Oh Syria the victory is coming

Salaam

Syrian rebels have launched a surprise offensive. Making big gains.

Blurb


Over the past week, Syrian opposition fighters have seized control of Aleppo and advanced further south towards Hama. This unexpected move has reignited what was largely a frozen conflict. In response, the Syrian Army, with support from Russia and reportedly, Iraqi militias, has intensified bombing campaigns on opposition-held areas. So, what’s next for Syria’s war?



Comment and analysis.

Blurb

Shadee Elmasry having a conversation with Sami Hamdi on the current situation






Blurb


0:00 - Intro
6:40 - Jolani and HTS
16:33 - Why did the Rebels Act Now?
30:30 - Will the Rebels Unite?
34:30 - Was the revolution worth it?
46:25 - Will this offensive cause problems for Gaza?
59:15 - Are Syrians Hopeful?
1:06:20 - Are the secret police still active?
1:10:10 - Reconstruction

Bilal Abdul Kareem, born Darrell Lamont Phelps in 1970 in New York, is an American-born journalist and war correspondent known for his coverage of the Syrian Civil War. He initially gained recognition for his work with CNN and has been associated with other major news networks like the BBC and Channel 4. Kareem converted to Islam and has a background that spans from acting and stand-up comedy to activism, particularly focusing on AIDS awareness in his earlier years.

His journalistic career took a significant turn when he began documenting the Syrian conflict in 2012, where he founded his own media outlet, On the Ground News (OGN). Kareem's work has often placed him in proximity to insurgent groups, earning him both praise for his courage and criticism for perceived biases. His reporting style has been noted for providing a unique perspective from within rebel-held territories, often focusing on the lives of civilians and fighters.

Kareem has claimed to have survived multiple drone strikes, alleging that he was placed on a U.S. "kill list" due to his reporting, which led him to file a lawsuit against the U.S. government. This case was dismissed citing state secrets privilege. In August 2020, he was arrested by Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), an al-Qaeda offshoot in northern Idlib, Syria, on charges of incitement and working with groups that harm public security, but was released after six months. His work continues to focus on the humanitarian aspects of conflicts, often putting him at personal risk but also earning him a following among those interested in grassroots journalism from conflict zones.


 
Salaam

Events on the ground are moving rapidly.

Blurb

Syrian state media has reported that President Bashar al-Assad has not fled the country.

But the rebels are closing in on the capital and the presidential palace from the north and from the south with claims from opposition forces that they have entered the outskirts of the city.






More comment and analysis.

Blurb

It’s been a spectacular week in Syria. The world had written off the rebellion that began in 2011, believing Assad, with the support of Russian air power and Iranian militias, had consolidated his rule. In the past weeks, it has been reintegrated into the Arab League, and it just seemed the best the revolution could accept is a rump state in Idlib. There are many who have not followed the developments in Syria over the past 13 years of revolution, and the Thinking Muslim will dedicate some of our shows to reveal the facts and provide important analysis.

Today, we have Razan Saffour to give her own account of the Syrian revolution. Razan is a Syrian researcher and an activist. Recently she has been speaking to the international press about developments. So we are honoured to have her with us today.





Blurb

The demands of the people were snuffed out by a deranged dictator who decided he would burn his country, before giving up power. We thought the revolution had ended, and the millions of Syrians dispersed around the world were never to see their homeland again. This all spectacularly changed this past week, where, to everyone’s surprise, the opposition was able, for the first time, to take over Aleppo and are now fighting to expand their territory. Many questions remain, and a deliberate propaganda campaign waged by Iran and Russia with the help of their social media proxies has confused many who had not followed the events.

They hope to throw out false news to make us believe its all too confusing. To help us untangle the political realities I have back on the show Sami Hamdi who joins us today from the US.





Blurb

This episode was filmed on Saturday, before Damascus fell.

The Syrian revolution began in 2011 as a grassroots, civil society uprising against one of the most tyrannical rulers in the Muslim World. Bashar al-Assad like his father before him, presided over a state of terror, with disappearances, secret police repression and a punitive state machinery that governed through fear. Assad styled himself as an anti-imperialist when in reality he had colluded with the West in past conflicts and after 9/11 Syria became a favourite place for the Americans to render suspects for horrific torture.

Today we have Moazzam Begg who is the senior director of CAGE and author of enemy combatant – a book about his time as a detainee first in Bagram and then in Guantanamo. He also spent time in Syria during the revolution, as part of his investigation into the Assad regimes complicity in the CIA torture programme.







Blurb


In just over a week, opposition forces in Syria have seized major cities including Aleppo, and large swathes of territory. They've faced little or no resistance from the Syrian military, apart from air strikes involving Russia. And with Damascus in the opposition's sights, what's President Bashar Al Assad's strategy?






Blurb


Caspian take on the situation.


Though this video has dated quickly.





EDIT - Assad has fled the country.

Blurb

Syrian opposition claims al-Assad has escaped the country.

Syrian opposition forces have declared the end of President Bashar al-Assad's rule after 13 years of civil war.

Earlier, Reuters news reported that the leader, who ruled for 24 years, had left the capital, Damascus.

A few hours ago, rebel forces had announced that they had entered Damascus. They also said they had taken over the city's airport and the state TV building.

The Syrian Prime Minister says the government was ready to hand over power to any leadership chosen by the people.


 
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Salaam

I wont lie its bewildering. Shocked at the rapid pace of collapse and change.. There's no doubt a lot going on behind the scenes, the picture of what has just happened will become clearer in the months and years ahead.

Nevertheless I think we should be cautiously optimistic. The Syrian revolution has been a rollercoaster, felt the heights of optimism and then the depths of despair. When the initial protests broke out I was naive thinking there could be some sort of peace agreement (a peace agreement, Assad leaves, transitional govt). Over the years realising how evil Assad was, struggle was the only way. I was also against great powers intervention given the history of where that would lead (undermining and subverting the revolution). Then eventually I fell into despondency., Red hua sums up how I was feeling (minus the smearing part).



But then I must not forget.

"Allah is the best of planners" verse 8:30 of Surah Al-Anfal

and this



Much sacrifices has been made to reach this point.

The conflict is won, I pray they can win the peace.




A reminder of how the Assad family ruled Syria.

How the Assad family built an empire of fear in Syria

Hafez and his son Bashar killed countless people over five decades and oversaw the country’s descent into kleptocracy


On Sunday morning, as gaunt detainees flooded out of Syrian regime prisons and jubilant Damascenes streamed into the presidential palace to root around among abandoned designer shopping bags, Bashar al-Assad was nowhere to be found.

The only sign of the dynastic president, whose family had ruled Syria for half a century, was his ubiquitous portrait. Except now, instead of being in its usual pride of place on walls and above desks, Assad’s images were being trampled under the feet of people the dictator had for years tried to bomb, gas and torture into submission.

It was a stunning downfall. Damascus without the Assad family, who enforced their minority rule with an iron fist, is almost unimaginable for many Syrians.

For Haid Haid, a Syrian columnist and consulting fellow with Chatham House, the regime’s enduring legacy would be defined by its attempt to “destroy people’s spirit and prevent them from imagining that they could live in a better place”.

Bordered by Iraq, Jordan, Israel, Lebanon and Turkey, Syria is blessed with natural resources, a rich ancient history and a strategic position on the Mediterranean.

The Assad regime, which has ruled Syria since 1970, “had all the time and the tools to make Syria like Singapore, if they wanted”, said Bassam Barbandi, a former Syrian diplomat who defected to the opposition. “But they didn’t. They tried to crush the people . . . in order to survive.”

Ultimately Bashar, his brother Maher and wife Asma — a London-born ex-JP Morgan banker once feted by Vogue as “a rose in the desert” — used their power ruthlessly to finance the regime while the economy cratered in the rubble of Syria’s civil war. Analysts said the family controlled smuggling and even benefited from the growing trade in Captagon, an illicit stimulant mainly produced in Syria.

