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Showing posts with label Nusra Front. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nusra Front. Show all posts

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Christians Facing Holocaust In Middle East. Can They Be Saved?

A Crusade to Save Christians

By Charles Krauthammer   |   Friday, 31 Jul 2015 07:54 AM

Christianity, whose presence in the Middle East predates Islam's by 600 years, is about to be cleansed from the Middle East.

Egyptian Copts may have found some respite under Abdel Fatah al-Sissi, but after their persecution under the previous Muslim Brotherhood government, they know how precarious their existence in 90 percent Muslim Egypt remains.

Elsewhere, it's much worse. Twenty-one Copts were beheaded by the Islamic State affiliate in Libya for the crime of being Christian. In those large swaths of Syria and Iraq where the Islamic State rules, the consequences for Christians are terrible — enslavement, exile, torture, massacre, crucifixion.

Over the decades, many Middle Eastern Christians, seeing the rise of political Islam and the intensification of savage sectarian wars, have simply left. Lebanon's Christians, once more than half the population, are now estimated at about a third.
The number of Christians under Palestinian Authority rule in the West Bank has dwindled — in Bethlehem, for example, dropping by half. (The exception, of course, is Israel, where Christians, Arabs and non-Arabs, enjoy not just protection but civil rights. Their numbers are increasing. But that's another story.)

Most endangered are the Christians of Syria. Four years ago they numbered about 1.1 million. By now 700,000 have fled.

Many of those remaining in country are caught either under radical Islamist rule or in the crossfire between factions. As the larger Christian world looks on passively, their future, like the future of Middle Eastern Christianity writ large, will be determined by Iran, by Hezbollah, by the Assad dynasty, by the Islamic State, by the Nusra Front, by various other local factions, and by regional powers seeking advantage.

Meanwhile, on a more limited scale, there are things that can be done. Three weeks ago, for example, 150 Syrian Christians were airlifted to refuge and safety in Poland.

That's the work of the Weidenfeld Safe Havens Fund. It provided the flight and will support the refugees for as long as 18 months as they try to remake their lives.

The person behind all this is Lord George Weidenfeld: life peer, philanthropist, publisher (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, established 1949), Europeanist (founder of the Institute for Strategic Dialogue to promote classically liberal European values), proud public Jew (honorary vice president of the World Jewish Congress), lifelong Zionist (he once served as the chief of Cabinet to Israel's first president, Chaim Weizmann) and, as he will delightedly tell you, the last person to fight a duel at the University of Vienna — with sabers, against a Nazi. (No one died.)
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Weidenfeld, now 95, once invoked "Torschlusspanik," "a German phrase which roughly translates as the 'panic before the closing of the doors,'" to explain why "I'm a man in a hurry."

Remarkably healthy and stunningly energetic (as distant cousins, we are often in touch), he appears nowhere near any exit doors. But he is aware of and deeply troubled by the doors closing in on a community in Syria largely abandoned by the world.

In context, the scale of the initial rescue is tragically small. The objective is to rescue 2,000 families. Compared to the carnage in Syria wrought by the pitiless combatants — 230,000 dead, half the 22 million population driven from their homes — it's a paltry sum. But these are real people who will be saved. And for Weidenfeld, that counts.

Yet he has been criticized for rescuing just Christians. In fact, the U.S. government will not participate because the rescue doesn't extend to Yazidis, Druze or Shiites.

This comes under the heading of no good deed going unpunished. It's a rather odd view that because he cannot do everything, he should be admonished for trying to do something.

If Weidenfeld were a man of infinite means, the criticism might be valid. As it is, he says rather sensibly, "I can't save the world."
The Arab states, particularly the Gulf monarchies, are surely not without resources. With so few doing so little for so many, he's doing what he can.

For him, it's personal. In 1938, still a teenager, he was brought from Vienna to London where the Plymouth Brethren took him in and provided for him. He never forgot.

He is trying to return the kindness, he explains, to repay the good that Christians did for him 77 years ago.

In doing so, he is not just giving hope and a new life to 150 souls, soon to be thousands. He has struck a blow for something exceedingly rare: simple, willful righteousness.

