Syria again - your solutions?

but the Arab Spring is meant to topple the likes of Syria ; we were about to get into some Shengen deal you know and the news here were spectacular back then too . Which might be interesting for future generations that the thaw was ably used to question the existence of the armed forces , to disrupt the hardliners' propaganda on how vital they were to the country .

the media is like the wind , it changes direction with the season .
 
I found the following story at Worldpress.org:

Russia readies marines for Syria mission

Two landing ships with marines being prapared


ByReuters

PublishedMonday, June 18, 2012

Russia is preparing to send marines to Syria in the event that it needs to protect personnel and remove equipment from its naval facility in the Mediterranean port of Tartus, Interfax news agency reported on Monday.

Syria is Moscow's firmest foothold in the Middle East, buys weapons from Russia worth billions of dollars, and hosts the Russian navy's only permanent warm water port outside the former Soviet Union.
The report cited an unidentified officer in the naval command. The navy and Defence Ministry declined immediate comment.

Interfax said two large landing ships were preparing to depart for Syria - if necessary - with marines on board.

The ships, crews and marines "are capable, in case of need, to provide security for Russian citizens and remove property from the logistics facility (in Tartus)," Interfax quoted the unnamed officer as saying.

Russia says it uses the facility to service its ships in the region, including those on anti-piracy missions in the Gulf of Aden, where it cooperates with Nato.
Russian warships call at Tartus only occasionally, and an upsurge in naval activity near Syria this year has been seen as a show of support for the government, an ally of Moscow's since the Soviet era.
 
(CNN 19Jun12) -- A Russian cargo ship reported to be carrying arms to Syria is turning back, Britain's top diplomat said Tuesday.

"I am pleased that the ship that was reported to be carrying arms to Syria has turned back apparently towards Russia," British Foreign Secretary William Hague told the House of Commons.

U.S. officials have said that the Russian operator Femco's cargo ship, MV Alaed, was headed for Syria with attack helicopters and munitions for the al-Assad regime from the port of Kaliningrad. The vessel had been off the north coast of Scotland, according to ship tracking data.

Hague commented on a ship during questions about the fighting in Syria during a wide-ranging House of Commons question-and-answer session about foreign policy. He didn't name the vessel.

He mentioned the status of the ship when asked whether "every peaceful diplomatic effort is being made to prevent the Syrian government from getting its hands on weapons that can be used against its own people."

Hague also cited a European Union arms embargo on Syria.

"We discourage anyone else from supplying arms to Syria," he said. "We have had discussions with Russia about that specifically."

He answered a question about how to approach the issue of chemical weaponry in Syria. Hague said that such weapons are a concern and that he's "confident that the international community" would pursue any action to deal with the issue, but he wouldn't elaborate.

The Standard Club, a UK marine insurer, said it has stopped coverage for the Alaed. The withdrawal of coverage applies to the whole Femco fleet of eight vessels entered with the company, Standard Club officials said.

"We were made aware of the allegations that the Alaed was carrying munitions destined for Syria and have already informed the ship owner that their insurance cover ceased automatically in view of the nature of the voyage," the company told CNN on Monday.

Femco declined to comment to CNN on Tuesday.

The Alaed was proceeding southwest at a speed of 12 knots and was some 40 miles off the Scottish port of Thurso at 9 a.m. ET Monday. The data showed that it left Kaliningrad 10 days ago with a final destination of Vladivostok on July 24.

On Friday, U.S. officials said they were tracking a Russian military cargo ship, the Nikolay Filchenov, also thought to be bound for Syria. U.S. intelligence believes the Russians are sending the ship to help fortify a Russian naval base in Syria as the situation in the country continues to spiral out of control, Pentagon officials told CNN on Friday.
 
Honestly I dont have a major problem with how Russia is acting in this whole thing despite my country's officials trying to act like they practically are helping shoot the civilians themselves.
 