It became “like a mafia running a state”, said Malik al-Abdeh, a London-based Syrian analyst. The result for many ordinary people was that Syria was so “closely associated with your own torture or your own tormentor . . . that you almost begin to hate your country”.

The original architect of this dark regime was the son of a poor family from Syria’s coastal region and a member of the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shia Islam. Hafez al-Assad, an air force pilot, rose through the secular and Arab nationalist Syrian Ba’ath party, which took control of Syria in 1963, became defence minister and finally seized power in a coup.

A minority ruler in a mainly Sunni country, Hafez concentrated power with loyal members of his sect and buttressed his rule with brutal intelligence agencies that monitored Syrians’ every move. He also pitted the agencies against each other, heightening the sense of paranoia and fear. He was “a cold and calculated political and security operative”, said Charles Lister, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute.

The dictator brooked no dissent. In 1982, he put down an Islamist uprising in the city of Hama with a bloody massacre of tens of thousands of people.

“There’s been a thesis for a long time that this is a minority regime without popular support,” said Abdeh. “Therefore, they have to use violence to maintain power, and this is all a house of cards.”

The Assad patriarch also sought to project their power across the region. Under Hafez, the Syrian army intervened in Lebanon’s civil war, occupying parts of the country for years, and became widely feared for their ruthlessness as Lebanese citizens disappeared into Syrian prisons.

Hafez’s second son Bashar, born in 1965, grew up in the shadow of his charismatic elder brother Bassel, heir-apparent to Hafez’s throne. Bashar meanwhile qualified as a doctor and went to London to train as an ophthalmologist.

But Hafez’s plans for his succession were shredded when Bassel crashed his Mercedes and died aged 31 in 1994. Bashar was recalled to Damascus and groomed for the presidency himself. Six years later, Hafez died.

Different powers vied to woo Bashar, who was then aged just 34. Syria’s former coloniser France even awarded him its highest civilian award, the Légion d’honneur, after he ascended to power in 2001. Western countries initially believed that “a more Western, liberalised, potentially ‘cosmopolitan’ leader coming into power . . . was going to be a good development”, said Lister.

But Bashar grew close to Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Iran-backed Lebanese militant group Hizbollah, and ultimately to Iran’s so-called “axis of resistance” of anti-US forces.

This alliance with Hizbollah destabilised Lebanon as weapons flowed across the border. Many in the region saw Syria’s hand behind the assassination of Lebanon’s prime minister Rafik Hariri in 2005, though a UN-backed tribunal did not charge any Syrians.

Domestically, Bashar sought to steer Syria from the socialist economic model adopted by his father towards a putatively free-market economy, also prompting hopes of a so-called Damascus Spring with greater personal freedoms.

But the promise of reform soon proved empty. Syrian economists say he instead introduced kleptocracy: although some businesses were able to profit, family members like his cousin Rami Makhlouf dominated the economy.

While less advantaged inhabitants of the countryside and suburbs felt they were being left behind, Bashar counted on support from Syria’s urban mercantile families and minorities.

But Bashar was never on comfortable ground, said Lina Khatib, an associate fellow at Chatham House. His “constant paranoia meant he mistrusted his own circle”, she said. “His rule was marked by a breakdown of trust even within his own regime.”

Then a wave of protests across the Arab world in 2011 ignited the simmering socio-economic tensions in Syria, stoked by grievances over corruption and Assad’s autocratic rule. Protesters flooded the streets, calling for the regime’s fall.

Bashar faced a choice. Rather than move towards reform and reconciliation, he opted to crush the rebellion. More than 300,000 civilians were killed in the first decade of war, the UN has estimated, with deadly chemical attacks becoming its grisliest hallmark.

He “was living with the ghost of his dad”, said Barbandi. “He wanted to be stronger or tougher in dealing with the Syrians than his dad in Hama.”

Bashar was not the only Assad to play a role in crushing the uprising. Maher, his younger brother, ran the Syrian army’s notoriously brutal Fourth Division, while experts say he controlled smuggling, including weapons and oil — illicit revenue streams that helped finance the war effort.

Bashar staved off defeat with the help of his backers Hizbollah, Iran and Russia, and declared his intention to win back “every inch” of Syria. But even as the fighting slowed and front lines stabilised in 2019, Syria’s economy buckled.

This was “a defining moment”, said Karam Shaar, a Syrian political economy specialist based in New Zealand. With his economic woes compounded by the global pandemic, a financial meltdown in neighbouring Lebanon and international sanctions, Assad started shaking down business people, and even his own cousin Makhlouf.

Asma, Bashar’s wife, was also taking control of the spoils. She consolidated control over the aid sector, a huge — and rare — source of clean cash into Syria, while her allies manoeuvred into positions of economic power.

With public salaries eroded by inflation, and after years of bloody war, Assad’s army became “a shadow of itself”, Shaar said. Even Assad’s coastal Alawite heartland was demoralised.

A presidency that had held absolute power over the lives of its people had become reliant on international supporters. But when a lightning advance by well-armed, well-organised rebels took advantage of Tehran and Moscow’s own problems, Assad’s backers appeared unable to counter the opposition push.

As fighters ripped pictures of Bashar and dragged statues of Hafez around with trucks, Assad’s house of cards finally came down.

The Assad dynasty will be remembered for its callous disregard for Syrian lives. But Haid, the columnist, said Syrians were moving past its empire of fear: “We have seen how people were able to overcome that and create the future they want for themselves.”

https://www.ft.com/content/35855345-05b5-4e4f-a978-2754cd8b31ab


Where is Bashar Al Assad now?

Syria's President Bashar al Assad is in Moscow and has been granted asylum, confirms Russian state media

President Bashar al Assad left office on Sunday after his government fell following a lightening offensive. As he fled, Syrians celebrated in the streets and ransacked presidential residences.

https://news.sky.com/story/syrias-p...-asylum-confirms-russian-state-media-13269955



Blurb

The capture of the Syrian capital Damascus was unprecedented - with rebel forces apparently meeting little or no resistance.

The rebel commander of the main group Hayat Tahrir al Sham - known as HTS - said in a statement read out on Syrian TV: "the future is ours and that there is no turning back".


 
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Salaam

More comment and analysis

Blurb

Join the 5Pillars team with esteemed guests to discuss and debate the momentous events in Syria as Bashar Al Assad is overthrown by a rebel coalition







Blurb



In this episode, I talk to an expert in the field of military strategy and security whose focus has been the theater of the Middle East, Dr. Tallha Abdulrazaq. Dr. Tallha explains to us the underlying reasons for the Syrian Resistance sweeping across the length and breadth of Syria in 11 days without facing much resistance much like in Afghanistan 2021. We also talk about what to expect next and if this campaign can have a domino effect across the Arab world with specificity to the 3 key pillar states of Arab power: Syria, Iraq, and Egypt.

00:00:00 - Trailer
00:02:21 - Introduction
00:04:50 - Who are the key players and groups inside the Syrian Resistance?
00:18:12 - Is the Syrian conflict distracting from the Palestinian conflict? Is this a conspiracy to neutralize the “Axis of Resistance”?
00:29:10 - What was the political strategy employed by Syrian rebels that enabled this 11-day Blitz?
00:44:50 - What military strategy and tactics did the resistance change/develop to change the game?
00:55:18 - Are the Ukrainians & CIA helping train & arm Syrian rebels?
1:02:00 - Is Israel taking advantage of the situation to push forward with “The Greater Israel” project?
1:11:50 - Can the rebels be pushed back? Are their gains reversible?
1:30:10 - Can this Syrian Blitz have a Domino Effect in the rest of the Arab World?




 
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Salaam

Another update. Lets have a look at some of the brothers and sisters who traveled to Syria.

Shajul Islam left the UK to help the Syrian revolution working there as a medical professional.

He was accused of engaging in terrorist activities

Syria kidnap case against doctor dropped by prosecution

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-24901481

As noted the case was dropped.




This is a sample of his current work in northern Syria.

