro PKK/YPG as I remember, but shifted to ultra anti as they began to accomodate more towards Assad and I think this fitted with him ending up seeing Turkey as the only means of preserving the 'revolution' after his hopes of US intervention were disappointed.
That's probably fairly accurate, I should say it's been ages since I followed his writing at all so this is only based on the direction he seemed to be going back then, it doesn't sound like there's been much change though. I always got the impression Al-Shami was well to his left but even from his starting point I think he ended up in a fairly reactionary place. The political derangement of a significant chunk of the left on Syria probably didn't help matters.I'm getting the impression now that his position is just Syrian Arab nationalism. If you compared the situation to say the collapse of Yugoslavia it might be like supporting the Serbs or the Croats. It's disappointing but maybe his politics is just a long way from mine.
We exhumed and beheaded Oliver Cromwell. It's symbolic of the fall of the regime.He's already dead ffs. shrugs
We exhumed and beheaded Oliver Cromwell. It's symbolic of the fall of the regime.
We exhumed and beheaded Oliver Cromwell. It's symbolic of the fall of the regime.
It just turns the perpetrators into monsters and it serves no purpose.
It's effectively desecrating and mutilating corpses and all that does is dehumanise those who carry out such pointless acts.
You can't murder a mummified corpse.One murdering, repressive arsehole replaced by another. Great.
I'm not judging them. I totally get it that these are people with every right to be angry and vengeful but if this new regime ever wants to be taken seriously, they need to be able to adopt the moral high ground and exercise restraint, otherwise there will never be stability in that country... and that is what Syria really needs.I'm the same, but with the atrocities the Assads have committed on people, it's not the time or place to judge imo.
a good piece from one of the Salvage collective. It’s a video, but there is a transcript as well.
“And it’s important also to understand that this is not just a militia. This is not just fighting. As soon as the cities and villages started to fall, people started to come out and protest again. And that’s what happened in Damascus. And happened in Homs. Particularly interestingly, places that were not traditional opposition areas or were Druze areas (a smaller religious sect in the south) were very heavily involved and many non-Islamist militias from the south were actually the ones that took Damascus or came into Damascus from the south.”
Video | Everything is changing in relation to this
rs21 - revolutionary socialism in the 21st centuryrevsoc21.uk
"Second thing is like Hamas HTS have moved to showing they can do the bread and butter stuff."Just listened to that.
I'm not really up on this anti imperialist left stuff and Israel. So I gather he is talking to a specific audience.
Not , after recent reading , on Zionism / Israel convinced on the its all about anti imperialism argument
A leading light in my local PSC pointed out to me that the Cold War ended years ago. Its not about anti imperialism any more. Evangelical Christianity in US and hardline religious Zionism is more important now.
On HTS. There trajectory sounds similar to Hamas. Learning to take aboard that the society they work in is fundamentally interested in freedom. Not Islamism. Though this will attract percentage of the society they operate in to their Islamic values
Second thing is like Hamas HTS have moved to showing they can do the bread and butter stuff. ( On another thing I listened to) HTS have spent time making an efficient administration in the sector they control
So both are a form of Nationalism rather than internationalist Islamism.
I think the test will be whether HTS will be prepared in practise to work alongside other groups in Syria
Hamas for example have shown willingness at some moments to work in a Unity government. Alongside Fatah. Interestingly when Muslim Brotherhood ( later to be Hamas) were still not taking active part in Palestinian resistance some Palestinian Muslim Brotherhood joined Fatah. As Fatah were taking action.
The other thing he brings up is that both Hamas and Islamic Jihad have made positive statements on fall of Assad. Not saying fall of Assad is a disaster.
From my personal experience I've found people I meet from middle east here in London ( learning English on visas) are often secular and dont like Islamic parties ( the men with beards one told me). But when it comes down to Palestine they in their words regard Palestinians as their brothers and the Zionists stole their land.
If I was Israeli Id be more worried about flowering of real democracy in middle east. As ordinary people would ask their governments to do more
Good twenty minute talk imo.
Calls for end to West arming Israel at end I notice
The release of political prisoners is a wonderful thing.New Lines report on Sednaya prison:
Hope and Despair at Assad's 'Human Slaughterhouse'
New Lines reports from Sednaya Prison, where Syrians brave horrors in a desperate search for lost loved onesnewlinesmag.com
vid of women prisoners being released along with a still from the vid of a toddler who perhaps has known nothing else:
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there are lots more vids and pics but many are not appropriate to post on here.
FP: Can Jolani bring order to Syria after so many years of civil war and with so many competing groups and factions? Is Jolani really the man for the job? And what kind of relationship will he have with Turkey—and the Kurds?
AZ: In terms of the Kurds, I’m less concerned of potential deals being cut. HTS already reached out to the Kurds and the SDF, and it seems as if they’re more willing to discuss and negotiate. There’s also the fact that there have been rumors behind the scenes that the two groups had already been engaging with one another going back a couple of years.
The issue is more whether Turkey wants to continue to push its cards against the Kurds in Syria and how that could then further create more cascading destabilization vis-à-vis the Islamic State. I believe that the U.S. government as well as European countries are probably in talks with Ankara now over this issue.
In terms of stability, besides the Islamic State, the SNA is the biggest problem right now.
FP: What would you say are the biggest misconceptions about HTS and Jolani that are really important to dispel in terms of grasping the situation in Syria and its potential future?
AZ: One of the things is just coming to grips with the fact that they’re no longer global jihadis or related to the Islamic State or al Qaeda. That’s old news.
At the same time, we need to be cognizant that they also aren’t these liberal democrats, like many of the folks who came out to protests in 2011, either. It’s very complicated, and people need to get used to being in the gray instead of making it a black-and-white issue
“It’s all going to become one. All the government bodies will be dissolved: no Salvation Government, no factions, nothing,” said Mohammad Yasser Ghazal, a 36-year-old technocrat in the rebel government seconded from his job to help reconfigure the Damascus governorate. “It will all soon be dissolved into one Syrian republic.”
Ghazal insisted his state would not take government workers’ sectarian affiliations into account, only the value of the work that each brings. “You saw how the [Assad] regime raised them: they call us Sidi [‘my master,’]” he said. “You feel they are broken. [We just want them] to get out of that mindset. You’re a person with self-dignity, I’m not your master or anything. I am an employee, like you.”
Of course it will.
It'll be a great addition to all the other democratic and peaceful Islamic governments of the world!