Charles Krauthammer is a Pulitzer Prize-winning syndicated columnist, published weekly in more than 400 newspapers worldwide. From 2001 to 2006, he served on the president's Council on Bioethics. He is author of the New York Times best-seller "Things That Matter: Three Decades of Passions, Pastimes and Politics." For more of Charles Krauthammer's reports, Go Here Now.
© Washington Post Writers Group


Saturday, May 23, 2015

ISIS Is Repulsed In Golan By Free Syrian Army.

Author(s):  Morgan Winsor
Source:  ibtimes.com.     Article date: May 20th, 2015


Israeli soldiers walk near mobile artillery units near the border with Syria in the Golan Heights on January 27, 2015.
(Reuters/Baz Ratner)
Islamic State loyalists in Syria have made attempts in recent weeks to expand the extremist group’s territory near the border with Israel, but have been twice thwarted by Syrian rebels along the Golan Heights. Israel has not yet responded to the incidents, even as mortar shells from the battles with ISIS fighters landed across the border into Israeli territory, Israeli news site Ynetnews said.
In the past, Israel has increased its forces in the Golan Heights near the Syrian border when shells fired by the Syrian army spilled over into Israeli territory, the Jerusalem Post said. However, Israel has remained quiet during the past two weeks as rebel fighters from Syria repelled militants loyal to the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS or ISIL.
The ISIS-loyalists have so far failed to gain foothold on the Golan Heights border, which would allow the Islamic State to set up a base for operations against Israel, Ynetnews said. Their attacks have been thwarted by the Free Syrian Army, which reportedly receives Israeli humanitarian aid, in cooperation with the Nusra Front, a Sunni Muslim branch of al Qaeda operating in Syria and Lebanon.
Israel views al Qaeda-affiliated groups as enemies but is far more hostile with Iran and its allies. Earlier this year, Israel opened its borders with Syria to provide medical treatment to the Nusra Front and al Qaeda fighters wounded along the Golan Heights, the Wall Street Journal said.
Nusra Front, which has referred to the United States and Israel as enemies of Islam, is fighting the Iranian-backed alliance of Syrain President Bashar Assad and Hezbollah. Nusra Front seized the border area last summer but hasn’t attacked Israel.
“There is no doubt that Hezbollah and Iran are the major threat to Israel, much more than the radical Sunni Islamists, who are also an enemy,” Amos Yadlin, the former head of Israel’s military intelligence, told the Wall Street Journal in March. “Those Sunni elements who control some two-thirds to 90 percent of the border on the Golan aren't attacking Israel. This gives you some basis to think that they understand who is their real enemy—maybe it isn’t Israel.”

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

We Give Weapons To Harakat Hazm In Syria, Now They Are Defeated And Our Tow Missiles End Up In The Hands Of The Nusra Front!

Once again our leaders mislead us, we invest in "losers" and the weapons we gave them is turned over to the enemy!  McCain and others said that if we supported these people, we would not have to get involved in Syria.  Sorry folks, it doesn't work that way inthe Middle East.  When are we going to learn from our mistakes or more importantly

when are our leaders going to?



Conservative Tom

Syria: al-Qaeda Nusra Front 'seizes' hi-tech weapons after defeat of US-armed Harakat Hazm rebels



Harakat Hazm Syria US-Backed Rebels
Fighters from Harakat Hazm are seen in Aleppo's Sheikh Said district. The group has announced its dissolution.
US efforts to increase moderate rebels' influence in Syria have suffered a major
 setback, as one of the main Washington-supported groups disbanded after