Blurb

This vlog highlights the incredible projects One Nation has established here in the blessed land of Shaam. In just 24 hours, we aimed to show the One Nation deployment team the life-changing initiatives happening on the ground, demonstrating the real impact your donations are making.

Please watch, share, and if you're interested in joining us on a charity deployment, feel free to message me for more details. Let’s continue making an impact together!







And now






In Damascus











Lets look at Tauqir Sharif invovlement in the Syrian revolution.

Blurb

British-born Tauqir Sharif runs a humanitarian aid organisation in war-torn Syria. When the British government revokes his citizenship over alleged ties to al-Qaeda, he decides to appeal but is forced by circumstances to boycott his own trial. Soon after, his worst fears are realised when he is arrested by a powerful rebel group. With rare access to Idlib during a dangerous and unpredictable time in northern Syria, this film demonstrates the real-life consequences of citizenship revocation. Stateless in Syria is a documentary film by Horia El Hadad.

00:00 - Chapter 1
25:00 - Chapter 2
46:57 - Chapter 3



And now


Tauqir Tox Sharif
@toxaidworker
Mujahideen after liberation of Hama City earlier today. A city where the Hama massacre took place in 1982 by Hafez Al Assad, Bashars father!

https://x.com/toxaidworker/status/1864881538279576029


Tauqir Tox Sharif
@toxaidworker
STATUE OF HAFIZ ASSAD TOPPLED IN HAMA BY REBELS - inshallah I will be going there today - stay tuned for updates #Syria

https://x.com/toxaidworker/status/1864889825674788912


Tauqir Tox Sharif
@toxaidworker
On my way to newly freed Hama city from Aleppo city duas plz!
HTS is doing lots of good work to win the hearts of the people. What are your thoughts?

#Syria

https://x.com/toxaidworker/status/1864942323039080651

Tauqir Tox Sharif
@toxaidworker
Hama city is free and subhanallah incredible! The people, the presence, the aura. Allah, hu akbar!

Allah bless all the mujahideen who fought to open this majestic place!
Stay tuned for unreal footage coming up.

https://x.com/toxaidworker/status/1865030189371056563













Tox Sharif
@toxaidworker
Proof that Allah can change your state at any time [MENTION=4204]bilal[/MENTION]Kareem

https://x.com/toxaidworker/status/1866242230614151260


And More

Blurb

In this episode, we dive into the current situation in Syria, discussing the progress of the revolutionary rebels and the celebration of freedom by Syrians worldwide. Let us know in the comments if there are any topics you’d like us to cover in future episodes.

0:00 Intro
1:01 Celebrations in Syria
2:16 Recap of Syrian Revolution
7:35 Al Assad Regime and Palestine
12:30 Muslim Countries with Palestine
13:0 Life Under Assad Regime
17:57 The Fall of Bashar And His Army
19:30 Criticism Against the Rebels
20:35 The Unseen Reality
22:12 Will People Go Back to Their Homes
23:20 Destruction & Poverty in Aleppo
24:29 The Greater Sham Project
26:03 Name Suggestions & Comments
32:08 The Groups in Syria
35:30 Negative Propaganda
37:11 Noussair Mazraoui Case
39:10 Muslims and Their Principles
40:51 Dan Bilzerian & Mohamed Salah
42:18 Christianity in Syria
45:55 Outro

 
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Salaam

Lets look at Bilal Abdul Kareem.

Heres his biography

https://www.bilalabdulkareem.com/biography/

One of his early reports.

Blurb

Bombing both the Assad regime and the rebels will neither help the Syrian people nor end the "war on terror" - so says Bilal Abdul Kareem, who has filmed alongside Islamic fighters in Syria.



One of the darkest moments. The fall of Aleppo.

Blurb

On The Ground News's Bilal Abdul Kareem tells MEE: 'The regime is pushing forward and things are as bad as they can be'.




In liberated territories Bilal suffered arrest and imprisonment (Just like Tauqir Sharif)

Blurb

In an exclusive interview with MEE, US journalist Bilal Abdul Kareem talks for the first time about the six months he spent in a Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham prison in Syria.

Abdul Kareem, who has been reporting from opposition-held Syria since 2012, believes he was arrested for reporting on allegations of torture against the group - and says he heard the screams of prisoners during his own captivity.

Admitting he was putting himself in jeopardy by talking to MEE, Abdul Kareem accused HTS leader Abu Mohammad al-Jolani of lying about conditions in the militant group's prisons, and said he was "unfit to rule".




And now



















Bilal and Tauqir reunite in the heart of Damascus.

Tox Sharif
@toxaidworker
Proof that Allah can change your state at any time @bilal Kareem

https://x.com/toxaidworker/status/1866242230614151260



 
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Salaam

Finally lets look at brother Abdussamed Dagül.


Blurb

"Hard Workers" new episode focuses on independent Turkish journalist Abdus Samad Daghul. What is it like to get up everyday ready to fight through the dangers of being a journalist in Syria and then still come home and have enough energy to be a father and husband?


And now







A Christian pharmacist from Aleppo:

We have not seen any harm from anyone. Life continues as normal.












The Reasons Behind the Mujahideen’s Rapid Advance

In recent days, the most frequently asked question has been: How did the Mujahideen manage to advance so quickly? I will try to answer this briefly and clearly.

The Mujahideen made excellent use of the past five years, which essentially became a period of ceasefire. During this time, they carefully analyzed the reasons for their previous losses and mistakes in past battles and focused on addressing their weaknesses. They built a stronger military structure, incorporating night-vision-equipped special forces, artillery and missile units, infiltrating special operations teams, and the Falcon Brigades, which played a decisive role particularly in the battles of Aleppo and Hama.

Additionally, the Mujahideen adapted to modern warfare by utilizing advanced technology. They developed their own cruise missiles, armed drones capable of dropping bombs, and kamikaze drones capable of conducting suicide attacks. In contrast, the Assad regime had been preoccupied for years with plundering Syrian lands, engaging in internal power struggles, and grappling with economic crises. Meanwhile, its main supporters, Russia and Iran, offered only half-hearted assistance, rendering them ineffective against the Mujahideen’s preparations.

A Scenario Depicting the Collapse of the Assad Regime

To make the situation clearer, imagine this brief scenario: You are a soldier of the Assad regime. For years, you’ve been living under economic hardship, unable to provide for your family with the salary you receive. While you’re on your weekly patrol, the Mujahideen conduct infiltration operations, systematically taking out your comrades. Your commanders either don’t know how to respond or simply don’t care.

Suddenly, one night, the Mujahideen launch a large-scale operation. Bullets fly over your head, and your comrades beside you fall one by one. You try to contact your commander via radio to report the situation and request reinforcements, only to find out that the Mujahideen have destroyed command centers with cruise missiles, incapacitating your commanders. The remaining generals have already fled.

As if that’s not enough, you realize that fire is coming not just from the front—the direction of the enemy—but also from behind. The Mujahideen’s special forces have infiltrated your rear lines. While you try to take cover in your trench, precision artillery shells hit nearby posts. Pickup trucks carrying fleeing comrades are struck by kamikaze drones, killing everyone aboard. At this point, you understand that there is nothing left to defend and no means to continue fighting. Left with no other choice, you surrender to the Mujahideen’s call to “lay down your arms.”

Conclusion

The primary reason for the rapid collapse of the Assad regime’s lines is that the Mujahideen trusted in Allah only and adhered to Allah’s command: “Prepare against them whatever forces you can muster…” They relied solely on Him and launched this large-scale operation. Meanwhile, the regime, weakened by internal divisions and military and political disarray, stood no chance against this meticulously prepared offensive.

Abdussamed Dagül
















Yes, just like Palestine and elsewhere, those who fought for their liberation will be remembered.



The wisdom behind going through difficult days is seeing who your true friends are and who will stay by your side to support you. On good days, everyone is already by your side.

Today, we see a similar situation on the Syrian front. Those who for years cast doubt on the mujahideen and sowed suspicion in the hearts of the ummah are now trying to claim a share in the victories Allah has granted the mujahideen.