Honestly I dont have a major problem with how Russia is acting in this whole thing despite my country's officials trying to act like they practically are helping shoot the civilians themselves.

Largely agree. But don't you consider it mildly ironic considering Russian reaction and historical treatment of the Entente occupations of Vladivostok, Archangel and Murmansk in 1918-120 for ostensibly the same reasons?
 
Largely agree. But don't you consider it mildly ironic considering Russian reaction and historical treatment of the Entente occupations of Vladivostok, Archangel and Murmansk in 1918-120 for ostensibly the same reasons?


You'll have to explain the irony.
 
I have no problem with Russia flexing her muscles. It is indeed interesting. I am curious though if the media will only report on ships that turn around and not those that arrive at their destination. That would be even more media ironic. Keep the US in the know, but lull them to sleep with false security.
 
From WorldPress, 20Jun12"

On his part, French President Francois Hollande said that Russia was playing "its role to promote the transition" in Syria, involving the departure of President Bashar el Assad. He made this comment on Tuesday during a press conference in Los Cabos (Mexico) , after the G20 summit. "Those who massacred their people today can not be the future of Syria," he added.

"We have to strengthen the pressure of sanctions, giving observers a different mission from this of today". And he added: Towards Syria, "we have to reinforce the pressure of sanctions, giving observers a mission different from this of today, since the observers were withdrawn and find a political solution, that of Assad's departure," said the French leader.
 
regarding the ship apparently a British company withdrew the insurance , the helicopters might turn on a Russian military ship , or it can be some political deal .

the piece of the day is as follows .

in the Middle East the Israeli expansion is a fact .

Syria , gaining independence at the same time was a place where the rules of Divide and Rule were applied . The French had opened the way for minority Alawites to be the armed force , while the majority Sunni were the merchants and stuff . And the never ending feud with Israel increased the influence of the Army , hence the Alawites . Democracy does not grow on trees ; even in the worst tyrannies things find a balance , a compromise is reached eventually . Syria couldn't find the opportunity ; when they weren't under attack from Israel , they were destabilizing the region under the guise of fighting Israel . And it wasn't a piece of cake , either .

hence the Syrian pleasure at the thaw with Turkey . Idiots do not run states , though can do well enough with Starfleet and stuff . Those in Damascus , as smart as anybody , could see they were stuck in a past century . The growing Islamist tone of my country and the resulting decay in the relationship with Israel could mean they could become a buffer zone between the two "Western powers in the region" , we could prop them up and open channels of communication with the US -which most unfortunately for the world "happens to be the arbiter of things"- further eroding the Israeli threat and kickstart their economy to further enrich the Sunni merchant class so that the "ever-present" Gulf Oil threat could be minimised . We could be the life-line to a shipwrecked guy struggling in the sea .

ı chanced on this on the web just yesterday , but it is a shining example of how serious the Syrians were in this friendship thing . Some years back the Turkish PM was in Damascus and while visiting a mosque from the Ottoman era he saw the Syrian military museum was next door and kinda crowding the mosque . The PM said and the Syrians didn't say "Yeah, whatever" . They closed the museum and moved the exhibits away . This in a country where fighting Israel is practically the only achievement . An equivalent in the American context could have been the Chinese asking for the closure of the cemetery in Arlington (?) for the tombstones do not match the trees and the grass ...

this approach on part of the Syrians might have caused them some real grief . The following part goes into spoiler only because it would otherwise lengthen this post into a proper wall of text ; it is certainly relevant .

wanna learn an interesting thing on Mitt Romney ? Ha , read it in the spoiler !