suffering a military defeat by al-Qaeda affiliates.
Harakat Hazm announced its dissolution after the Nusra Front captured its
headquarters in the Aleppo province. The secular militia said its fighters
were to join the Levant Front, an Aleppo-based rebel coalition including
 Islamist groups, to avoid further "bloodshed".
The move came after the Nusra Front, al-Qaeda's official affiliate in Syria,
overran Base 46, a former government military facility in the town Atarib,
where Harakat Hazm had its main operations.
Harakat Hazm had been supplied advanced US weaponry, which is now
feared to have fallen into the hands of jihadist militants. Nusra Front fighters
claimed on social media that, with the base, they had also seized heavy
weapons, including TOW anti-tank missiles and other US provisions,
according to the Washington Post.
The group had boasted a similar booty after it routed Harakat Hazm and
its allies of the Syrian Revolutionaries Front (SFR) from Jabal al-Zawiya,
 Idlib province, in November 2014.
After capturing Base 46 it also issued a statement saying they had taken
an unspecified number of Harakat Hazm fighters captive and they were to
 "be punished according to Sharia."
"We are going to pursuit the leaders of this criminal gang until they get
penalty for their oppression," the statement said, according to the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).
Washington relied on Harakat Hazm to counter Islamic State (Isis)
 militants on the ground in Syria, complementing its air strikes. American
support proved to be a double-edged sword for the group, as it turned
 its fighters into a direct target of the Nusra Front, which is listed by the
 US as a terrorist organisation.
In addition, Harakat Hazm's leadership recently lamented the US had
heavily scaled back its funding. Reasons for the reduction partially laid
in the group's inability to stand up to the jihadists and its increased

coordination with the Levant Front, which is distrusted by Washington
due to its mixed composition including radical Islamic militias, a
State Department official told The Daily Beast.
Some of Harakat Hazm fighters were among those expected to take
part in a US-backed military training program for moderate rebels to
 start in the coming weeks in Turkey.

Friday, September 26, 2014

Israel Shoots Down Syrian Jet Over Israel. Will This Start Another Front?

Israel Was Just Forced to Do Something That Could Mean Another Conflict is Coming [WATCH]


Israel Defense Forces representatives said that their Patriot air defense system shot down a Syrian military jet in Israeli airspace.
Unsurprisingly, Syrian officials called the move an “act of aggression,” according to a report from Western Journalism.
The report cites NBC News sources that claim the aircraft may have been a Syrian MiG fighter. While Israel shot down a Syrian drone in August, this would be the first Syrian jet to be brought down in over a quarter of a century, according to the report.
Syrian state television claimed that the incident proved Israel’s support for the Nusra Front rebel group, which seems difficult to believe. The Nusra Front is affiliated with the radical Islamic terrorists of al-Qaeda, who have no love for the Jewish nation.
Israel confirmed that it is neutral with regard to the Syrian civil war, and said that “unauthorized aircraft” from any nation or group that enter its airspace will be engaged as a threat.
Although much of the Middle East is currently in chaos, Israel is enjoying a respite from the conflict that has recently taken over 2,000 lives in the Gaza Strip and Israel this summer. New cease-fire talks between Israel and Hamas are scheduled to begin soon.
Israel has become expert at shooting threats from the sky since Iraq’s Saddam Hussein launched SCUD missiles at the Jewish nation during the first Iraq War, hoping to encourage other Muslims to rally to his cause.
That didn’t work out so well for Hussein, and Syrian claims that Israel has jumped into its civil war on the side of al-Qaeda seem just as unlikely to result in any practical assistance to the Assad regime.

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Syrian Side Of Golan Heights Mostly Controlled By Militants. Not Good News For Israel

