Syrian Civil War and The future of Syria after liberation

What has the rebel leader said about his vision for Syria?​


BBC

The fall of the Assad regime has left many wondering what the future of Syria will look like.

Let’s take a look at what the leader of Islamist rebel group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, has said about his vision for the country.

Abu Mohammed al-Jawlani at the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus with dozens of his supporters behind him trying to take his photo.


Reuters

On governance:
In an interview with CNN, external on Friday, Jolani was asked whether post-Assad Syria would be governed via strict Islamic rule. He responded: “People who fear Islamic governance either have seen incorrect implementations of it or do not understand it properly.”

The leader of HTS said his group will focus on building a “governing system that is institutional, not one where a single ruler makes arbitrary decisions”.

On religious minorities:
Jolani has sought to reassure Syria’s minority groups about the future governance of the country, insisting there should be a legal framework to ensure the rights of all.

“No-one has the right to erase another group. These sects have co-existed in this region for hundreds of years and no-one has the right to eliminate them,” he tells CNN.

On international relations:
To Syria’s neighbours and powers like Russia, Jolani has pledged peaceful relations. He even assured Russia its Syrian bases would remain unharmed if attacks ceased.

Despite the assurances, human rights groups have still raised alarm over the rise of HTS, a group that has its roots in al-Qaeda and is designated a terror organisation by several Western powers.

The BBC's chief international correspondent, Lyse Doucet, also writes that the HTS leader is not the only player in Syria's fast-changing future.
 
My question still stands. Would you volunteer to be locked up in the deepest dungeons of Syadnaya? Don’t deflect.
Do you think other arab countries prisons are a better place for oppositions?

Assad was a violent dictator, but he was not the enemy of the common people His enemy was Israel
 
It’s the most pertinent question as in essence your argument is for the necessary evil, so are you willing to face that evil yourself? for the supposed greater good


Ok, let me ask you the same loaded question.

Would you like to be in an apartment block in Gaza while a Zionist plane fuelled by oil supplied by Turkey(Azeri oil but Turkey facilitates it) is about to drop a 2000lb bomb on you and 100 other civilians?

You know as Erdogan is openly bragging about setting off the rebels to overthrow Assad.

What is the point of my loaded question apart from showing how ridiculous your one was?

THERE ARE NO GOOD GUYS HERE.

There is practically no difference between Assad and Erdogan. They both kill or help to kill thousands of civilians if it serves their interests.
 
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How about not starting this Arab Spring, which led to such events as being killed or locked up in Syadnaya? Knowing you are geographically in a volatile region and sitting right next to a country just waiting for a meltdown to happen to seize the moment.

There are times to act internally once you have handled external threats.

Now, you have a divided country with no army, navy, or air force; you will be relegated to a position in which you will never pose a threat.

Now, Assad wasn't a good leader. I don't like him, but you also have to understand that these strongmen tend to hold the country together in a society such as the Middle East.

You just answered the question, an evil man got removed.

Rest time will heal. We as Muslims don’t do necessary evil crap.
 
Ok, let me ask you the same loaded question.

Would you like to be in an apartment block in Gaza while a Zionist plane fuelled by oil supplied by Turkey(Azeri oil but Turkey facilitates it) is about to drop a 2000lb bomb on you and 100 other civilians?

You know as Erdogan is openly bragging about setting off the rebels to overthrow Assad.

What is the point of my loaded question apart from showing how ridiculous your one was?

THERE ARE NO GOOD GUYS HERE.

There is practically no difference between Assad and Erdogan. They both kill or help to kill thousands of civilians if it serves their interests.
Again deflection. Asad being there had no effect on Erdogan supplying fuel to the zionists. But let’s for argument sake say it did, then would volunteer yourself and your loved ones to Syednaya’s dungeon for the “greater good”? Or that sacrifice is reserved for others?
 
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Do you think other arab countries prisons are a better place for oppositions?

Assad was a violent dictator, but he was not the enemy of the common people His enemy was Israel
That is irrelevant argument, there are other bad places so why not this one.

He killed and tortured by the thousand but he was no enemy of his people.

You are a Shia, you revere Ali (R.A.) and Imam Hussain (R.A.), don’t subscribe or preach necessary evil logic, just imagine what their view for such a tyrant and murderer would be.
 
That is irrelevant argument, there are other bad places so why not this one.

He killed and tortured by the thousand but he was no enemy of his people.

You are a Shia, you revere Ali (R.A.) and Imam Hussain (R.A.), don’t subscribe or preach necessary evil logic, just imagine what their view for such a tyrant and murderer would be.
Assad was a secular nationalist socialist. I don't think that he was even a Muslim, but what I wrote is a fact.

There was no difference between him and Gaddafi, Saddam, Saleh, etc.
 
The two people that "thanked" you so far are Turkish fans.

Turkey is supplying oil to facilitate genocide in Gaza.

The real question now is, are the IDF about to whack "HTS" as "terrorists" to create even more space for the Kurds ? If so, the whole Turkish enterprise could come crashing down, with Israel on top of Syria ... It would be the real power play move right now, there is a chance that Israel will do it. It would be inline with Israels strategic interests now that the Turks have taken Assad and his Army out of the way.

IDF chief of staff: The war will be moved to Syria starting tonight..

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Are the Turks about to get played by their own play ?
 
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I had my suspicions !! but all his posts have reference to Turkey, ottoman rule etc. This guy is obsessed about ottoman era.
Hakikat is some Ertugrul fan. He's obsessed with the Ottomans and panislamism.
 
Assad was a secular nationalist socialist. I don't think that he was even a Muslim, but what I wrote is a fact.

There was no difference between him and Gaddafi, Saddam, Saleh, etc.
Absolutely. No argument there. He was the same type. And we should hold the same bar for all of them and not rejoice on one’s ouster and not on the other.
 
The real question now is, are the IDF about to whack "HTS" as "terrorists" to create even more space for the Kurds ? If so, the whole Turkish enterprise is about to come crashing down, with Israel on top of Syria as the big bad boss man...

View attachment 87570


This is a totally Zionist instigated operation with Erdogan as either the "useful idiot" or the bribed/threatened puppet. I go with the latter as I don't think he is that stupid.

All of Syrias defences have now been destroyed and some here fantasise that Turkey would be supplying new weapons that could threaten the entity. No, Syria is now going to be permanently defenceless and Zio-US planes will fly anywhere they want in Syria now. No more need to use stand of missiles to save their aircraft from being shot down by Syrian air defences.

Zio-US would shape Syria exactly as it sees fit. If Turkey stands in their way(not that could realistically happen), Zio-US just needs to crash its economy with the flick of a switch.
 
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In maps: How Syrian rebels toppled the Assad regime​



It took only 12 days for Syrian rebel groups to topple the country's 50-year-old Assad regime and capture the country's capital of Damascus.

Here's a visual timeline of how it unfolded:


Five map graphics showing how Syrian rebels advanced from the north - beginning with HTS holding a small area near Syria's border with Turkey, and ending with the opposition forces claiming 'historic victory' after capturing Homs and Damasus
 

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