Spoiler :


just like they always do , the seperatists have attacked a border outpost , with 8 killed . They lost about 30 by the time ı was writing this . Though ı still can not grasp why a NATO army couldn't get at least a 100 out of the 300 reported to have attacked , right on the spot . Note for the goverment generals , crying after the dead is human and we are all human in the end , but ... Hearing Apaches were after the terrorists was nice , though the new army should teach the journos that no AH-64s for this country .

anyways the experts were all over the TV channels all day long . For the proponents of the newly elites it was easier back in the day ; whenever casualties were sustained it was the traitors in the army that wanted the sabotage the breaking of peace in the country , as hate would trump peace everytime . Today we hear (now that the Military is tamed) the seperatists have bought 5000 black umbrellas and wet them with water in night operations as a shield against thermal imaging ; 18 captured with their recent dead . You certainly wouldn't hear such details in the past ... But not across the board , there are still some who want "all professional military" with police taking over the Jandarma , so that the leading congregation can field an army of its own . As the 21st century Turkish SS .

ranting on the experts theme shall go on unabated for this post , as one must give up any errand to hear their wisdom . Was about to watch Resident Evil -the one in Las Vegas- for perhaps the tenth time when ı came across the stellar ensemble in one channel and they were so lame . Now this channel used to be with the opposition , but you know a TV Station is too great an investment and goverments have ways of teaching stuff to unruly businessmen and so on . And they were enlightening us with pics from the G-20 meeting . And yes , they really went downtown , for at least 20 minutes , that the pic of the one on one talks released was not a snub by Obama . 3 Goverment Ministers this side , two unknowns that side and one translator each ... The channel's resident correspondent was on live broadcast twice to say the unknown Americans had to be White House Staff . You know , one of the Americans was a blonde . Not manly enough from Obama ! Important things these are , for pro-goverment media in Turkey suggests campaign managers of a certain US candidate are in contact with the seperatists to kill Turkish soldiers to discredit Barack Hussein . You know , through the failures of a close ally and friend .

not that they actually believe that . Those with the ideological slant use the notion instead of directly naming Israel , where the Parliament pointedly discusses the Armenian thing of 1915 . Others create an imaginary bogeyman just like Israel was lambasted by American permission in the past years .

anyhow , got tired with the lame channel and went back to the movie , to see the fight at the casinos and Milla discovering her clone . Much more fun than watching all the experts seeing eye to eye and hinting the thing is inevitable and one must pay heed to what US wants . Yeah , right . The thing is the West borders redrawn , the nation states abolished , except the US of course , blah blah blah .

the experts remain tough , rough and brilliant . One was like a decisive man of action ... The border area is rugged and we should have gone to level areas to ease observation and control , about 50 kilometres . Because , you know we actually "own" those areas . How , ı don't know . At this juncture let me remind you ı am a Starfleet Admiral and my imagination still fails me on how this territorial thing works . ı didn't hear that we have repudiated Lausanne . This is where we come to the soft Syrian response . Considering when our brilliant strategists were in diapers the Syrians were getting massacred and stuff by the Zionist Entity , it is kinda moronic to think an easily discernable fake anti-Semitizm would make them rush to our arms but naturally people thought they were much better than those in Damascus . Their softness had to be out of total weakness and the strong decide , right ?

this country has been deceived by the West that with a little effort we would rule the Middle East . Not because it is unkind , ungood and certainly unGodly to feed people solid human waste only because they are of some other ethnicity or even maybe different political persuasion , but to take all the Kurds and a large swathe of Arabs under the wings of this state that reforms of various different things are being done . The experts grumble on how there is this mine , a natural resource is at hand meaning especially the Kurds and how we should use them . Some comment on it openly on how this "hugging between brothers" will change the balance of power in the Middle East . Eh , so what ? What will we do with a new balance of power ? Considering the foam that forms at the corners of smarties here regarding Syria and the conquest that would follow had US given the green light ı doubt it would amount to anything . When reason fails it then the turn of nationalism / patriotism comes . One ranking dude asks if this country imprisons itself with fighting only the seperatists ( and avoids the despots and stuff ) how will it stand up to the giants in the world ? ı don't know , how about chopping the giants below knees so that their necks will be just about the ax swinging range ? That's if we need to stand up to giants , right ? Sounds unpatriotic ? Ah of course . Those traitors serving foreign interests were supposedly liquated in a soft type campaign , it seems not enough has been done . Because between the bouts of calls of treason which the Democrat types still spew at a speed that would shame a machine gun , there is still place for mocking . So a paper project to have river / canal communication to Ankara in 1930s turns to be bringing the sea to the capital . Allright , funny . As rivers are unsuitable for barge transport in Turkey , one should not bother reminding people that the average Rhein port handles more traffic than the average Turkish seaport , or a major project for the UK was all those canals though the arrival of the railroads decreased their importance .