Islamist Militants Rule ’95 Percent’ of Heights Overlooking Northern Israel

Radical Islamist militants now rule the vast majority of territory on the Syrian side of the Golan Heights, an Israeli military commander says, placing them in strategic position to threaten northern Israeli communities.
Col. Anan Abbas, deputy commander of the Israel Defense Forces’ Golan Brigade told Israel’s Channel 10 News that 95 percent of the territory of the Golan Heights on the Syrian side of the border with Israel has fallen under control of jihadist rebels.
Among the militants controlling the area are those with the Al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front which has imposed strict Islamic law in the areas it has captured and just last week posted a video of its Shariah council amputating the hands of accused thieves in Al-Bukamal in eastern Syria near the Iraqi border.
Israeli soldiers are seen on their Merkava tank positioned near the Quneitra checkpoint on the border with Syria in the Golan Heights, on June 22, 2014. (Photo: Menahem Kahana/AFP/Getty Images)
Israeli soldiers are seen on their Merkava tank positioned near the Quneitra checkpoint on the border with Syria in the Golan Heights, on June 22, 2014. (Photo: Menahem Kahana/AFP/Getty Images)
The only remaining part of the Golan Heights still controlled by President Bashar Assad’s forces is the area of the Quneitra border crossing with Israel, according to the Israeli commander, who added that one of the two Syrian army brigades that had controlled the area had disappeared from the battlefield.
Though the Nusra Front, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria and other rebel groups are currently engaged in an effort to oust Assad from power and establish a regional caliphate, Col. Abbas said their sights are also set on Israel.
“[W]e know their goal is to harm Israel; we’ve seen their propaganda material,” he said.
The Israeli news site Ynet reported last week that as a result of the emerging threat from Islamist militants in Syria, the IDF has set up “attack cells” along the Golan border, that is, prepositioned outposts that could be quickly staffed in the event of a cross border attack from the Golan, speeding response time for the Israeli military.
In 1981, Israel annexed the part of the Golan Heights it captured from Syria in the 1967 war.
Former President Bill Clinton made concerted efforts in the 1990s to convince Israel to relinquish the Golan to Syria in exchange for a peace deal; however, negotiations eventually collapsed.
Much of northern Israel including the Sea of Galilee can be seen from the Golan and thus is considered by Israel to be of strategic importance to be held to ensure the security of citizens living in the northern part of the country.
A leader of the Nusra Front compared the Golan’s strategic importance to the mujahideen campaign against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan.
“This view reminds us of the lion of the mujahideen, Osama bin Laden, on the mountains of Tora Bora,” a leader of the Al-Nusra Front told Reuters in May.
Last week, an Israeli teenager was killed by Syrian troops who shot at him across the border.
Syria later told Israel via a U.N. emissary that the its army troops had mistakenly identified a truck approaching the boy and his father as a rebel truck on the Syrian side of the border and fired an anti-tank missile on their location, Channel 10 reported.
Reuters last month noted that recent advances by Islamist militants in the Golan were “important not just because they expand rebel control close to the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights and the Jordanian border, but because President Bashar al-Assad’s power base in Damascus lies just 40 miles to the north.”
Reuters also quoted Western intelligence officials who estimated that some 60 insurgent groups are operating in southern Syria.

Monday, January 27, 2014

Should Israel Decide To Open A Front Against Al-Qaeda In Syria? What Are The Pros And Cons?

Israeli officer: With 30,000 Al Qaeda fighters in Syria, Israel re-evaluates its neutrality in civil war