But the Mujahideen have chosen to sacrifice their lives to establish Islamic values and bring prosperity, justice, and safety to this Ummah without fearing the blame of the blamers. Their unwavering dedication and steadfastness are a reminder that true victory comes through patience, sacrifice, and reliance on Allah alone.
 
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One of the most evil aspects of the Assad regime. Its prison system.
This report was released 8 years ago

Blurb

Amnesty International has teamed up with Forensic Architecture, a research agency based at Goldsmiths, University of London, to recreate the horrors of Saydnaya, a Syrian torture prison near Damascus, through an interactive 3D model.

This video demonstrates the model of the prison, and features interviews and testimonies from researchers at Forensic Architecture, from Philip Luther, Middle East and North Africa Programme Director at Amnesty International, and with former prisoners at Saydnaya.



From 6 years ago

Blurb

Saydnaya is one of 27 prisons in Syria where thousands — often falsely accused of dissidence and terrorism — are tortured and killed. Here's a look at what goes on inside.


These reports were dismissed by Assadists/Leftists/Russians as lies and propoganda.




And now.

Blurb

This is the infamous Sednaya prison in Syria that Bashar Al Assad used to exact out some of the most brutal and extreme torture methods known to mankind.

This prison was said to house 150,000 inmates. Some in the white prison above ground and others in the red block three stories under the ground.

Feel free to use this footage to expose Bashars crimes.




Footage of the initial moment the prison was stormed.

Blurb

Social media footage shows the moment prisoners ran through the streets of Damascus after reportedly being freed.

Women and children were among those released from the country’s notorious underground institution, Sednaya Prison.

“Don’t be afraid… We’re part of the revolution,” one rebel says as they rush to unlock cells.

A toddler could be seen walking down the corridor as women rushed to leave their cells.

Once described as the “human slaughterhouse” by Amnesty International in 2017, a report alleged that thousands were tortured and executed under the authorisation of the Bashar al-Assad regime.































And so much more to discover. For example Assads Drug empire.

From 2 years ago

Blurb


It fuelled the Syrian war, and now it's propping up both the Syrian and Lebanese economies.

Captagon, a speed-like amphetamine, was the favourite of fighters on the frontline, and is now turning both countries into narco-states.

Channel 4 News has obtained footage of an illegal Captagon factory on the Lebanese-Syrian border. It's one of scores of underground labs churning out millions of pills, creating a crisis of addiction across the Middle East.






And now




Blurb

Footage has emerged from Maher al-Assad’s Captagon manufacturing factories that were seized by Syrian rebels on Wednesday.

The former president’s brother was responsible for managing the drug’s production in Syria prior to the fall of the regime. Smuggling of Captagon - an addictive, amphetamine-type stimulant - became one of the main sources of income for the Assad regime to help boost the economy during the Syrian Civil War.

Al Jazeera reports that Syria produces 80 percent of the world’s captagon supply, which has since been dismantled after opposition forces took control of Damascus.




Blurb

It's been called the poor man's cocaine.

Captagon: the drug that funded Bashar al-Assad's brutal rule in Syria.

It's an amphetamine which - in high doses - induces feelings of euphoria and invulnerability.

Popular with soldiers, they say it offers 'chemical courage' and reportedly suppresses pain.

And it's made the Assad family billions - more than 10 billion dollars a year, by recent estimates. Money it used to shore up a crumbling dynasty.






More comment.









 
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Another update.

Fort Down In A Fortnight: Syrian Insurgents Oust Assad Regime

A half-century of Syrian rule by the Assad family came to a sudden end this month with the stunning advance of insurgents who forced out Bashar al-Assad from power. It was a stunning denouement to an exceptionally bloody war, featuring no less than four foreign armies – Iran, the United States, Russia, and Türkiye – and numerous armed factions; many of whom united to expel a notoriously tyrannical government and send much of the country into widespread rapture.

The facts are these: at the end of the autumn last month, a coalition of insurgents bottled since 2018 in the northwest region of Syria burst out with unprecedented coordination to seize the major northern city Aleppo. They then cut south in a pincer movement to take the long-embattled city of Hama. As they swept into central Syria, from the south another set of militants – many of whom had surrendered and been recruited as militias by Russia in 2018 – defected and captured the Daraa and Qunaitra provinces. The capital, Damascus, fell with stunning speed and Assad’s regime collapsed even as he fled abroad, apparently via mediation by the United Arab Emirates, to Russia. A long-expected standoff at the central city Homs largely failed to materialize; instead, the insurgents proceeded to Damascus amid massive celebrations as long-filled dungeons around the country were emptied. Prime minister Ghazi Jalali, a technocrat only recently promoted by Assad, was kept in place, but there was no doubt that the insurgents were running the show. And as thousands of Syrians streamed back into the country after years of exile – the war had displaced some half of its population – there was no doubting the optimism in the air.

To see how the regime fell with such stunning speed and who these insurgents are, we must look briefly at the history of the regime and the war.

Background


Assad had inherited power from his ruthless and cunning father Hafiz (1971-2000), whose reign had been marked by nimble flexibility abroad and iron-fisted suppression at home. These traits were in evidence when in 1976 he maneuvered Syria into a thirty-year occupation of Lebanon, directed initially and principally at the major Palestinian groups in that war, and in 1982 crushed a largely Islamist Sunni revolt that resulted in northern Syria with pointed brutality. But they were also evident in Hafiz’s cynical balance between his principal foreign backers in Moscow and the United States, as well as regional states such as Iran, Iraq, Türkiye, and Saudi Arabia.

Hafiz had come to power amid an intense power struggle within the then-powerful Baath party in the 1960s; he led a secretive military committee that expelled the original Baathists into Iraq and seized power. Throughout his rule, his major rival was the neighboring Baath regime in Iraq, mutual hostility to which united his own secularist regime with the supposedly “Islamic revolutionary” government of Iran and even led to occasional collaboration with Israel. Though Hafiz and Egypt’s Anwar Sadat had briefly fought Israel in 1973, this served mainly to bolster their own standing: Sadat thrust himself energetically into the American camp while a more distant Hafiz nonetheless primarily directed his gunsights at the Palestinians, then led by Yasser Arafat, in Lebanon. This coupled with the fact that he did not challenge Israel’s occupation of the Golan heights meant that Washington was prepared to overlook his Soviet inclinations during the Cold War. In the aftermath, Hafiz played an important symbolic role by joining the American-led war against Saddam Hussein, and was assiduously courted by Washington through the 1990s. His regime’s model of survival, however, was to balance off competing powers: in Lebanon, for instance, both Saudi Arabia and Iran saw him as a useful buffer against their rivals.

Bashar inherited this balancing act but played it to far less effect: he managed to stave off initial American threats with close intelligence cooperation – Syria’s notoriously brutal dungeons played an important intelligence role for the Americans – as well as a withdrawal from Lebanon under American pressure. With the American occupation of Iraq, the Syrian regime tried to corral public outrage by keeping an open border – which permitted fighters to enter and refugees to leave – but also frequently imprisoning prisoners who were used as a form of leverage. Mounting American hostility to Iran also enabled Assad to posit himself as an intermediary, which did not go unappreciated. Though Damascus refrained from the sort of open collaboration that was emblematic of Amman and Cairo, its services were valued enough by enough competing foreign parties that when the Arab revolts broke out in early 2011, Assad’s wife Asma Akhras was being serenaded in foreign media, Hillary Clinton was hailing him as a “reformer”, and he confidently predicted that the revolt would pass Syria by. Instead it would be the site of the bloodiest war of the 2010s.

Repression and Revolt

When the protests did arrive in Syria, Bashar resisted conciliatory advice – including from Türkiye’s Tayyip Erdogan, Hamas’ Khaled Mashaal, and even Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad – and instead resorted to his regime’s tried method of brutal suppression, with thousands killed over 2011 and several cities besieged before a revolt broke out, principally armed by mass defections by soldiers of the mostly Sunni majority and by Türkiye in particular. Other states, such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar, sent weapons to the insurgents. France, Britain, and the United States – fresh off backing an insurgency in Libya – diplomatically flirted with the Syrian insurgency but ultimately abandoned it, largely because a large proportion of the insurgents were considered Islamists and because it was seen as too much of a risk to Israel. Iran heavily sided with the regime, decisively bringing in its Lebanese “Hezbollah” militia and breaking with Hamas, who had backed the revolt instead.

