Obama’s big question mark on Syria (BBC)
(AFP)
Meanwhile, how ethnically mixed?
Gulp.
Via Washington Post
Thanks Spaghetti Hoop
Obama’s big question mark on Syria (BBC)
(AFP)
Meanwhile, how ethnically mixed?
Gulp.
Via Washington Post
Thanks Spaghetti Hoop
To a faraway country of which we know little.
Michael O’Toole tweetz:
“Soldiers in the Glen [of Imaal, Co Wicklow firing range]. They’ll be in Syria in less than a month. Good luck to them.”
A graphic in today’s New York Daily News.
The raids, if they go ahead, would be aimed at punishing President Bashar al-Assad’s regime and sending him a message rather than wiping out his military capacity and handing the rebels a decisive advantage, they say.
Any Syria strikes will be symbolic, limited: experts (France24)
Hague: "We’re not waiting to see if chemical weapons were used."
— PoliticsHome (@politicshome) August 28, 2013
A US Scud missile test launch in the Persian Gulf yesterday that looks like something*.
(*not a Scud missile, though)
Syria crisis: UK and US finalise plans for military strikes (Guardian)
Thanks Diarmaid Frain
“The issue is very clear. Syria is Washington’s war. It was planned many years ago. The issue was replacing an independent government with a subservient, pro-Western one.
Any government that is independent gets targeted for regime change.
“This is longstanding US policy and the situation in Syria is very grave.
…American forces have been beefed up in the Mediterranean. There is every indication that America plans to attack. It will do it extra judiciously, lawlessly.”
US war on Syria ‘planned many years ago’ (Press TV)
Kerry Cites Clear Evidence of Chemical Weapon Use in Syria (New York Times)
Obama Can Strike Unilaterally (Time)
Previously: Meanwhile, In Syryia
Meanwhile…
Syria, named one of the top ten countries to visit by Lonely Planet, 2011.
Thanks Aisling Hussey
Vehicle of @UN #Syria #ChemicalWeapons team hit by sniper fire. Team replacing vehicle & then returning to area.
— UN Spokesperson (@UN_Spokesperson) August 26, 2013
“The first vehicle of the Chemical Weapons Investigation Team was deliberately shot at multiple times by unidentified snipers in the buffer zone area.”
“As the car was no longer serviceable, the Team returned safely back to the Government check-point. The Team will return to the area after replacing the vehicle.”
“It has to be stressed again that all sides need to extend their cooperation so that the Team can safely carry out their important work.”
“With Syria’s war well into its third year, the number of Syrian children forced to flee their homeland as refugees will reach one million today.”
“This one millionth child refugee is not just another number,” said UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake. “This is a real child ripped from home, maybe even from a family, facing horrors we can only begin to comprehend.”
…
“Children make up half of all refugees from the Syria conflict, according to the two agencies. Most have arrived in Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt. Increasingly, Syrians are fleeing to North Africa and Europe.”“Latest figures show that some 740,000 Syrian child refugees are under the age of 11.”
“Inside Syria, according to the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, some 7,000 children have been killed during the conflict. UNHCR and UNICEF estimate that more than 2 million children have been internally displaced within Syria.”
Image of boy in Aleppo, Syria last year by award-winning Reuters photographer Goran Tomasevic.
Patrick Cockburn writes:
Pictures showing that the Syrian army used chemical weapons against rebel-held eld Eastern Ghouta just east of Damascus are graphic and moving. But they are likely to be viewed sceptically because the claims so much resemble those made about Saddam Hussein’s possession of weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) before the US and British invasion of Iraq in 2003…
…Like the Iraqi opposition to Saddam, who provided most of the evidence of WMDs, the Syrian opposition has every incentive to show the Syrian government deploying chemical weapons in order to trigger foreign intervention. Although the US has gone cold on armed involvement in Syria, President Obama did say a year ago that President Bashar al-Assad’s use of such weapons was “a red line”. The implication is that the US would respond militarily, though just how has never been spelt out.
But the obvious fact that for the Syrian government to use chemical weapons would be much against their own interests does not prove it did not happen. Governments and armies do stupid things. But it is difficult to imagine any compelling reason why they should do so.
(AFP)
A suspected arms dump explosion in Homs, Syria, today.
Thanks Karl leavey