Serpentine
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In the coming days (weeks), city of Palmyra (Tadmur) will be liberated from ISIS. This is going to change many things in the fight against Daesh.
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Days? LOL.In the coming days (weeks), city of Palmyra (Tadmur) will be liberated from ISIS.
Like what? LOLThis is going to change many things in the fight against Daesh.
Fighting for justice, it's never in vain. Keep the hope alive!
Earlier you said that Syria would turn into another Libya without Asad and now you are saying that both are in infinitely worse shape. So, what's the point of having Asad in power?
Assad wasn't able to advance vs. ISIS with Shia militias, ground troops, and RuAF airstrikes.In the coming days (weeks), city of Palmyra (Tadmur) will be liberated from ISIS. This is going to change many things in the fight against Daesh.
What's secular about a regime that is extremely sectarian by nature and which currently relies on religious Shia fanatics (basically terrorists) from across the Muslim world to barely stay in power? People who while we speak are involved in ethnic cleansing in Syria. What's pluralist about a one-party system, family rule and a dictatorship where Alawi tribes sit on all the power excluding a few rich Sunni Arab families loyal to the regime? What's functional about a regime that is only able to control 50% of the country due to the largest internal protests in the Arab world during the Arab Spring against a ruling regime? What does that say about ANY regime?
I wonder what you would have said about another regime that you disliked in a similar situation using similar policies? Something tells me that you would have sounded differently.
What has happened in Syria is a humanitarian catastrophe and the Al-Assad regime is mostly to blame for that although they are not the only faction that is to be blamed. My country KSA, the GCC and many Arab states, Iran, Russia, Turkey, the West etc. could have done differently and better too. In the end the Syrians themselves should decide their future. We as fellow Arabs, Muslims and humans can only assist them but I am against forcing anything on them. I hope the same would occur should we in KSA be so unlucky to experience anything like Syria has due to the local regime and foreign involvement.
Lastly you might not want to believe this but the Al-Assad regime was the MAIN supporter and financial backer of Al-Qaeda in Iraq during the US occupation. That same group later turned into ISIS a few years ago. This is something that not only US intelligence, Arab intelligence but also Iraqi intelligence has confirmed long ago. Unfortunately I am not yet allowed to post any links but you can research this on your own with an open heart and learn something new. There is plenty of evidence out there, believe me.
Same was before Baath captured power.Even though Assad was a dictator at least Syria was a place where Sunnis, Shias, Christians and secularists lived peacefully.
Thanks to Assad.Now its a battle largely between Shia/sectarians (SAA) vs Sunnis hardliners.
Thanks to Assad.
Assad wasn't able to advance vs. ISIS with Shia militias, ground troops, and RuAF airstrikes.
Now all he has are helicopters and artillery from the Ruskies, as SOF are scared after 5 of them killed off. Human wave tactics may work in hilly countrysides but not in the desert. ISIS are Iraqi Ba'athists and they've dealt with hordes of Iranian shiites before, nothing new to them.
There is of course. Not a single offensive is made without this cannon fodder. GoogleNo Shia presence in the area except very few Hezbollah units my sectarian friend.
the 50 cents moroccan hebrew preaching again, you should not worry about poutine piss, you should worry about mine that you receive every year...Each time Israel obtains a handout from the US, there is a little bit of my swimmers up your @ss.
fighting for saudi and qatari money. Shame they didn't realised their masters and USA would leave them out to dry !
Even though Assad was a dictator at least Syria was a place where Sunnis, Shias, Christians and secularists lived peacefully. Now its a battle largely between Shia/secularists (SAA) vs Sunnis hardliners.
I agree with you that Syrians should have been left to solve this problem on their own.