Although a major target of both regime and foreign ire it was a certain “Abu Muhammad Jawlani” – Ahmad Sharaa, then the Qaida commander sent to Syria, who organized an efficient and fierce insurgent group called Nusra Front. In actual fact the Syrian revolt was too much of a mass uprising to be corralled by any one faction. An exile “government” founded in France and based largely in Türkiye had minimal influence on the ground, and was soon discarded as it broke up by 2014. What was clear, and alarmed the United States, Russia, and Iran, was the major role played by largely Islamist insurgents of varying types. They included long-imprisoned militants Hassan Abboud (Abu Abdullah), Zahran Alloush, Ahmad Issa (Abu Issa), and Hasan Soufan (Abul-Baraa), as well as Iraq insurgency veterans such as Hashim Shaikh (Abu Jabir) and Nusra’s founders Sharaa, Maysara Musa (Abu Maria), and Iyad Nazmi (Abu Julaibib). The largest, best-organized groups were the tightly controlled Nusra and the more confederal Ahrarul-Sham founded by Abboud and Shaikh. In the mid-2010s, their joint collaboration yielded the capture of several key cities including Raqqa and Idlib: other cities such as Aleppo and Homs, the sites of massive battles, were eventually lost.

Conflagration

In the mid-2010s the conflict rapidly spilled across borders, fueled by fighters on different sides from around the world. The Syrian war affected events in Lebanon, and was in turn affected by events in Iraq. This coupled with Sharaa’s fallout with Qaida’s autonomous wing in Iraq – soon to be renamed Daesh – which broke away from the parent organization and announced a self-styled “caliphate” that sprawled across both sides of the border by summer 2014. Iran, along with a large number of mostly Shia militias, invaded as early as 2013 to fight the insurgency.

The United States entered in 2014: they targeted Nusra, which was their first target and several of whose commanders they killed in the battlefield, and then Daesh. In the process they exacerbated frictions between the Syrian insurgents who had already been fighting against Daesh, with Nusra generally. They also supported militias, largely through Jordan and under the misleading name of “moderate rebels”, who formed a buffer zone in the south and failed to cooperate with other rebels: this was an American attempt to redirect the revolt away from Assad and against either Daesh or other American targets. The main American vassal, however, was the so-called “Democratic Forces” or Qasd led by Mazloum Abdi, a leftist militia linked to Türkiye’s Kurdish insurgency and wanted their own region called Rojava. Having evicted Daesh from the Syrian east, the American military occupied this strategic region in league with Qasd. This also prompted conflict between the American-backed Qasd and the Turkish-backed Syrian insurgents. Indeed, the Americans soon began to bar weapons that might reach rebels, conditioning their support on fighting only against “terrorists”.

American intervention influenced escalation by other foreign powers. In 2015 Russia mounted a full-scale invasion to support the regime, killing Alloush in the process. In 2016, Türkiye, whose leader Erdogan had just survived a coup strongly linked to the Americans, entered the Syrian northeast to head off Qasd. Turkish failure to help the Syrian insurgents against the Russian-Iranian capture of Aleppo from the insurgents prompted Sharaa, who had criticized reliance on Türkiye, to strike against his former allies in the Turkish-backed Ahrarul-Sham, whose leader Shaikh defected to join him. They set up an autonomous emirate in Idlib, both cooperating and competing with groups under the Turkish umbrella. Sharaa renamed his faction Tahrirul-Sham and formally cut off its links with Qaida, whose loyalists such as Iyad broke away: many of them were subsequently killed off by the Americans. In the south, American-backed militias on the Jordanian border caved with little resistance against Russia, many of them switching sides and serving as regime militia.

Breathing Space

With a shared mistrust of Washington, Erdogan and Vladimir Putin set up a back-channel during the late 2010s. This enabled Erdogan to negotiate the excavation of insurgents defeated by Russia into the northwest, where Türkiye promised to restrain Tahrirul-Sham. In fact, this enabled the rebels to rebuild and refashion their cooperation: for example, Ahrarul-Sham leaders Soufan, Abu-Ubaidah Shaikh, Ahmad Dalati, and Inad Darwaish (Abul-Mundhir) wanted closer links with Tahrirul-Sham. By now the Idlib emirate led by Sharaa, Hashim Shaikh, Maysara, and Murhaf Abu-Qasra (Abu Hasan) had proven a stable if severe rule, and was already tacitly reconciling with a Turkiye who had meanwhile evicted Qasd from the north and repulsed a regime assault.

The arrival of first American-Jordanian-backed militia and then Russia in the Syrian south had cut off Hamas from the rebels, forcing them to reconcile with Iran, agreeing to disagree on the Syrian regime. Iran’s presentation of the Syrian regime as a cog in its “axis of resistance” was disingenuous not only given Assad’s disinterest in the fight against Israel – who constantly bombed Syria without response – but also because protection of Assad diverted Iran-backed militia such as Hezbollah from the fight against Israel. When in 2023 Hamas launched an attack on Israel – which responded with a brutal genocide at Palestine – the escalation caught Iran entirely by surprise.

Though Hezbollah in Lebanon and the pro-Iran Houthi government in Yemen fought fiercely against Israel, Iran was loath to get drawn in and made the most muted response to Israel’s invasion of Lebanon. Assad’s total non-response did not go unnoticed in pro-Israel Arab capitals such as the United Arab Emirates. Revealingly, Abu Dhabi had taken the lead in Arab normalization with Israel but also maintained links with Assad, whose family largely resided there. The Emirati regime wanted to rehabilitate and support Assad in return for his discarding Iran. But much as the 2023 Hamas attack on Israel had preempted a Saudi-Israeli rapprochement, so the Syrian rebel assault of 2024 rendered this Emirati initiative useless. Assad was abroad when the Syrian insurgents swooped.

Thunderbolt and Threat

The first target was Aleppo, where Dalati and Issa surprised and quickly forced out regime commander Salman Safalti. A pincer attack by Abu-Qasra and Darwaish then seized their hometown Hama, site of the regime’s most infamous massacre, from the veteran regime commander Saleh Abdullah. In the south, meanwhile, militias suddenly defected and forced out Luai Ali, the regime spymaster who had bought them off. Even as the insurgents in the north thundered toward Homs, Damascus fell: the notorious brother of Assad and enforcer, Mahir, fled along with most of the regime. Sharaa, who had embarked on a diplomatic offensive to match the military assault in the north, arrived in Damascus, where regime dungeons were opened and thousands were released to mass celebration.

This mood was darkened by attacks from Israel. Immediately after Assad’s ouster, Israel attacked militants in southern Syria and began bombarding the military and intelligence sites of the new Syrian rulers, unwilling to let them have the resources available to their much more predictable predecessor. The genocide cabinet of Benjamin Netanyahu-Mileikowski has meanwhile announced its intention to make Syria its newest military front. The Syrian “revolutionary government” thus has little scope to celebrate.

https://muslimmatters.org/2024/12/11/fort-down-in-a-fortnight-syrian-insurgents-oust-assad-regime/


To sum it up






Blurb

Syrians in cities across the world celebrated the fall of the Bashar al-Assad regime. People cheered, danced with flags and beeped car horns after the Syrian government was ousted in an end to the Assad family's 50-year rule














Tauqir Tox Sharif
@toxaidworker
Today from the city of Hama! The city was absolutely buzzing with celebration and so much happiness after the first Friday prayer since the fall of #Basharalasad #Assad #syria #Hama

https://x.com/toxaidworker/status/1867566787451400365

What the!? What is Dilly doing in Damascus?!



Hah, this bro is always on the move. . . . .

And again.