for any favourable mention of the past might dilute the influence of the new . This reform business actually insults the Kurds and their intelligence as individual people . When a little kid falls down or runs into something , we in Turkey might slap the floor or kick the guilty table . It breaks the cycle of pain and cry in the kid , through a "What the ..." moment where the sanity of the adult is openly at doubt . Works , if the pain is not great . The reform in Turkey , that slaps the past whenever possible , has been kinda proven to be only cosmetic . For the individual rights . The process , the real intention of the West continiues unabated . We were supposed to take over places down South , the reverse happens . Each day the influence of Barzani increases in our side of the border , as you know , we are currently in a cold war with Maliki of Iraq and we need people to do our bidding , never minding "isolating" the Seperatists in Northern Iraq . And one fears what would happened if the seperatists were not "isolated" . To the layman this isolation is certainly non-existent . The jealousy of the feodal chieftains against each other was something that kept our borders in the years past . Now Barzani has his own oil wells and money buys . And these reforms are quickly / surely mushing into hypocracy that erodes the confidence of people . Some day in very near future our brilliant experts will discover they have done every possible thing to break up this country .

as the story goes back in the days of the Ottoman Empire , the Sadrazam ( the PM for the day ) was listening the foreign ambrassadors discussing which state was greater . In the end , he shut up all his guests by declaring it wasn't the countries so far listed , for "we work from the inside and all of you from the outside to bring it down , but the Ottoman Empire still stands" . Those who talk of a new Ottoman era should remember this as well , right ?

this country suffered from political differences which could have led into civil war , a coup was made that enabled financial transformation of this country and funnily enough the architects of that change were so into brotherhood and a new Ottoman era in the Middle East . What's actually new today , didn't we see all of it 20 years ago ? Americans were actually opening fire on us then too . Why don't people learn from the past ? Or they are greater from the midgets of the past ? There was a full lull in seperatist operations for 5 and a half years during which America invaded Iraq , stabilized the situation and cleared it with their extensions here . To be a factor in the Middle East through the seperatists , this country , civilians and military allowed the seperatists to campaign against Iran as PEJAK and to make it believeable limited operations were allowed in this country , or am ı just dreaming ? And the operations are certainly "limited" in Turkey , our dear seperatists will be kept alive until good old USAF and all the rest of the mighty American military machine will be free to provide close air support and stuff . American UAV feeds help the seperatists to hide and avoid already . Rebalancing the power , a better future , hand in hand ? X-Wings will be there to provide a different kind of air support . The dot thing that immediately precedes this sentence is vocalised as period , you know .

but no , surely America is behind this great enterprise and we have their word that they like us and will share the Middle East with us to rule as equals . We must follow their leadership and act decently . Even if we can't control our internal affairs we should co-operate and perhaps should fight a couple of millions of people . When that case is solved , America can maybe help us with our internal peace and make those 10 000 or so militants disappear . You know America actually adores us , we plucky hard working , more democratic everyday denizens of the Middle East and some slice of Europe . With such a thing in mind all the fads of America somehow start here too . You certainly wouldn't find a connection with the Turkish police going Rodney King on a driver on the day Rodney King died . Police duty is a line of work that at times you have to beat the crap out of people , but ı digress ...

the clock -for this country- is ticking , and it would have helped had the Syrians had not been so eager , for it might have caused some self doubt in our expertss . He still doesn't know , but one particular expert is still the leading nominee in some Western files to be the guy to ask for a No-Fly zone over Turkey in the UN when our time comes .