Ahrar al-Sham jihadists fighting in Syria
In a special briefing to foreign correspondents Friday, Jan. 24, a high-ranking Israeli intelligence officer, speaking on condition of anonymity, reported that more than 30,000 al-Qaeda-linked fighters are active in Syria, a huge increase over the 2,000 jihadis present there two years ago. With jihadis in control of Syrian territory on Israel's northern borders, the high-ranking officer said “many discussions are taking place behind closed doors about the possibility of rethinking its strategy” of neutrality in the Syrian civil war.
The inference drawn from this disclosure is that, for the first time in Syria’s three-year civil conflict, Israel is ready to embark on cross-border military action to stem this direct threat.
In his briefing, the Israeli officer stressed that the Islamic rebel groups massing in Syria have openly threatened to turn their sights on Israel after toppling Assad.
He went on to report that another 1,200 Al Qaeda-affiliated fighters have taken up a presence in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip. Furthermore, coordination has deepened among Al Qaeda’s branches in Syria and Egyptian Sinai, where its local Salafist supporters have formed a jihadist coalition calling itself Ansar Beit al Maqdis (the Jerusalem Front).
This front carried out four terrorist attacks in Cairo Friday, killing at least 6 people and injuring more than 60. It exhibited for the first time a capacity for coordinated terrorist attacks inside the Egyptian capital.
Last week, Sinai Salafists fired two Grad missiles at the Israeli town of Eilat, after a rash of attacks on Israeli forces and a numerous lethal assaults on Egyptian military targets in Sinai.
The IDF has never before released figures on the scale of Al Qaeda’s deployment in Syria, or revealed its concentration on the Israeli border. The policy overhaul the officer described offered the rationale for potential Israeli intervention in Syria in order to push the jihadist menace back from its northern towns and villages.
Israel targeted after Syria and Iraq
Thousands of foreign fighters from across the Muslim world, as well as Europe and North America, have flocked to Syria to bolster the al-Qaeda-linked groups operating in Syria. They have big plans to establish a big independent Islamic state at the heart of the Middle East. This is the conclusion of intelligence experts, according to debkafile’s counter-terror and military sources. This state is intended in the first instance to devour large swathes of Iraq and Syria, before the founders turn their sights on Israel and Jordan.
However, if their first goal of toppling the Assad regime is frustrated by the Russian-Syrian-Iranian-Hizballah alliance, they are ready to reverse this order and go straight for Israel.
Four radical Islamist fighting groups are active in the Syrian civil war:
1. Jabhat al-Nusra, also known as the Nusra Front, operates under direct orders from the top, the Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zuwahiri.
Wednesday, Jan. 22, the Shin Beit reported foiling a plot he had hatched for a mixed team of jihadists to carry out three terrorist operations in Israel.  Local Palestinians and al Qaeda terrorists coming in from Turkey or Syria and the Russian Caucasian republics were to blow up the US Embassy in Tel Aviv as well as the Convention Center and a bus route in Jerusalem.
This disclosure provided the background for the briefing the IDF offered foreign correspondents Friday.
2. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS), which has captured large areas of eastern Syria, including some of its oil fields, and seized strategic districts of western Iraq, including the towns of Fallujah and Ramadi.
3. Ahram al Sham (Islamic Movement of the Free Men of the Levant). Though less known in the West, this organization has raised a force of 15,000 combatants from Al Qaeda and various radical Salafist movements. It heads the newly-formed Islamist Front of seven anti-Assad terrorist groups.
While this front has separated itself from Al Qaeda and is funded and armed by Saudi Arabia, it shares the same ideology and dedication to Israel’s destruction.
Ahram al Sham’s relations with al Qaeda have been the subject of speculation among US and Israeli intelligence specialists. The guessing was laid to rest in early January, when the group’s leader Abu Khalid al-Syria admitted for the first time that he is a member of al Qaeda.
4. Jaish al-Islam (the Army of Islam). This is the largest Syrian rebel force present in the Damascus area, and Riyadh’s favored group for assistance, judging from the fact that, in addition to arms and funds, Saudi intelligence has sent Pakistani military instructors to train its members.
Israel’s military options
Although the IDF officer did not go into Israel’s military plans for tackling the burgeoning Al Qaeda threat, debkafile’s military sources project some options.
a)  Carving out secure buffer zones, permanent or temporary, on the Syrian side of the border. This would be contingent on the cooperation of local Syrian militias willing to rid their lands of Al Qaeda incursions.
b)  Air and ground strikes against jihadist border concentrations.
c)  Deep thrusts inside Syria and Iraq to block al Qaeda forces’ advances to threaten the Kingdom of Jordan.
d)  Targeted assassinations of top al Qaeda commanders.
e)  Thwarting jihadist drives to extend their conquests of strategic areas of Syria for use as springboards against Israel. One example is Jebel Druze, whose population has preserved neutrality and stayed out of the Syrian civil war.
Israel’s recourse to military action against the jihadist threat from Syria would require learning US military tactics for combating terrorists in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The IDF has no experience of this kind or scale of warfare. It would have to re-write its war doctrine and retrain substantial commando forces in preparation for long years of close-up combat against the jihadist enemy.
Israel would also need to carefully weigh the pros and cons of a military campaign against al Qaeda’s Syrian deployment, taking into consideration that resorting to a campaign against al Qaeda would ease the pressure on the Assad regime and its allies, Iran and Hizballah. That is a hard call to make.