‘Facebook terrorism’ fuels murder mafia in Syria [video]
Russia Today
May 25, 2012
Social media is playing a vital role in Syria’s conflict, as both sides try to shape domestic and international opinion in their favour. Chilling videos of acts of brutality have the power to go viral and be broadcast on global TV networks – but sometimes, the pictures aren’t everything they appear to be. Oksana Boyko has more.
[hat tip: Land Destroyer Report]
UN finally realizes terrorist groups responsible for Syrian bombings
by Madison Ruppert
Editor of End the Lie
May 25, 2012
Since the violence in Syria first broke out, Syrian President Bashar al Assad stated that the attacks focused on civilians were the work of foreign agents and terrorists, an assertion which the Western media regularly mocked.
I have repeatedly pointed out that large sections of the opposition, such as the Free Syrian Army (FSA), are nothing more than terrorists, evidenced by their willingness to brag about carrying out terrorist attacks.
Furthermore, the reality of terrorist activity in Syria has been nothing short of blatant for months now and the Western rhetoric dating back to over a year ago completely glosses over these facts.
Earlier this year we witnessed a massive pro-Assad demonstration in Damascus which focused on protesting the “one-year conspiracy” to overthrow the Assad government, something which the Western media chose to ignore, for obvious reasons.
Just like the pro-Qaddafi demonstrations in Libya, the shows of support for the Assad government by the Syrian people do not fit into the narrative the establishment media and Western governments are trying to push upon us.
Now the United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has finally realized that he can no longer deny the painfully obvious, and thus has stated that the footprints of so-called “established terrorist groups” can be observed in the recent bombings in Syria.
The UN chief sent a letter to the UN Security Council (UNSC) on Friday which stated that the sheer scale and sophistication of the recent attacks in Syria suggest that there are terrorist groups involved.
The [Syrian] Government asserts that such groups are active in the country, as do some opposition groups. The al-Nusra Front has claimed responsibility for at least six of the recent bombings,” Ban stated.
It’s interesting that only now, after all this time, they seem to be willing to give the Assad government any shred of credence when it comes to their insistence that terrorists are involved in the violence there.
Arguably even more important is that Ban urged UNSC member states not to supply arms or what some officials would call “lethal aid” to the armed opposition, as well as the Syrian government itself.
Supporting any side with either military hardware or training, according to Ban, jeopardizes any chances of a cease-fire and long term peace in Syria.
Unfortunately, the U.S. is already arming the terrorists in Syria with one report even indicating that the rebels are being armed with anti-aircraft missiles and similarly, some nations like Russia are providing the Assad government with military aid in order to minimize the chance of foreign military intervention.
“The overall situation in Syria remains extremely serious,” Ban said, while indicating that there had been some small progress on some issues.
The UN observer force deployed to Syria continues to monitor the cease-fire between Assad forces and the armed opposition, with the truce stemming from UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan’s six-point peace plan proposed in March.
The Assad government continues to state that “outlaws, saboteurs, and armed terrorist groups,” which are organized from abroad, are behind the violence in Syria, while the armed opposition places the blame squarely on the government – an assertion which the West and the establishment media seems to nonsensically support.
Thankfully it appears that the UN is finally catching up with reality and recognizing the fact that the opposition in Syria isn’t entirely made up of peace-loving, pro-democracy, placard-waving protesters but indeed has a large armed terrorist element as well.
Hopefully this will help push Syria towards peace soon as these tragic events have continued to drag on since mid-March of last year, leaving unknown numbers of civilians and government forces dead.
Did I forget anything or miss any errors? Would you like to make me aware of a story or subject to cover? Or perhaps you want to bring your writing to a wider audience? Feel free to contact me at admin@EndtheLie.com with your concerns, tips, questions, original writings, insults or just about anything that may strike your fancy.
Please support our work and help us start to pay contributors by doing your shopping through our Amazon link or check out some must-have products at our store.
Related posts:
- Syrian Groups: At Least 60 Dead in Fresh Violence
- ‘Syrian armed groups destroy civilian facilities with imported weapons’
- Syria vows to fight ‘escalated terrorist attacks’ as first UN observers arrive
- Rebels could use UN chief’s words as legal cover for free-for-all – Syrian ambassador to UN
- UN blames Assad, Assad blames opposition for violence ahead of ceasefire
[hat tip: Activist Post]
The New War in Iraq
guest post by Eric Draitser of StopImperialism.com,
May 23, 2012 – Since the withdrawal of US military forces from Iraq, there has been an ongoing campaign of demonization and subversion of Prime Minister Maliki. Though this effort likely began with an assassination attempt in December of 2011, it has come to a head in recent months with the warrant, flight, and subsequent trial of Vice President Hashemi. This conflict illustrates not only the deep divides that exist within the ruling power structure in Baghdad, but also the attempts by foreign powers to exert control and influence over the future of Iraq.

Image: Current Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has walked a careful balancing act between departing US occupation forces, the foreign-interests that sent them, and establishing national sovereignty including independently determined relationships with neighboring states such as Syria and Iran.