 
DayPress, 9Dec11;

"At least 2,600 people have been killed in Syria since the start of protests..., said U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay. Pillay told reporters that she was shocked by the continued suppression of dissent in the Middle East Nation. She did not identify her sources. Syria's Government has barred Pillay's investigation team and most foreign journalists from entering the country.

Syria has also repeatedly blocked U.N. efforts to get human rights monitors into the country, U.N. Human Rights Affairs chief Valerie Amos told reporters in Abu Dhabi on Sunday"



MSNBC.com, 2Mar12;

"Armed forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad on Saturday bombarded the Jobar residential neighborhood of Homs, where a standoff between a Red Cross convoy and the government that has blocked the delivery of food, medical supplies and blankets to the thousands still stranded in the area. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said Saturday it was still negotiating with Syrian authorities who have denied its' aid convoy access to the shattered Baba Amr district.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Friday he had received 'grisly reports' that Syrian government forces were arbitrarily executing, imprisoning and torturing people in the battle-scarred city of Homs after rebel fighters had fled."



Aljazeera, 16May12;

"Doctors Without Borders has been trying for months to get access to Syria but is still banned... Attempts by the UN World Food Programme to deliver aid to up to half a million people are on hold since the Government wants to control the operation."


ChristianScienceMonitor, 7Jun12;

Syria Denies UN Observers Access to Alleged Massacre Site.

"UN Observers were denied access to the Syrian village of Mazraat al-Qubeir, where opposition activists and UN officials say dozens were murdered on Thursday.

The UN Observers, some of whom are based in Hama, tried to gain access to the hamlet of Mazraat al-Qubeir,... (but) were prevented from reaching the village to investigate by both the Syrian Army and loyalist civilians in the area."



CNN, 20Jun12;

Media "Inciting Sectarian Wars," al-Assad Adviser Says

Bouthaina Shaaban (Media adviser to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad) told Russia Today, a government-supported television news channel,... (that) reports from international news organizations that the Syrian government has sharply limited access to the country to foreign journalists... (are) examples of misinformation. 'It is not true that we don't give access to foreign journalists,' she said. 'Hundreds of Russian journalists came, hundreds of journalists from all over the world: from China, from India...'

With rare exceptions, CNN's repeated and continuing requests to travel and report inside Syria have been declined. (-CNN)
 
Assad is doing that too, if I recall correctly...

I suggest stopping all supplies but food, water and medicine (and other necessary things) to Syria .

That's a bit like murder.

I'd say it's enough to let them know that we know what they're up to and won't give them any special favors in the mean-time.
 
there is a strategy site ı follow under a false name after they banned me and one Syrian names every single soldier and police killed and buried daily , it never falls below 20 . Won't claim the numbers are 100% correct or Damascus show much restraint but the war is two sided .
 
Human Rights Watch (hrw.org): World Report 2012; Syria,

Syria, a repressive police state ruled under an emergency law since 1963, did not prove immune in 2011 to the pro-democracy Arab Spring movements.

...Security forces responded brutally, killing at least 3,500 protesters and arbitrarily detaining thousands, including children under age 18, holding most of them incommunicado and subjecting many to torture.

...at this writing the ongoing bloody repression signaled the government’s determination to crush dissent and reject reforms that might undermine its authority.

...Security forces and government-supported armed groups used violence, often lethal, to attack and disperse overwhelmingly peaceful anti-government protesters.

...Security forces subjected thousands of people to arbitrary arrests and widespread torture in detention.

...Syrian authorities in many cases denied wounded protesters access to medical assistance.

...The Syrian government also detained journalists trying to report on Syria’s crackdown.

