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If Americans start equipping the Kurds with Javelin,Stinger,artillery,MRAPs and loitering munitions...say goodbye to TFSA and say hello to Kurdistan.shut up first worlder. SDF is next on the list they will get hammered. Americans will be sent packing just like the Russians
Are the kurds anti Zionist?Just a reminder, pretty much every single major factions fighting in Syria is anti-zionist. From the kurds, to Assad, to HTS and SNA.
Not one of these factions are pro-Israel, or being backed by Israel.
Of course Israel has its preferences, but for them it's a matter of who's the least bad choice for them (in my view it was Assad as he kept the border quiet between Syria and Israeli occupied Golan).
Anyway, now that Assad is pretty much finished, the future of Syria is far more uncertain. What is certain is that the civil war will continue, but with 1 less major faction.
If Americans start equipping the Kurds with Javelin,Stinger,artillery,MRAPs and loitering munitions...say goodbye to TFSA and say hello to Kurdistan.
I thought you were smarter than falling for western propaganda.Assad’s beginnings:
- The Assad dynasty has been in power for 53 years, since Hafez al-Assad became president in 1971. He served for 29 years until his death in 2000. His regime lived on under the leadership of his son and current Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
- In 1994, Hafez al-Assad’s oldest son and heir apparent, Basel, died in a car accident. Bashar was called back from medical training in Britain and groomed to take over his father’s role.
- To maintain its decades-long rule, the regime has killed hundreds of thousands of people, jailed dissidents and brutally displaced millions internally and abroad.
Bashar al-Assad’s rule:
- Assad was elected unopposed as president of Syria on July 10, 2000. On May 29, 2007, he ran again unopposed for president and was elected to a second seven-year term.
- At the height of the Arab Spring in 2011, pro-democracy demonstrators took to the streets in Syria calling for the ouster of Assad. The protesters were met with deadly force. As Assad’s forces crushed the pro-democracy movement, an armed opposition began to form made up of small organic militias and some defectors from the Syrian military. That same year, the United States, Jordan, Turkey and the European Union called for Assad to step down.
- In 2014, Assad was reelected with 88.7% of the vote, according to reports on state run television. It was Syria’s first election since the start of civil war in 2011.
- And in 2021, Assad was reelected with 95.1% of the vote, although the US, UK, France, Germany and Italy issue a joint statement calling it a “fraudulent election.”
- Assad’s chokehold on the country has been reinforced by his allies. As anti-government forces grew in the aftermath of the 2011 Arab Spring, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard as well as its Lebanese proxy Hezbollah helped fight the armed rebel groups on the ground. In the skies, the Syrian Air Force was bolstered by Russian warplanes.
- Assad has been accused of human rights violations throughout the war. On 2013, UN weapons inspectors returned “overwhelming and indisputable” evidence of the use of nerve gas in Syria. The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons’ Investigation and Identification Team concluded Assad’s forces were responsible for a series of chemical attacks on a Syrian town in late March 2017. Syrian officials have repeatedly denied allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity, insisting that they target terrorists and not peaceful protesters.
If Americans start equipping the Kurds with Javelin,Stinger,artillery,MRAPs and loitering munitions...say goodbye to TFSA and say hello to Kurdistan.
Assad regime's military sends texts to Syrians, vowing to defend the country
CNN’ Eyad Kourdi
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad regime’s military has sent a message to residents assuring them that it will continue to defend the country, as rebels say they are circling in on the capital Damascus.
“The Syrian Arab Army, as always, continues its national and constitutional duties to defend Syria and its people, and it will restore security and stability to all parts of our homeland,” the military said in a text sent via its cell providers across the country on Saturday evening.
But some of the Syrian regime’s recent statements have appeared at odds with events on the ground.
The Syrian regime has denied it is in retreat, but videos geolocated by CNN appeared to show Assad regime forces leaving neighborhoods in Damascus just a few miles from the presidential palace.
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