Author Topic: Iran admits fighting war in Sryia to defend Assad who butchers his own people!  (Read 861 times)

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Christians4LessGvt

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Iranian general admits 'fighting every aspect of a war' in defending Syria's Assad

By Lisa Daftari

August 28, 2012

Iran, in continuing to support the Syrian government's crackdown against protesters, publicly stated that it is sending military personnel from its elite Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps to Syria.

"Today, we are involved in fighting every aspect of a war, a military -- one in Syria, and a cultural one as well," Gen. Salar Abnoush, a Revolutionary Guard commander, said to a group of volunteer trainees Monday, as reported by Daneshjoo News Agency, an online pro-regime student-run media platform.

Though many have pointed for quite some time to the symbiotic relationship between Tehran and Damascus, including Iran?s training of Syrian cyber police and sending tactical support and cash, the statement appears to be the Iranian regime's first public account of military participation in Syria.

More than 23,000 Syrians, including many women and children, have been massacred in the more than 17 months of uprising against the Bashar al-Assad regime.

Public acknowledgment of Iran's manpower support and military involvement in Syria comes at a time when international pressure against Syria is at its peak and the Syrian regime's massacre against its civilians is most violent. Syrian military defections are on the rise, and many soldiers are often unwilling to fire at protesting crowds.

"Today, Syria is resisting as our front's surrogate, and we all have a responsibility to support it and to not let the line fall," Iran's semi-official Fars News Agency quoted Mullah Hussein Taeb as saying. Taeb is a well-known suppressor of the 2009 Iranian uprisings, as head of intelligence for the Revolutionary Guard, and right-hand man to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

This month, Syrian rebels in Damascus captured 48 Iranians, who they believed were members of Iran's Revolutionary Guard. The Iranian government replied that the 48, including some retired members of the Revolutionary Guard, were on pilgrimage visiting a Shiite shrine.

The acknowledgement Monday coincides with Iran hosting a six-day Non-Aligned Movement summit this week to oppose the sanctions and Western isolation that are aimed at punishing the Islamic Republic for its nuclear agenda.

Iranian officials hope to unify participants of the 120-nation summit, including new Egyptian President Mohammad Morsi, the first Egyptian leader to visit Iran since its 1979 Islamic Revolution, to stand behind the Iranian regime's ongoing proliferation program.

A second item on the agenda will be a detailed game plan for Syria presented by the Iranian government.

Iran is still eager to host talks between Assad's government and the opposition, according to Alaeddin Boroujerdi, chairman of the Iranian Parliament?s National Security and Foreign Policy Commission. Boroujerdi is currently in Syria and met with regime officials Sunday, according to the Iran's state-owned broadcasting service Press TV.

Many Iranians feel betrayed by their government helping Syria at a time when their own economy is in dire decline.

"The people of Iran are more upset about the financial help that the regime gives Syria, when our own people did not receive the proper help and rescue during the recent earthquake," said Marjan, a former journalist living in Iran. "We don't have enough hospital beds to care for all the victims, and then we hear the government is sending ambulances to Syria."

Many social media groups and campaigns focus on the solidarity between the Iranian and Syrian people, both wanting to break free of dictatorships.

"The future of our country and the future of Iran's government are two separate things," writes one political blogger in Persian. "If this regime continues to do whatever it takes to keep Assad in power, not only must we live in famine, even our children will have to pay."

Another Iranian activist writes to Fox News in an email: "The Iranian people are against aiding Assad's government. The Iranian regime believes that if they keep Assad in power, it will strengthen their own reign at home. They are mistaken."

In February, documents revealed that the Iranian government had given the Syrian regime more than $1 billion to help relieve pressures of an international oil embargo and other restrictive measures on travel and trade through its central bank. Currently, the U.S., Turkey, European Union and Arab League have imposed crippling sanctions on Syria's trade, banking and oil exports in order to deter its massacring of citizens.

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2012/08/28/iranian-general-admits-fighting-every-aspect-war-in-defending-syria-assad/
"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" - Ronald Reagan - June 12, 1987

Plane

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  Was Iran recently claiming credit for inspiring the uprising in Libia and Egypt?

  They somehow got on the wrong side of this one.

  Not surprising , Syria has been an ally and a stageing ground for the catspaw activitys of Hezbolla.

 If Syria's Bashir falls , Irans best bet will be to prevent the new government from knowing any peace without paying allegience to Iran.

Xavier_Onassis

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Syria has no common border with Iran.
"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

BSB/Hero/Genius/MovieStar

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"Iran admits fighting war in Sryia to defend Assad who butchers his own people!"

Would that be a compound-complex sentence?

BSB

Xavier_Onassis

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It is a complex sentence that needs a comment after "Assad", separating the appositive clause form the word it modifies.

Iran is defending Assad, because Alawites are a Shiite sect. The Alawites and other Shiites are allies of Hezbollah.

Iran is the center of Shiite Islam, just as Saudi Arabia is the center of Sunni Islam.

The rulers of Iran, the largest Shiite nation in the world, support the Shia Islam. They consider butchery of their enemies to be normal.

The ayatollahs are very intolerant. Assad's government was very tolerant of minorities in Syria, such as Christians, Druzes, and others. But of course, it was still a brutal dictatorship, just a nonsectarian one.
"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

Plane

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Syria has no common border with Iran.