Full Human Rights Watch Report:

Spoiler :
World Report 2012: Syria

Syria, a repressive police state ruled under an emergency law since 1963, did not prove immune in 2011 to the pro-democracy Arab Spring movements. Anti-government protests erupted in the southern governorate of Daraa in mid-March and quickly spread to other parts of the country. Security forces responded brutally, killing at least 3,500 protesters and arbitrarily detaining thousands, including children under age 18, holding most of them incommunicado and subjecting many to torture. The security forces also launched large-scale military operations in restive towns nationwide.

In parallel, Syria’s government enacted a number of reforms in an unsuccessful effort to quell the protest movement, lifting the state of emergency, introducing a new media law, and granting citizenship to stateless Kurds. But at this writing the ongoing bloody repression signaled the government’s determination to crush dissent and reject reforms that might undermine its authority.

Killings of Protesters and Bystanders

Security forces and government-supported armed groups used violence, often lethal, to attack and disperse overwhelmingly peaceful anti-government protesters from mid-March onwards. The exact number of dead is impossible to verify due to restrictions on access, but local groups documented 3,500 civilian dead as of November 15. Many of the killings took place during shootings on protesters and funeral processions, such as the April killings in the central city of Homs of at least 15 people at the New Clock Tower Square when protesters tried to organize a sit-in, and in the southern town of Izraa of at least 34 protesters.

While in some cases security forces initially used tear gas or fired in the air to disperse the crowds, in many others, they fired directly at protesters without advance warning. Many victims sustained head, neck, and chest wounds, suggesting they were deliberately targeted. In several cases, security forces chased and continued to shoot at protesters as they ran away.

Syrian authorities repeatedly claimed that security forces were responding to armed attacks by terrorist gangs. In most cases that Human Rights Watch documented, witnesses insisted that those killed and injured were unarmed and posed no lethal threat. Instances where protesters used lethal force against Syrian security forces were limited, and often came in response to lethal force by security forces.

Violations during Large-Scale Military Operations

Security forces conducted several large-scale military operations in restive towns and cities, resulting in mass killings, arrests, and detentions as well as the use of torture. In April tanks and armored personnel carriers imposed a siege on the city of Daraa for 11 days, killing at least 115 residents according to local activists. Daraa residents told Human Rights Watch that security forces occupied all neighborhoods, placed snipers on roofs of buildings across the city, and prevented any movement of residents by firing on those who tried to leave their homes. Security forces launched a massive arrest campaign, arbitrarily detaining hundreds. Released detainees said that security
forces subjected them, as well as hundreds of others they saw in detention, to various forms of torture and degrading treatment.

In May security forces attacked the coastal city of Banyas, using the town’s sports stadium as a detention facility, and the town of Tal Kalakh, near the Lebanese border, forcing more than 3,000 Syrians to flee over the border to Lebanon. In June security forces sent tanks into the northern town of Jisr al-Shughur following armed confrontations between locally posted security forces and residents. In July security forces stormed Hama, which had witnessed the largest anti-government protests in Syria, killing at least 200 residents in four days, according to lists of the names of those killed provided by local activists. In August tanks and armored vehicles entered al-Ramel neighborhood in the coastal town of Latakia. Security forces also stormed the neighborhoods of Bab Sba, Bab Amro, and Bayyada in Homs on multiple occasions between May and September.

Arbitrary Arrests, Enforced Disappearances, and Torture

Security forces subjected thousands of people to arbitrary arrests and widespread torture in detention. The exact numbers are impossible to verify but information that Human Rights Watch collected suggests that security forces detained more than 20,000 people between March and September. Many detainees were young men in their 20s or 30s; but children, women, and elderly people were also included. While the government appears to have released most after several days or weeks in detention, several hundred remained missing at this writing.

According to released detainees, the methods of torture included prolonged beatings with sticks, twisted wires, and other devices; electric shocks; use of improvised metal and wooden “racks”; and, in at least one case, the rape of a male detainee with a baton. The interrogators and guards also subjected detainees to various forms of humiliating treatment, such as making them kiss their shoes and declare that President Bashar al-Assad was their god. Several detainees said their captors repeatedly threatened them with imminent execution, and all described appalling detention conditions, with overcrowded cells in which at times detainees could only sleep in turns.