 
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Another update

Blurb

This episode was filmed on Saturday, before Damascus fell.

Syria has finally been liberated after 13 years of struggle. We mourn the lives of all that have fallen and celebrate with Syrians. But the horrors of Assad’s gulags are coming to light for the world to see. The scenes from Seydnaya, the slaughterhouse, have shocked many of us. Reflecting on the horrors and looking at some of the challenges, I am honoured today to have a Syrian who has been at the heart of this struggle.

Robin Yassin-Kassab is the author of the novel The Road from Damascus. He is co-author with Leila al-Shami of the Rathbone-Folio prize-shortlisted book Burning Country: Syrians in Revolution and War. And he is the chief English editor of the ISIS prisons museum – which may soon become the Syria Prisons Museum







Blurb

"There are many layers to this revolution", says Tauqir "Tox" Sharif, aid worker working and reporting from the ground in Syria for over a decade.

He addresses hopes and concerns regarding the victory of opposition groups, the line between propaganda and reality, and what Muslims particularly in the West can do for Syria going forward, including setting up pressure groups to hold the new leadership to account.






Blurb

0:00 Intro
2:50 Bilal Abdul Kareem
4:20 Bilals background & story
8:30 Bilals arrest?
10:53 HTS
12:30 Sufyan al-Thawri and the ruler
13:34 Bashar al-Assad & unchecked power
15:34 Status on Saydnaya Prison
17:43 Horrific Torture in Saydnaya
21:13 The Children of Saydnaya
22:25 Abu Saleem
24:45 Government Affairs
29:03 Egyptian Military
29:57 Bashars Army
34:14 Deep state
35:48 Are the rebels Isis and al-Qaeda?
38:22 Why they became extremists
38:45 No Isis element
43:10 Islamic guidance & leadership in Syria
44:18 Beyonce?!
45:43 Soldiers in class?
47:49 Abu Muhammad al-Jolani
53:22 Different groups in Syria
55:48 Christians in Syria?
58:28 All the fighters in Syria
1:01:39 Turkish Support?
1:06:40 Supporting Muslims
1:07:14 Israeli Incursion
1:09:14 The Golan Heights
1:13:07 Tanks heading into Damascus?
1:13:58 The Justice Covenant
1:22:20 How to contact him











 
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Salaam

Like to share. Marathon discussion on whats just happened.

Blurb

Bringing together activists, scholars and thinkers.















Finally free.






:statisfie






Daily life - the new normal - hopefully.



It is surreal to be in Damascus after 14 years of absence and war.

The road to Damascus from the Lebanese border was smooth, fast, safe, and non-climactic. There are still some old flags and pictures of Assad that were not taken out yet. Apparently, they are not a priority. The army barracks that sprinkled the highway were deserted. The Lebanese driver was very happy that there is no more Assad army that used to harass him and blackmail him for bribes. The HTS men who were in a few of the road blocks were polite and did not ask questions. They did not even inspect that car. They just waved us in.

Inside Damascus, I did not see men with guns or military vehicles. It felt boringly normal, although there is a feeling of hope, disbelief and uncertainty.

The neighbourhoods, the shops, the restaurants, and public institutions are the same like when I left them- the traffic jams, the shortages, the outdated facilities, the organized chaos, and the tasty meals that not many can afford to buy.

Waking into the public squares and talking to people gives you a sense of things. The new green flag with 3 red stars is everywhere, children and adults are taking pictures in the famous Umayyad square and standing on the top of one of statues of Hafez Asad thrown on the road collecting garbage. It was removed from the entrance of the nearby massive library that was named after him. The library was closed until further notice. I am sure that it will have a different name after it reopens.

The calmness and normality might be deceiving. Children are going to schools, book stores have reopened, the call for prayer fills the cold and polluted air above Damascus, markets are full, cafes are full with men and women playing cards and smoking hookah, and a lot of meetings of different people trying to figure out what is going on. I bought an extra large cup of delicious smoothie cocktail from the famous small fruit shop called Abu Shaker near Salehiya in the heart of downtown Damascus. I paid 35,000 Syrian pound, 10% of the average salary of government employee, or an army officer.

Talking to people, there is a general sense of cautious optimism, and even joy, mixed with anxiety of what the future may bring. They are not used yet to express things freely.

“We are in shock” one of the girls told me. She is a smart middle school student who goes to prep school. Many of her friends whose families are allied with the regime have left. But she was overall optimistic and upbeat.

One Taxi driver said when I asked him about what is he thinking in light of the colossal changes: “ Well, I hope that it is good. At least tomorrow may be bringing something. In the last 14 years, tomorrow was brining nothing.”
 
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Salaam

More analysis on why Assad collapsed.

Blurb

The al-Assad family ruled Syria for more than 50 years. The Syrian civil war has continued for 13.

And yet, when the Assad Government ended, it did so in less than two weeks, with the army largely folding in the face of a surprise opposition offensive and Assad himself fleeing to Moscow.

The future of Syria is now highly uncertain and beyond the ability of a one hour video to fully explore. But there are still question worth exploring now as the situation continues to play out.

Why did Assad's military crumble, and what are the potential strategic implications for one of his most significant backers?






And more.



Syrians are still both shocked & mesmerized by the events of this month

How can a 54 year-old rule have such an abrupt closing chapter?

This account was created to help shed light on the key events that led to Dec 8 & the departure of Assad

Key insiders have come forward to help piece together what happened

Countdown to Assad ‘s fall started on Oct 7, 2023 when Hamas / Sinwar initiated an attack on what had become known as the Nova music festival massacre inside #Israel

While the world was shocked by the event, few at the time thought that this massacre would have anything to do with Assad or his downfall nearly a year later

If Hamas started the chain link that would lead to Assad ‘s fall, it was the decision of Hezbollah / Nasrallah to open a front on #Israel ‘s northern border from #Lebanon that would turn out to be a decisive mistake for what has been known as the resistance axis

Sep 27, 2024 was both symbolic & real turning point when #Israel decided to kill Nasrallah as one of the key figures in the resistance axis. That day Assad lost what has arguably been his number one ally, confidant, financial & manpower resource. Assad now had less than 3m left

Why was Hezbollah / Nasrallah so important to Assad?

As #Syria ‘s war started, Assad soon found out that his army was not committed enough to die for him. As economic sanctions started to bite, his ability to pay his soldiers waned further. Standards of living were in free fall for all citizens including those in the army

Was #Syria ruled by Alawis or the Assad family that happened to be Alawi ?

The answer to this question is critical but has received little attention. Based on numerous interviews and conversations, the answer seems to be resoundingly clear - Syria was ruled by the Assad family and Alawis were both used by the family while the community of course also benefited from this two way relationship. It is true that Alawis made most of the key intelligence agencies as well as the senior figures in the Army. This is not to say that Sunnis like Ali Mamlouk did not hold key positions. Important thing to remember however is that Alawis did not really put up a fight when the final chapter arrived

But, why?

If Assad was good at anything, it was to convince the minorities as well many capitals that without him and his family rule, all minorities (and even secular citizens) were doomed

Alawis in particular fully believed this narrative and hence threw their fate to Assad ‘s will. As the war broke out and economic sanctions followed, paying the regular army became increasingly harder. Fighting and dying for Assad was getting more difficult to rally as financial resources dwindled. As that unfolded , Assad realized he needs to garner support from groups whose commitment didn’t need money but ideology, religion & sectarian identity fervor

Enter Shia and Hezbollah’s fear of Sunni Islam as Assad’s tool to exploit. The more Asasd relied on Shia militia groups and #Iran , the more he alienated his own Sunni population as well as regional capitals. Alawis themselves were not happy with Shia groups or Iran expanding their footprint or influence in #Syria . those Alawis however were made to believe that these groups were the only allies that shared their far of Sunnis, a narrative that Assad was happy to exploit. Assad hates being tied to one patron. Improving ties with #UAE was part of that strategy of not being reliant on either just #Iran or #Russia

Improving ties with Abu Dhabi convinced Assad that should things deteriorate he now access to a rich , powerful and resourceful capital that can come to his defense should things take a turn for the worse

As #Israel pummeled Hezbollah & made the decision to destroy the Iranian influence in the region, one capital read the chess board perfectly

Enter the role of #Turkey led by both Erdogan and Hakan Fidan who would both soon emerge as the strongest players in the new unfolding redesign of the region as #Iran retreats

The first genius move of Ankara was to publicly reach out to Assad to make him believe that the Turkish leadership is keen to hold talk with him about teaming up against the Kurds. This outreach was made while knowing fully well that Assad was likely to reject it. The purpose was to show Assad that Ankara was in a conciliatory rather than offensive posture towards Damascus. This played a role. In making Assad ignore or downplay the constant intel about impending attacks by the opposition in Idlib
The assault on #Aleppo started on Dec 2 while Assad was attending his son’s graduation in Moscow. #Russia knew this and had likely passed this information to Ankara. #Turkey for its part had the Syrian armed groups led by HTS ready to pounce on the day Assad is out of the country.