Yes , inconvienient isn't it?

Plane

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Iran urges nonaligned nations role in Syria
 
By ALI AKBAR DAREINI, Associated Press

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran's supreme leader said Friday that developing nations have a greater right than the U.S. or NATO to intervene in Syria, signaling an effort to lead a diplomatic push over efforts to resolve the crisis.

The comments came a day after Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi embarrassed the Islamic Republic by blasting its ally, Syria, during a speech at the summit of the Nonaligned Movement, a grouping of some 120 nations.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei met Friday with Syria's prime minister, Wael Nader al-Halqi, and Damascus' delegation to the conference.

"There is a proxy war against the Syrian government, on behalf of some governments led by the U.S. and some other powers with the objective of meeting the Zionist regime's (Israeli) interests and inflicting a blow to resistance in the region," Khamenei was quoted as saying on his website.

He didn't mention Egypt. But Iran's former ambassador to Syria, Hossein Sheikholeslam, openly criticized Morsi, saying the Islamist leader had demonstrated "lack of political maturity" with his comments.

Morsi — in the first visit to Iran by an Egyptian leader since the 1979 Islamic Revolution — on Thursday called the Syrian regime "oppressive" and said the world must stand behind the Syrian rebels. That prompted a walkout by Syrian delegates to the conference.

Sheikholeslam said Morsi "made a big mistake" by condemning the Syrian government in his speech, according to the semiofficial Mehr news agency

Iran sought to use the weeklong summit to assert itself on the Syrian crisis and to counter Western efforts to isolate Tehran over its nuclear program. The U.S. and its allies say Iran is trying to develop atomic weapons, but Iran denies the claims and says its program is for peaceful purposes.

The final summit declaration issued Friday said all countries had the right to development and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes. It notably singled out Iran.

The statement made no mention of Syria's civil war, reflecting the huge differences among the nonaligned member states and their failure to narrow the gaps.

Tehran has faced an uphill challenge in garnering support for Syrian President Bashar Assad. Some in the organization — particularly Sunni Muslim majority nations — are more sympathetic with the rebels, if not outright backing them.

The U.N. and Arab League have both led ultimately failed efforts to negotiate an end to Syria's violence, in which thousands have been killed since early 2011. Turkey this week called for the U.N. to authorize creation of a safe zone in Syria for tens of thousands fleeing their homes. Britain and France have left open the possibility of more aggressive action, including a military-enforced no-fly zone to protect a safe area — though that still seems a remote possibility.

"The Nonaligned Movement definitely has more political right than the U.S., NATO or some European countries to intervene in the Syrian issue," Khamenei said. He did not elaborate on what kind of role the group should ........................................................................................

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem on Friday complained that some nonaligned member states arm the rebels.

"Unfortunately, some regional countries, that are also members of the nonaligned movement, are providing weapons and military training as well as money to the armed groups to destroy Syria's infrastructure," he told Iranian state TV Friday.

Al-Moallem didn't name any country but last month he openly accused regional powerhouses Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey of trying to destroy Syria by supporting the rebels.

Iran, Syria's key remaining ally in the Middle East, has provided Assad's government with military and political backing for years, and has kept up its strong support for the regime since the uprising began in March 2011. Syrian activists say at least 20,000 people have been killed in the conflict.

Tehran has urged Damascus to listen to the Syrian people's "legitimate demands" but has strongly opposed shipment of weapons to the rebels.

"The main culprits in the Syrian issue are those who have paved the way for flooding shipments of arms into Syria as well as financial support for the irresponsible groups," state TV quoted Khamenei as saying Friday. "The Syrian government should remove excuses from the opponents, continue political reforms and expose behind-the-curtain facts for the Arab public opinion."

Iran has already proposed a three-month cease-fire to pave the way for national reconciliation talks between the Syrian government and the opponents.

Anti-regime fighters have dismissed any role for Iran in such a plan. The rebels say it has little hope of succeeding. Also, the United States has rejected Iranian participation in international meetings on the Syrian crisis.

...........................................

Plane

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terrorize


President Assad's ground troops are nowhere to be seen in the rebel-held territory they call "Free Syria." But without a no-fly zone, civilians, like those today in Al-Bab, find themselves constantly vulnerable to aerial assaults.


http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2012/0831/In-rebel-held-Free-Syria-regime-planes-still-terrorize

More than a thousand people gathered to sing and chant anti-Assad slogans - minutes later, the square emptied as the sound of a fighter jet from the Assad air force began to circle the square. As the people scattered, a blast was heard followed by three other explosions. The fighter jet made at least 6 passes as it fired its 50 caliber machine gun on the neighborhood below. Doctors at the local underground hospital did not allow this reporter access to the facility because of the load of patients coming in. Unconfirmed reports by the FSA spokesperson in Kilis say that 7 people died and 50 were injured.

Xavier_Onassis

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Iran is only a spectator in the Syrian uprising. Most of Iran's rhetoric is aimed at the Iranian population, who need a common enemy to offset the criticism of the gross corruption and incompetence of the ruling parties.
"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

Plane

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Iran is only a spectator in the Syrian uprising. Most of Iran's rhetoric is aimed at the Iranian population, who need a common enemy to offset the criticism of the gross corruption and incompetence of the ruling parties.


In the same sense that Bank America is a spectator of my home?