Syrian Civil War and The future of Syria after liberation

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


@tower9
 
Last edited:
How? Have you seen the economy of Egypt? Iraq has yet to rebuild much of Iraq itself. Jordan has no economic power to be a player in Syria. Only as a middle man. The only Arabs that can afford to bankroll all of Syria for an almost unlimited time are the GCC. Given the competition between KSA, UAE and Qatar, that might ironically actually help Syria becoming rebuilt as they will compete with each other (in a positive way). Rest of the role, I believe, will be taken up by next door Turkey. Not sure about the role of US/EU/West. Probably propping up the Kurds.
It will be ofc the Military Engineers and a lot of private companies (El Sewedy, Arab Contractors, Orascom with the Sawiris family) etc...
 
He was a known terrorist for years. My only worry is that they don't start cutting the nose of women and stop female kids from attending primary education. That's all it matters to me... Taliban are making sure to keep the generation of Afghanistan illiterate which consequently means that they will stay behind the rest of the world. The same shouldn't happen to Syria

Relax. You've been watching too much Fox News and BBC.

ISIS are eliminated and the takfiri have been exposed as being Zionist agents.
 
If kurds are smart they will ask for autonomous region in syria not a fully independent state otherwise turkey will get involved directly

Kurds will 100% go for autonomous region but as they get stronger they will go for independent nation with Iraqi Kurdish state, now is not the right time for independent.
 
He was a known terrorist for years. My only worry is that they don't start cutting the nose of women and stop female kids from attending primary education. That's all it matters to me... Taliban are making sure to keep the generation of Afghanistan illiterate which consequently means that they will stay behind the rest of the world. The same shouldn't happen to Syria
Fake Profile @Musings @Waz

This is an Indian pretending to be a Pakistani with a Muslim name.
 
It will be ofc the Military Engineers and a lot of private companies (El Sewedy, Arab Contractors, Orascom with the Sawiris family) etc...
Well, I would welcome that. Let us see. It is high time for Arab regimes to be helping and cooperating with other Arab regimes and taking their own future and present into their own hands. Rather than the current divisions and letting outsiders meddle and decide for them.

But unfortunately, as you and I know and every Arab, most of those regimes (like in the entire Muslim world) mostly care about their thrones, enriching their friends, staying in power, (this is their priority) rather than working for the benefit of their nations and the Arab world. That is why, I am afraid, that most Arab regimes reacted negatively (of late and apparently) to recent events in Syria. They don't want the Arab people to have a semblance of democracy, free debate and for people to shape their own future together.

All the problems (most at least) are due to this. Unfortunately most intellectuals are not talking about it in each Arab country as they are mostly trying to remain on good terms with their own regimes. It is all a parasitic system that needs each other.

When it is no longer able to barely survive (as in the case of Al-Assad) it collapses and people have no loyalty to it.
 
It's the stupid Made in USA narrative for color revolutions, only suitable for fully retarded people.

Color revolutions is just another way of make wars and conquer countries, the most coward, hypocrite and unstable way: giving weapons and money to hitmen.

At least USA past invasions used professional army. Now they use the worst criminals of every place to spread mayhem in countries, breaking down prisons.

You are absolutely right, it is directly from the playbook of CIA and MOSSAD.

It appears coastal Syria is still free (Latakia an: Tartus) and unoccupied by the terrorists. Assad theoretically could return to Latakia and reorganize a resistance to take back Syria but it’s a stretch without Russia or some other support.

The terrorists are not militarily strong. I suspect there was a betrayal inside the Syrian army.
 
Bashar Assad is officially refugee.
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

Good to see that the idiot MbZ did not welcome Al-Assad. At least a positive. Some Arab tabloids were reporting otherwise until very recently. I wonder if the other tyrant (Maher) has followed suit. I cannot imagine that he would be welcomed by any Arab state.
 
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


This was before the largely catastrophic and pointless Russian adventure into Ukraine. They turned arguably the most pro-Russian European country (closely related to Russia in terms of everything - culture, religion, language, mentality, history) after Belarus, into a hotbed of anti-Russian sentiments. This is the problem with megalomaniacal autocratic dictators like Putin.

And those 1000's of Russian soldiers and Wagner died for what exactly? To kill Syrian children and civilians just to prop up the Al-Assad regime for a few more years?

Humans are truly idiots by large.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top