At least 105 detainees died in custody in 2011, according to local activists. In cases of custodial death reviewed by Human Rights Watch, the bodies bore unmistakable marks of torture including bruises, cuts, and burns. The authorities provided the families with no information on the circumstances surrounding the deaths and, to Human Rights Watch’s knowledge, no investigation has been launched. In some cases, families of dead detainees had to sign statements that “armed gangs” had killed their relatives and promise not to hold public funerals as a condition to receiving the bodies. Some of those who died in detention were prominent protest leaders like Ghiyath Mattar, a 26-year-old community organizer from Daraya—a Damascus suburb—whose body security forces returned to his family four days after detaining him in September.

Denial of Medical Assistance

Syrian authorities in many cases denied wounded protesters access to medical assistance. On several occasions security forces prevented ambulances from reaching the wounded and, in at least three instances that Human Rights Watch documented, opened fire on medical personnel, in one case killing a doctor and a nurse in Daraa in March.

Security forces also arrested many injured protesters at hospitals, forcing many wounded to instead seek treatment in makeshift field hospitals—set up in private homes or mosques—for fear of arrest. In September hospital workers told Human Rights Watch that security forces forcibly removed 18 wounded persons from al-Barr hospital in Homs, including five who were still in the operating room.

Arrest of Activists and Journalists

The Syrian security forces have arrested hundreds of activists since protests erupted in mid-March, often merely for communicating with media or helping to organize protests. In April security forces detained Rasem al-Atassi, 66, former president of the Arab Organization for Human Rights in Syria, and a board member of the regional Arab Organization for Human Rights. A military investigative judge ordered his detention for 15 days to investigate his role in supporting protests.

In May security forces detained Mohammed Najati Tayyara, a human rights activist from Homs who had spoken to international media about the government's crackdown. He remained in detention at this writing.

Women activists were also targeted. In May security forces detained journalist and activist Dana al-Jawabra from outside her house in Damascus. Al-Jawabra, who hails from Daraa, was active in attempts to break the siege of the town by attempting to arrange a relief convoy. Also in May security forces detained human rights lawyer Catherine al-Talli, 32, in Damascus and held her incommunicado for two days.

In some instances, when the security forces were unable to locate the activist they were seeking, they detained family members. In May security forces detained Wael Hamadeh, a political activist and husband of prominent rights advocate Razan Zeitouneh, from his office. The security forces had gone to the couple’s house on April 30 searching for them but instead detained Hamadeh’s younger brother, Abdel Rahman, 20, when they could not find them. Security forces released Wael and Abdel Rahman months later.

The Syrian government also detained journalists trying to report on Syria’s crackdown. In March Syrian security services detained Reuters journalist Suleiman al-Khalidi, a Jordanian national, for reporting on the violence in Daraa. They expelled him from the country after holding him incommunicado for four days. In April security services detained Khaled Sid Mohand, a Franco-Algerian freelance journalist, and held him incommunicado for almost one month. Security services also detained Dorothy Parvaz—a national of the United States, Canada, and Iran—upon her arrival in Syria in April and held her incommunicado for six days, and detained Ghadi Frances and Ghassan Saoud, two Lebanese journalists, for short periods of time.

Reforms

In an attempt to quell the protests, Syrian authorities enacted a number of reforms, but the ongoing repression undermined their impact and made it impossible to assess the government’s intent to implement them. On April 4 President Assad enacted a decree that would grant citizenship to a number of Syria-born stateless Kurds. On April 21 he lifted the state of emergency in place since 1963 and abolished the State Security Court, an exceptional court with almost no procedural guarantees. In May and June Assad also issued two general amnesties, which benefited a small group of political prisoners.