Prime Minister Maliki came to power by overcoming the opposition of US puppet figures such as Allawi and Chalabi who, despite incredible financial support and propaganda, were unable to establish coalitions or even legitimate bases of support. Instead, Maliki emerged as the Shiite leader who was able to unify officials from a variety of ethnic and religious groups. At the time, this seemed a positive development for US military leadership and the Bush administration, anxious to have anyone who could exert control over Iraq.
However, in the years since then, Maliki has developed into a strong, nationalist leader who, in the interests of the Shiite majority and Iraq more generally, has exponentially expanded relations with Tehran, consolidated political control (particularly in the Kurdish North), and broken with the United States and its proxies in the GCC on issues such as Libya, Syria, and oil contracts. Naturally, this is anathema to US designs for Iraq and has lead to this concerted effort to remove, by any means necessary, Prime Minister Maliki.
Assassination Attempt a Warning To Maliki
In the midst of the withdrawal of US troops from Iraqi soil last December, a very rare event took place: a bomb exploded inside the heavily fortified Green Zone of Baghdad. Although the event garnered little international attention against the backdrop of the so-called “end of the Iraq War”, it sent a very clear message to the leadership in Baghdad – toe the US line or suffer the consequences. In the aftermath of the bombing, Maliki stated publicly that the plot was clearly an attempt on his life. However, instead of capitulating to such threats, the Prime Minister immediately denounced the episode and proceeded to meet with Iranian President Ahmadinejad. Undoubtedly, this decision conveyed to the United States that idea that Maliki would not succumb to pressure and threats.
The lessons learned from this failed assassination were significant. First and foremost, the United States and its proxies in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and elsewhere came to recognize that Maliki and his Shiite base of support in Baghdad had become more than just a thorn in the side of imperial ambitions. Rather, they were forced to admit that he and his ruling coalition had become a legitimate nationalist force. Secondly, those nations with designs to control Iraqi oil wealth, among other natural resources, were forced to admit that the traditional, strong-arm tactics of assassination and physical violence would not be effective against the entrenched and popular Maliki. Instead, they had to change the strategy from overt attacks to covert subversion.
The Hashemi Affair
When the story of Iraqi Vice President Hashemi being implicated in the operation of an assassination death squad first broke, it was immediately apparent that the issue was going to become an attempt to divide the government and destroy Prime Minister Maliki. Not only was Hashemi a representative of the Iraqiya bloc, an integral part of the fragile coalition ruling the country, but he was a Sunni. This meant that Iraq would be divided along political and religious lines. Naturally, the evolution of the crisis only furthered these initial conclusions.
Upon receiving news that an arrest warrant had been issued, Hashemi immediately fled to the Kurdish territory, seeking asylum in the arms of the Barzani government in Arbil. This initial move by Hashemi signaled to the world that this conflict was part of a much larger political struggle that would pit the Shiite majority led by Maliki against much of the Sunni and Kurdish minorities. It is no secret that these divisions have been, and continue to be, the locus of power maintained in Iraq by Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and their paymasters in Washington. In order to maintain their domination of Iraq’s wealth and resources, they needed to get rid of Maliki and they were determined to use their agent Hashemi to do so.
Any lingering doubts about the role of Saudi Arabia and Qatar in fostering this conflict were erased when Hashemi left Arbil in the semi-autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan for Qatar followed by Saudi Arabia. It was during these trips where Hashemi met with various power brokers, essentially receiving his orders from the reactionary Sunni leaders of those two nations. Hashemi had proven to be a useful pawn on the chessboard of the Middle East, in which the Gulf monarchies, always acting in the interests of their masters in Washington, seemed intent on exerting their dominance over Iraq at all costs.
The final stop on Hashemi’s destabilization tour was Turkey, where he resides today. Ankara, which has its own strategic interests in Iraq, for which Maliki presents an obstacle, has provided Hashemi with safe haven, even after Interpol issued a warrant calling for Hashemi’s arrest. Turkey, with its large Kurdish minority and ambitions of becoming a dominant regional power, has maintained that they will not extradite Hashemi back to Baghdad where his trial continues. By providing safe haven to an international fugitive, Turkey is playing a dangerous political game, one that threatens not only their own stability, but that of the entire region.
The Propaganda of “Dictatorship”
In the last two months, as the various forces have aligned to subvert the Maliki government, the talking point has been that Maliki is consolidating power into a dictatorship. Naturally, the propaganda function of such absurdities is to conflate Maliki with Saddam Hussein, thereby delegitimizing him in the eyes of an uninformed public. In fact, as Maliki has been attacked seemingly from all sides, he has moved to consolidate control so as to maintain the fragile coalition that rules Iraq despite (not thanks to) the weak, decentralized government established by the US-imposed Iraqi Constitution. In so doing, Maliki has won many enemies while, simultaneously working to restore Iraq’s reputation internationally.
The cries of “dictator” must be directly attributed to the forces of Western imperialism that control much of the international media and who seem to have no issue whatsoever with the dictatorships of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain and other proxy states. Of course, this demonization of Maliki is a last-ditch effort at destabilizing his government in the wake of the string of failures already mentioned.
