Pre-Tribulation World Mayhem in Many Things of Concern to Man – Number 7

Pre-Tribulation World Mayhem in Many Things of Concern to Man – Number 7

“They may have tanks and heavy weapons, but the people fight On”

October 2, 2011

http://www.tribulationperiod.com/

THE SYRIAN MAYHEM IS A MAJOR THING OF CONCERN TO MAN

President Assad is heading down a road leading to replacement by assassination or a bloodless coup. My concern is what kind of man will eventually replace him after some internal shuffling between Islamic sects in Syria, who I believe could be ‘a man of prophetic interest.’

Begin Excerpt 1 from Long War Journal

Syrian uprising: the ‘Free Syrian Army’ enters the picture

By CJ RADIN

September 30, 2011 10:21 AM

The uprising in Syria may be entering a new phase. The critical event is that Syrian Army defectors are beginning to form a dissident army. From The Washington Post:

A group of defectors calling themselves the Free Syrian Army is attempting the first effort to organize an armed challenge to President Bashar al-Assad’s rule, signaling what some hope and others fear may be a new phase in what has been an overwhelmingly peaceful Syrian protest movement.

For now, the shadowy entity seems mostly to consist of some big ambitions, a Facebook page and a relatively small number of defected soldiers and officers who have taken refuge on the borderlands of Turkey and Lebanon or among civilians in Syria’s cities.

Many of its claims appear exaggerated or fanciful, such as its boasts to have shot down a helicopter near Damascus this month and to have mustered a force of 10,000 to take on the Syrian military.

But it is clear that defections from the Syrian military have been accelerating in recent weeks, as have levels of violence in those areas where the defections have occurred.

“It is the beginning of armed rebellion,” said Gen. Riad Asaad, the dissident army’s leader, who defected from the air force in July and took refuge in Turkey.

“You cannot remove this regime except by force and bloodshed,” he said, speaking by telephone from the Syria-Turkey border. “But our losses will not be worse than we have right now, with the killings, the torture and the dumping of bodies.”

His goals are to carve out a slice of territory in northern Syria, secure international protection in the form of a no-fly zone, procure weapons from friendly countries and then launch a full-scale attack to topple the Assad government, echoing the trajectory of the Libyan revolution.

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In the meantime, the defected soldiers are focusing their attention on defending civilians in neighborhoods where protests occur, while seeking to promote further defections, he said.

If the group achieves even a fraction of those aims, it would mark a dramatic turning point in the six-month standoff between a government that has resorted to maximum force to suppress dissent and a protest movement that has remained largely peaceful.

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Defections are not new, but until now most have consisted of small groups of disgruntled soldiers fleeing orders to shoot civilians, then taking refuge in local homes, where they are hunted down and captured or killed, often along with those who sheltered them.

The phenomenon was causing so many civilian casualties that protest organizers this summer appealed to soldiers to not defect until they could count on sufficient numbers to make a difference, said Wissam Tarif, an activist with the human rights group Avaaz.

Soldiers with the Free Syrian Army say they are hoping that point has now been reached. Large-scale or high-ranking defections are still unlikely, because the overwhelming majority of the officer corps belongs to Assad’s minority Alawite sect, said a defected first lieutenant who has taken refuge in the Lebanese border town of Wadi Khaled and makes frequent clandestine visits to Homs to support the Free Syrian Army’s activities.

The city of Rastan is one of the focal points, according to Reuters:

Undeterred by the crackdown, more deserters declared the formation of another rebel military unit, of uncertain size, in the same area. And in a sign of increasingly heavily armed opposition to Assad, people in the nearby city of Homs said rebel soldiers hit a government tank with a rocket.

Hundreds of soldiers who have refused orders to fire on protesters have formed the Khaled Bin al-Walid battalion, named after

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the Arab conqueror of Syria, in Rastan.

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The force, led by Captain Abdelrahman Sheikh, has some tanks. Colonel Riad al-Asaad, the most senior military defector, is active in the area.

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The region around Homs and the adjoining province of Idlib on the border with Turkey have emerged as hotspots of armed resistance, although the bulk of the armed forces, commanded by officers from Assad’s Alawite minority, has remained nominally loyal, with tight surveillance by Alawite secret police and soldiers who disobey orders to crush protests risk being shot.

A senior diplomat in Damascus said rebel units were a mixed bag of deserters but that only the efforts of the Alawite officer corps were preventing much larger units joining them. “The deserters so far are a hodgepodge,” the diplomat said. “They did not train together and whole divisions are not leaving because of the Alawite control.”

While it is too soon to tell if this is a real turning point, pro-Assad forces are taking the threat very seriously.

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From Reuters:

Syrian forces backed by tanks and helicopters stormed into the central town of Rastan on Tuesday to crush army deserters who are fighting back after months of mostly peaceful protests against President Bashar al-Assad, residents said.

Early on Tuesday, dozens of armored vehicles entered Rastan, a town of 40,000 on the Orontes river north of Homs, after tanks and helicopters pounded it with heavy machineguns through the hours of darkness.