The Syrian authorities also enacted a number of reforms that they say will open up the political system in Syria and increase freedom of media. On July 28 Assad issued a decree approving a new political parties law. In August Assad issues a decree for a General Elections Law and approved a new media law meant to uphold freedom of expression, although the law still requires media to “respect this freedom of expression” by “practicing it with awareness and responsibility.”

Women’s and Girls’ Rights

Syria’s constitution guarantees gender equality, and many women are active in public life. However personal status laws and the penal code contain provisions that discriminate against women and girls, particularly in marriage, divorce, child custody, and inheritance. While the penal code no longer fully exonerates perpetrators of so-called honor crimes, it still gives judges options for reduced sentences if a crime was committed with “honorable” intent. The nationality law of 1969 prevents Syrian women married to foreign spouses the right to pass on their citizenship to their children or spouses.

Key International Actors

In response to the crackdown, the US and European Union imposed sanctions against individuals and entities, including travel bans and asset freezes against senior officials in the government and security forces, business officials who benefited from and/or aided government oppression and a host of entities. Both the US and the EU froze the assets of Syrian companies and banks tied to the government or its supporters, and the US government prohibited US entities and citizens from doing business with those companies and banks. In September the EU, which buys 95 percent of Syria’s oil exports, prohibited the purchase of Syrian oil and banned EU companies from investing in Syria’s oil sector.

A number of Arab states joined together in condemning Syria’s crackdown. In August Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Tunisia withdrew their ambassadors from Damascus for consultations. In November the Arab League voted to suspend Syria’s membership after Syria failed to implement an agreed-to plan to end to the violence.

Turkey, until recently a close ally and major trade partner, repeatedly condemned the Syrian crackdown and stopped at least two weapons shipments to Syria. It also hosted a number of meetings for Syria’s opposition.

In August the United Nations Security Council unanimously adopted a presidential statement condemning 'the widespread violations of human rights and the use of force against civilians by the Syrian authorities.” However, in October Russia and China, as well as India, Brazil, and South Africa, refused to support a Security Council resolution applying significant pressure on the Syrian government.

In April the UN Human Rights Council "unequivocally condemned the use of lethal violence against peaceful protesters.”In Augusta report from the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights “found a pattern of human rights violations … which may amount to crimes against humanity,” andthe council again condemned the “grave and systematic human rights violations by the Syrian authorities” and established “an independent international commission of inquiry to investigate all alleged violations since March 2011.” The commission was appointed in September and was due to issue its report in late November, but had not been granted access to Syria at this writing. Navi Pillay, the UN high commissioner for human rights, recommended in a
briefing to the Security Council in August that it refer Syria to the International Criminal Court.
 
Ah but Human Rights Watch are just an arm of the CIA (except when they criticise the US, Israel, the UK or any regime that can be associated with any of them)
 
Turkish military jet 'downed by Syria' near border

Turkey's government has called an emergency security meeting amid reports that one of its fighter jets was shot down by Syrian security forces.

The Turkish military earlier said it had lost contact with an F-4 Phantom over the Mediterranean Sea on Friday morning, south-west of Hatay province.

It did not confirm reports that Syrian air defence forces were responsible.

But local media are quoting Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan as saying "the other side have expressed regret".

Mr Erdogan also revealed that the two crew members were safe.

Relations between Turkey and Syria, once close allies, have deteriorated sharply since the uprising against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad began in March 2011.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-18554246

Maybe a solution is close at hand? :p

Worrying news.
 
Is two countries going to war the solution, or the fact that Syria may back down if another country seems threatened?

Note the ":p" and "worrying news". AFAIK Turkey has been the largest proponent of the humanitarian corridor suggestion (or at least closest to accept it) which could be a solution. A bloody solution. As would be a all out war. Struggled a bit with coming up with something to say outside the quote so I ended up with that with regards to the topic title.
 
Bring it on, boys :popcorn:

May I have the permission to say "grow up"?

I always thought wars were for little boys duking it out in the sand box. Adding "muscle" means nothing to me.
 
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