Having fought an aggressive and illegal war, committed billions of dollars to a reconstruction process that favored corporate and financial interests, and sought to exploit natural resources, the United States and its regional proxies have seemingly exhausted all avenues to rid themselves of the disease of Prime Minister Maliki. However, diseases often mutate, changing their form to become resistant to cures and antidotes – surviving even under extreme circumstances. To accept this analogy, we must see Maliki and his relations with Iran as having infected the imperial body and, as anti-imperialists interested in peace, prosperity and freedom for all, not just some, we must support Maliki and the Iraqi people in their ongoing struggle for true independence.
Eric Draister is an independent geopolitical analyst that maintains StopImperialism.com which hosts his weekly podcast. He has been a guest on Dr. Webster Tarpley’s World Crisis Radio and has provided analysis on Russia Today.
Two families Massacred by death squads in Al-Shoumariya Homs Syria 26 May 2012 [video]
Syrian Girl
May 26, 2012
These Massacres in Syria are designed to ignite civil war. To get people to join vigilanty groups on either side and tare the country apart. This massacre happened in Homs, a strong hold for the traitorous FSA milita, it’s fringe group Al CIAda, and various death squads. The FSA is claiming the Syrian army shot children sleeping in their beds but gave no motive. Syrian state media lays the blame squarely on the terrorists running rampant in Syria
http://www.sana.sy/eng/337/2012/04/27/415185.htm . Who benefits from keeping the body count up in Syria? Only those who are hell bent on changing the government and creating a civil war.
Syrian Forces Storm Aleppo to Release Abducted Lebanese, Nasrallah Warns Against Opportunism
Friends of Syria
May 22, 2012
12 Lebanese citizens were abducted by the Free Syrian Army in the region of Ajaj in Aleppo.
In details, the Free Syrian Army arrested the “Badr al-Kobra” bus that was carrying 50 Lebanese citizens coming back from a visit to the holy sites in Iran. The Army pulled the 7 men off of the bus, leaving 43 women onboard, allowing them to continue their driving to Lebanon.
As soon as residents learned of the incident, they closed several roads with burning tires in Dahiyeh, they rallied at the Bir al-Abed – Cinderella Intersection, cut off a number of roads, burned tires in front of Mar Mikhael Church in Chiyah and broke the windows of cars parked alongside.
The names of the abducted are as follows: head of the “Badr al-Kobra” campaign Abbas Cheaib, Hassan Mahmoud, Mehdi Ballout, Hussain al-Seblani, Ali Abbas, Abou Ali Saleh, Hussain Omar, Mustafa Yassin, Ali Zgheib, Awad Ibrahim, Ali al-Ahmar, Ali Safa, Rabih Zgheib and Ali Termos. Preparations are underway to hold a sit-in outside the Imam Al Kazem compound in solidarity with the abducted Lebanese citizens in Aleppo.
Later in the evening, Syrian forces launched raids with tanks and other armoured vehicles in the town of Ajaj, in Aleppo near the place where the Lebanese pilgrims were kidnapped.
The British-based group’s head, Rami Abdulrahman, said people in Ajaj had told him Syrian forces were combing some of the districts.
Commenting on the abduction, Hezbollah Secretary General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said that the commands of Hezbollah and the Amal Movement are following up on this issue at the highest levels. He stressed that he will spare no effort to release the abducted, adding that the Lebanese state must do the same.
Nasrallah called on everyone to cooperate in order to solve this problem, urging residents not to cut off roads.
Nasrallah warned that some may capitalize on this abduction for their own purposes.
Hezbollah MP Ali Ammar said that the women and some of the men who were aboard the bus are safe under the protection of the Syrian official authorities. He called on the government to contact influential parties and figures to release the pilgrims immediately.
A Hezbollah source earlier told LBCI that the blood of Dahiyeh’s residents is boiling, adding that the party began contacting key figures, calling for the release of the 12 captured Lebanese.
For his part, the brother of the campaign’s organizer told LBCI that the Free Syrian Army released the women in the region of Ajaj in Aleppo, adding that the Free Syrian Army called on the Syrian army to release some detainees in exchange for the release of the captured Lebanese citizens.
In a related context, the airport road was reopened after being cut off at Al-Rassoul Al-Aazam by relatives of the abducted Lebanese citizens.
Syrian Girl: NATO’s Secret Agenda In Syria [video]
Infowars.com
May 21, 2012
Infowars’ Paul Joseph Watson is joined by Syrian Girl, an outspoken activist against NATO’s campaign to use Al-Qaeda terrorists as a means of destabilizing the Assad regime. In this interview, Syrian Girl reveals the true intentions behind NATO’s agenda in Syria as well as discussing other topics such as the charge that she is a pro-Assad mouthpiece, women in the truth movement, the Arab Spring and more.
http://infowars.com
http://prisonplanet.tv
http://www.youtube.com/user/SyrianGirlpartisan
Tourism Dead in the Water [video]
Russia Today
May 21, 2012
For years Syria was able to capitalize on its rich history and the most ancient cities on planet earth to build a thriving tourist industry. But after months of conflict, this vital source of income has all but dried up. And as RT’s Oksana Boyko reports, many in the country feel robbed by the revolution.
[hat tip: Friends of Syria]