“Tanks closed in on Rastan overnight and the sound of machineguns and explosions has been non-stop. They finally entered this morning,” said a resident named Abu Qassem.

The Telegraph provides more detail on the situation in Rastan:

The Daily Telegraph has witnessed devastating scenes from the key city of Al Rastan – a city which bridges the country’s north-south divide – in which tanks and other heavy weapons are being used against schools and homes. Armed opposition groups have taken to building barricades against the onslaught.

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And according to residents many parts of Al Rastan have become no-go zones with skirmishes and military raids a daily occurrence.

The much feared ‘shabiha’ – pro-Assad militias- storm houses, hunting defected soldiers and arresting suspected dissidents as they go – ‘looking for reasons to kill’ one resident said. Government snipers sit atop local security headquarters during the day, picking off those who venture too close, whilst at night more random shootings follow.

After three days of fighting, Rastan is still in dispute. According to Asharq Alawsat, the Syrian State news agency has reported that seven soldiers were killed. In addition:

One army defector operating in the province of Idlib, northwest of Rastan, said the defectors in the town were using guerrilla tactics against the heavily-armed loyalist forces.

“Rastan has been churning out army officers for decades and there is a lot of experience among the defecting soldiers. Assad is mistaken if he thinks that he can wrap up the attack quickly,” he said, adding that agricultural terrain made it difficult for the regular army to seal off the area.

The Rastan area is a recruiting ground for Sunni conscripts who provide most of manpower in the military, which is dominated by officers from Assad’s minority Alawite sect.

Residents say that at least 1,000 deserters and armed villagers have been fighting the loyalist forces which are backed up by tanks and helicopters.

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Where does this lead? From Reuters and The Telegraph:

Julien Barnes-Dacey, Middle East analyst at Control Risks said unless more defections occur “the regime won’t face a meaningful military challenge.” He said the key question is “whether or not this will spread and result in a more decisive break right across the military, (which is) unfortunately most likely to happen along sectarian lines with Sunni conscripts joining the opposition and Alawite officers and elite units holding firm with Assad.”

The government blames the violence on armed gangs, who it says have killed 700 members of the security forces. Its version of events may finally becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy — to the chagrin of many protesters who had been determined to keep their movement peaceful and deny the authorities any pretext for the violence they have meted out.

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Many believe the image of city in revolt is one the government will find increasingly difficult to combat with stories about terrorists and ‘western agents’. In Damascus one opposition member expressed his delight: ‘This is a whole city of 100,000 who oppose the government. It’s unbelievable! They may have tanks and heavy weapons, but the people fight on.’

Begin Excerpt 2 from the Washington Post via World News and AP

Syrian troops battle hundreds of renegade soldiers

By Bassem Mroue, Published: September 30

BEIRUT — Syrian troops fought intense battles Friday with hundreds of fellow soldiers who have turned their weapons against the government of President Bashar al-Assad, revealing the increasingly militarized nature of an uprising started months ago by peaceful protesters.

Across the country, tens of thousands of demonstrators took to the streets as they do each Friday, braving gunfire by government forces.

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At least 11 protesters were killed and scores wounded, human rights groups said.

Opposition activists and the government confirmed a fourth straight day of battles in Rastan, just north of the central city of Homs. The fighting, which began with a government assault Tuesday, has been some of the most intense since the uprising against Assad began in mid-March.

The army defections, as well as reports that once-peaceful protesters are increasingly taking up arms to resist a six-month-old crackdown, have raised concerns of the risk of civil war in a country with a deep sectarian divide. The Assad government is dominated by the Alawite minority, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, but

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the country is overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim.

About 250 tanks and other army vehicles began entering Rastan early in the day, according to the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

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The army defectors involved in battles in the Rastan area and in the Jabal al-Zawiya region in the northern province of Idlib number about 2,000, according to a prominent human rights activist who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Rastan, from which the Syrian army draws many of its Sunni Muslim recruits, has seen some of the largest numbers of defections to date.

A military official said the days of clashes in the town have killed seven soldiers and police officers.

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Friday’s protests spread from the capital, Damascus, and its suburbs to the southern province of Daraa, the coastal city of Latakia and Idlib province in the northwest, as well as Hama and Homs.

Eleven people were killed, according to the London-based Observatory and Mustafa Osso, a Syria-based rights activist.

Most of the dead were from the province of Hama, they said, while others were killed in Homs and Idlib.

They had no immediate word on Friday’s death toll in Rastan because of the intensity of the fighting.

Also Friday, the Obama administration said it had read the “riot act” to Syria’s ambassador to the United States over an attack on the top U.S. envoy to Syria.

The State Department said Syrian Ambassador Imad Moustapha had been summoned late Thursday to receive a formal condemnation of the assault on Ambassador Robert S. Ford earlier in the day.

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The dressing-down was delivered by the top U.S. diplomat for the Middle East, Jeffrey Feltman, it said.

Moustapha was “read the riot act about this incident,” said spokeswoman Victoria Nuland.

“He was reminded that Ambassador Ford is the personal representative of the president and that an attack on Ford is an attack on the United States,” Nuland said.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and the White House had denounced the attack earlier.

Associated Press

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