#Aleppo was to become their first target

The outcome was both devastating and shocking. The armed groups literally walked through #Syria ‘s second largest city with little of any resistance.

Why was it so easy ?

Salaries of the Syrian army officer class was barely US$ 30 a month. Conscripts were making US$10. Senior officers were letting their subordinates stay home to collect their salaries to make ends meet. The army was hollowed on the inside and precious few were left to fight

If the Syrian Army was hollowed on the inside, Hezbollah fighters stationed in #Aleppo were distracted and busy helping the party defend itself against #Israel in #Lebanon

Iranian and Iraqi militias too had retreated back since their peak presence and support back in 2017

By the time, the attack of Dec 2 ensued, the city had hardly any manpower to defend it. Recall that Assad himself was away while he had been convinced that Ankara was keen on holding talks with him. Little that he knew that this was all
Part of the plan to let his guard down and totally misjudge #Turkey ‘s intention. As #Aleppo was falling to the opposition, Assad held talks with Putin pleading for help. Given the poor performance of the Syrian Army in Aleppo , Putin was in no mood to commit his men while the war in #Ukraine was still raging. Assad quickly flew back to Damascus and soon met with #Iran ‘s foreign minister in Damascus. What he heard then was not too dissimilar to what he had just heard in Moscow

Remember that the assault on #Aleppo happened with Assad in Moscow. Was Turkey informed by the Russians ahead of time? Also, while the attack on Aleppo happened in daylight, the advance on Hama and Homs took place at night. The Syrian Air Force had no capability to strike at night but the Russians did. Was Turkey also assured those Russian attacks won’t take place? Signs of Turkish / Russian coordination can’t be ignored here. As the armed groups reached Hama at night without any Russian Air Force response, the Syrian army was disintegrating. Many thought, surely the army will hold in Damascus. Assad ‘s generals in the meantime were led to believe that the President will pull out a last rabbit out his hat through perhaps his relationship with Abu Dhabi. Surely, he must be working on a plan given his silence as the march Damascus inched closer

As it turned out, they were dead wrong as Assad’s silence was only due to the fact that he was already at the Russian air base in Lattakia waiting for Putin’s final nod to flee the country for good

It’s telling that those who accompanied Assad on that last flight of #Syria were his two financial advisors and confidants (Yassar Ibrahim and Mansour Azzam). Living the next chapter of his life in #Russia is likely to demand lots of funds to satisfy his new host and his own lifestyle. Assad has spent years building a rather significant asset stash outside the country. He will now have to dip into this nest egg to help sustain the next chapter of his remaining life. What is the likely future of #Syria post Assad ? How will the new rulers of Damascus fare and govern? What are the prospects of the minorities? Should one be optimistic or fearful? Every Syrian is asking those questions. While the answers are impossible to know with any certainty, it’s important to emphasize that most of the answers will depend on what Ankara does and want. #Turkey now is the de facto power broker and Erdogan / Fidan are effectively in charge with if course Ahmad Al Sharaa as their hand picked leader on the ground

That #Turkey won big in #Syria also means that #UAE lost. As #Iran retreats from the Mediterranean, the ascendency of the Sunnis needed new leadership. Abu Dhabi / Saudi wanted that role with their own new version of Islam. Turkey (and Qatar) see that leadership from different lenses, one that can deliver economic prosperity but through political Islam (Muslim Brotherhood light ideology). Syrians themselves are now the next experiment and Ankara has every incentive to make this work.

This is the only way millions of Syrian refugees in Turkey will return home.

The speed and relative success of this dazzling change in Damascus owes itself to the fact that the armed groups did have one leader in Ahamd al Sharaa. He is from Damascus (grew up near Al shafi’i mosque ) and hence has a better sense of how urban citizens of the country live. This is in contrast to many of his associates who have a more radical view of the way #Syria ought to be governed. Time will tell if he can keep them in check. This is not to say that Al Sharaa himself is not an Islamist.

There is no question that #Syria now will pivot way more religious and pious

Most of the info on this thread has come from countless insiders who have stepped forward and shared their personal stories of what happened during the remarkable week between Dec 2-8

The thread is already too long and many other interesting details will have to wait for another time

Can’t finish without mentioning the absolutely sickening and revolting images and stories coming out of #Syria ‘s prisons

Most Syrians have been traumatized by seeing the industrial scale of those atrocities

Yes, many have long known that the regime dealt brutally with dissent but what we have seen over the past week has been shocking. Assad and everyone who participated in those acts of evil must be held accountable to make sure this doesn’t happen again

Putin, are you watching, reading and ignoring ?




Interesting. The Fall of Bashar - from a Syrian Army officer's perspective

Blurb

William Morris LL.D., the NCF Secretary General, tells what a Christian Syrian Army officer from Division Four saw of the fall of Bashar al Assad and the events of the past few days


 
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Salaam

Another update.



Blurb

Dilly Hussain has just returned from an assignment in Syria, so this is your chance to ask him about his trip. Join Dilly and the 5Pillars team at 8pm GMT tonight to discuss the latest developments in Syria.







Blurb

In the first episode of the Blood Brothers Podcast filmed in Damascus, Dilly Hussain speaks with the official spokesperson of the Syrian Transitional Government, Obaidah Arnaout. #Syria #HTS #Israel

Topics of discussion include:

  • Syria's biggest challenges after the downfall of Bashar al-Assad.
  • Who exactly was involved in Operation Deterring Aggression.
  • How does the toppling of the Assad regime impact Palestine?
  • Israel's ongoing attacks in Syria. Why the silence?
  • Hayat Tahrir Sham's (HTS) proscription as a terrorist organisation.
  • What type of government will be established in Syria?
  • The future of foreign fighters in Syria.



Blurb

In the second episode of the Blood Brothers Podcast filmed in Damascus, Dilly Hussain speaks with the Syrian war studies expert and military scientist, Yasser Al-Jundi. #Syria #War #Military

Topics of discussion include:

• Why was Operation Deterring Aggression successful from a warfare perspective?
• Could Hezbollah, Iran and Russia have saved the Syrian Arab Army?
• What domestically manufactured weapons did the Syrian rebels use?
• What type of rearmament will Syria need after Israel has destroyed 80% of its military capabilities?
• Will Russia's military bases remain in Syria? Are there any benefits of it remaining?
• Artificial Intelligence, drone warfare and nuclear deterrence.










Blurb

Syria is now free. But what does the future hold for a revolution that we believed had all but been decimated? The most recent spectacular offensive has given the rebel groups control over the country's major cities. There now is an appetite for change and unity. I have been struck by the jubilation felt by most Syrians as the tyrant fell. Many who escaped his brutality are returning. The optimism has to be maintained, and the positivity it expresses should not be replaced with the pessimism shown by some partial commentators who are wishing for Syria to fail.

But challenges remain. How do we navigate these? And what of the people who are now at the centre of the new government? I have the pleasure of having Bilal Abdul Kareem on the show to help us understand the complexities of the road ahead and analyse the current players.

Bilal Abdul Kareem is a video journalist who has been covering the conflict in Syria since 2012. He has produced reports for CNN, Channel 4, BBC, and Sky News and runs his own news channel, On The Ground News.

Timestamps:

0:00 – Introduction
2:30 – HTS ideology
5:55 – Justice – Islamic call
8:41 – Jolani – positive?
11:50 – Bilal too pessimistic?
14:34 – New Syria
16:31 – Toleration of Journalists
17:49 – Capability to govern
20:11 – Israel
23:30 – How far is Israel in Syria
26:00 – Assad central to resisting Israel?
28:06 - Where Islam fits?
33:28 – New government and the West
35:54 – Syrian Prisons
39:38 – SDF
43:35 – Iran and Hezbollah
46:25 – Iran’s role in Syria
49:18 – Anti-Imperialist left
52:18 – Syrian Mindset







More analysis of what the future holds.

 
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Salaam

Another update.


Blurb

The Syrian revolution began in 2011 as a grassroots civil society uprising against one of the most tyrannical rulers in the Muslim World. Bashar al-Assad, like his father before him, presided over a state of terror, with mass disappearances, secret police repression and a brutal, corrupt state machinery that governed through fear. Assad had four secret service agencies (mukhabarat) that worked independently.

If you got onto a list, your life would become a never-ending Kafkaesque tragedy. All four had to pardon you before you could be absolved of any guilt. Ordinary Syrians talked in hushed tones in case stray criticism of the state would be misconstrued as insurrection. Assad was a ‘god’ who had to be adored by his people.

What has happened over these past two weeks is truly spectacular. But how did we get here? And how do we understand the past 13 years?





This video led to a lot of debate and discussion. Ill highlight some

@rahmioruc581

1 day ago


Such a flawed take: *Kurds did the "dirty job" against whom? (Did you forget the so called Islamic State has enslaved Yezidi kids? Fighting against these people suddenly now became a dirty job? ) *How do you know SDF does not represent Kurds? (I am not saying %100 Kurds support SDF. But do you follow the discussions between two main factions. The one in the orbit of Turkey basically request SDF to become an entirely Kurdish organization, leaving behind other nations around the area. This position is fundementally wrong, just look at the Ottoman regulations of 1850's, these places were called Kurdistan, and they have been Arabized.

I don't believe in any historical claim of right to a land, it is a different version of fascism. So, even for Turkey backed Kurdish groups ,the problem is not of a representation) *All of a sudden you connect Kurds with Israel . (You well know that the loss of Syria has diminished any chances for Hamas and Palestanian resistance. You guys have decided that as long as our Sharia-aligned guys rule over Syria who cares if Israel wins or gets more territory. So when it comes to you guys it is good to be "strategic", but Kurdish people who have been stateless since hundred years, if they start acting strategicly they become enemies of umma.

*Your next argument could be Kurds are just there protecting the oil (The oil revenues of which had never been shared with Kurds before. And yet, I believe after an election process the revenus should be shared will all Syrians. And check who is providing Israil with oil?) These kinds of flawed takes, which has no intention to understand Kurdish position and just repeats Turkish official position is the reason why Kurds feeel threatened, and that's why many call for cooperating with Israel, because you guys have no intention to help Kurdish people have the right to govern themselves wassalam.

May Allah give guidance to you and people like you

@behrouzch29

2 days ago (edited)


As an Iranian, I have always opposed my country’s support for Palestine. I believe it is a complete waste of resources. We have subjected ourselves to global sanctions for a delusional ideology, thinking that as part of the Muslim world and a powerful country, we must liberate Palestine. However, the reality is that sectarianism and the deep-seated hatred towards Shia Muslims among Sunnis are so strong that, no matter how much we sacrifice for them, they will never truly align with us.

Our national interest, in my opinion, lies in forming alliances with Israel and the Kurds. Sunni Muslims whether religious or driven by Arab nationalism view us with disdain. Religious Sunnis label us as "Rafidis" while nationalist Arabs consider us "Majus" (fire worshipers) a derogatory racist term.

After all sacrifice which they all were against Iran's national interest ,This lunatic came and says the axis of resistance has never been for Palestine!!

i really hope one day my government will cease its support for Palestinians and their cause, focusing instead on building a strong coalition with Israel and the West. With the third-largest oil reserves and the second-largest natural gas reserves in the world, we could be the strongest country in West Asia if we weren’t burdened by sanctions.



@AhmadFakih123

1 day ago


As a Lebanese Shia from the South, having lost family members for the Palestinian cause and witnessed the destruction of my village, I can no longer prioritise Palestine over my own country. Despite our sacrifices, Palestinians often view our support with suspicion, fueled by sectarian biases embedded in their culture and rhetoric.

The broader Muslim world, with its 1.5 billion people, should stand up for Palestine if they truly consider it part of their "Ummah." Until then, our involvement should focus on protecting our nations and people.

Peace with Israel remains inconceivable given decades of bloodshed. Yet, after October 7th, Iran and the Axis of Resistance must reconsider their unreciprocated support for the Palestinian cause, especially after Hamas’s reckless, uncoordinated actions.

Palestinians have undermined their own cause through actions like the Oslo Accords and internal divisions. Their history in Lebanon includes harm to both Shia and Christian communities. It’s time for us—whether Shia from Lebanon, Iran, Iraq, or Afghanistan—to focus on building our own strength and futures, leaving behind the illusions of a cause even many Sunnis have abandoned.






Fast moving situation on the ground. Another good discussion on what is happening.

Blurb

Paul Williams interviews Dilly Hussain about his recent trip to Syria.









I post this because it is the most comprehensive discussion of Tauqir Sharif experience in the land of Sham.

Blurb

0:00 Intro
1:21 Todays Stream
2:40 Tauqir Sharif
3:14 Background
4:02 Relief work in Gaza
7:30 Israeli Imprisonment
10:42 Coming out as heroes
15:01 Ambulances into Syria
16:42 Oppression of Basshars Soldiers
19:54 European Borders
24:35 100 Car convoys
27:00 Isis kidnaps convoy
29:09 Isis attempts to assassinate Tauqir
33:00 Relying on Allah
33:50 Only one that survived
37:43 The Men have become people of Dunya
39:20 Shaykh Asrar Rashid on Syria
40:20 Sisters learning deen in secret
42:20 Mass graves
46:01 Blowing up bodies
48:03 The Jihad debate?
54:45 British Secret Courts
57:30 Loosing Citizenship a blessing
1:00:00 No Utopia - Syria Melting Pot
1:03:30 Relief work in Syria since 2012
1:04:03 Project Iqra
1:05:17 Charity that specializes
1:06:00 Business and Sustainability Model
1:06:43 Board of Scholars of the Org
1:07:15 4 Stages of Work
1:09:50 Building of Masjids
1:11:00 Helping the Orphans
1:11:29 Self Independence
1:13:50 Helping to Help Others
1:16:09 Future and Rebuilding of Syria
1:16:55 Point System
1:18:49 Building House in Syria - Advice
1:20:40 Offices Throughout Syria
1:21:10 Rulers Pre-Revolution
1:25:10 Aqida Groups in Syria
1:27:25 Percentage of Foreign Rebels
1:30:08 Uyghurs in Syria
1:31:57 Interaction with Jolani
1:34:09 Deals with the West
1:37:28 Trajectory of Islam in Syria
1:39:08 Places to Simply Study and Dawah
1:40:14 Transformational Change in Culture
1:42:00 Elements of Regime still Existent
1:44:00 Closing Remarks





Blurb

We take you on an unforgettable journey through some of Syria's most iconic cities. Starting from Aleppo, we travel through Hama and Homs, experiencing the rich history and culture along the way.

Our adventure leads us to Damascus, the capital of Syria, where we are excited to finally arrive and explore the city. But this trip also shows the darker side of Syria's recent regime ruling history, as we visit Sednaya prison to expose the horrific atrocities committed by the Assad regime. Make sure to subscribe to see more videos like this from Syria.


 
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