Thursday, August 02, 2012

Libya : The former rebel militias are as bad as Gadaffi's dictatorship at it's worst

The NATO governments who armed and provided air support to the armed rebellion against Gadaffi's dictatorship have quietly ignored the aftermath of Gadaffi's overthrow, perhaps because it involves militias running riot torturing, threatening and killing people (apparently with the approval of the National Transitional Council), looting; and even ethnically cleansing entire towns for the crime of being black.

Many people paint Libya as entirely worse or entirely better than it was under Gadaffi, but it isn't as clear cut as that. While the rebels were committing some atrocities themselves even before the military balance swung in their favour, Gadaffi's forces were killing people suspected of not supporting Gadaffi or supporting the rebels on a much larger scale and almost randomly, even when abandoning cities to the rebel advance (1) - (2).

For white or brown skinned Libyans not suspected of supporting Gadaffi, things are better for many of them. For Islamists, many of whom were jailed and tortured under Gadaffi, things are better too. For black Libyans and black immigrant workers from other countries - and anyone suspected of having supported Gadaffi (whether they actually did or not) things are much, much worse. Over all that seems like no real improvement.

Amnesty Internationalreports that 'Militias continue to arrest people and hold them in secret and unofficial detention facilities...it is estimated that 4,000 remain in centres outside the reach of the central authorities. Some have been held without charge for a year.

An Amnesty International fact-finding team found evidence of recent beatings and other abuse - in some cases amounting to torture - in 12 of the 15 detention centres where it was able to interview detainees in private during its most recent visit.

Common methods of torture reported to the organization include suspension in contorted positions and prolonged beatings with various objects including metal bars and chains, electric cables, wooden sticks, plastic hoses, water pipes, and rifle-butts; and electric shocks.

Amnesty International has detailed information on at least 20 cases of death in custody as a result of torture by militias since late August 2011.'

It adds that 'In May the transitional authorities adopted legislation which grants immunity from prosecution to thuwwar (revolutionaries) for military and civilian acts committed with the “purpose of rendering successful or protecting the 17 February Revolution.”

In a June meeting with Amnesty International, Libya’s General Prosecutor was unable to provide any details of thuwwar being brought to justice for torturing detainees or committing other human rights abuses. ' (3)

This sounds a lot like even the central government in Libya is giving former rebel militia-men a blank cheque to do anything to anyone to "protect the revolution", with a law which could as easily have been one of those allowing Gadaffi's forces to do anything to anyone to protect his 1969 revolution against the monarchy. Unless this changes then it's just going to be history repeating itself.

The French medical charity Medicines Sans Frontieres (doctors without borders) suspended some of its operations in Libya in January after multiple cases of rebel militia-men bringing in prisoners who they had tortured for treatment just to keep them alive to torture them some more (4).

James Hider of the Times newspaper reports that 'In Mshashia, once a town of 15,000 outside Zintan, not a single person can be seen. Entry roads are blocked with burnt-out lorries. Signs read: “Closed military zone. No entry.”

The emptying of Tawerga, just outside Misrata, is even more disturbing. A town of 30,000 people, many of them black, the mass expulsion was tinged with the racial overtones that marked much of the revolution, when Gaddafi was accused of using African mercenaries to do his killing. ...

...Ramzi al-Muntar, a jobless former rebel ....whose home was destroyed in the siege of Misrata...

“They are not allowed to come back. If they do, someone will kill them,” he said. “...Anyway, they are not really Libyans. They are descended from a slave ship that ran aground once off the coast.” (5).

Amnesty was already reporting in September last year that many black Tawerghan men had never been heard of again after being taken away at gunpoint by armed militia-men from the Misrata brigades (6).

Human Rights Watch has reported that the militias have also tortured Tawerghans to death and looted their homes and businesses, which has parallells with ethnic cleansing by militias in Bosnia , which was similarly motivated partly by getting loot in a country under sanctions and in which 'economic reforms' demanded by the US in return for providing new loans to Yugoslavia (having called in the old ones) had pushed up unemployment (7) - (9).

The militias aren't even content with having forced Tawerghans out of their homes, having continued to attack and kill Tawerghan men, women and children in refugee camps near Tripoli for instance (10).

Libyans who aren't black aren't safe either if they annoy or criticise the militias in any way.

Just complaining about Misrata militia-men firing their guns in the air was enough for them to beat one hotel owner unconscious and destroy his hotel with rocket propelled grenades, while another man who had some unknown argument with militia-men at a checkpoint was later found by his family dead in a morgue, supposedly of natural causes, though his body was covered in bruises and a second autopsy paid for by his family showed he had died of kidney failure and internal bleeding (11).

This sounds a lot like the days of Gadaffi's dictatorship when anyone who criticised Gadaffi or his regime could end up disappeared, only more chaotic, because rather than being at risk if you criticise one lot of rulers, Libyans are at risk if they criticise or argue with any of over 100 militias, if their skin is considered to dark, or if they are suspected (rightly or wrongly) of having supported Gadaffi.

The way the supposedly 'democratic' armed revolutionaries, who supposedly only wanted "freedom" are behaving - just like the forces of the dictatorship they overthrew - makes me regret having supported arming the rebels and half regret ever having backed a NATO intervention to protect Benghazi (though i never supported using it for a war of regime change due to the risks of civil war and revenge killings by victorious rebels). It also makes me even more opposed to supporting armed rebellion in Syria, as the resulting sectarian civil war is likely to make Libya look peaceful by comparison.

If freedom from dictatorship just means the freedom for different people to torture and murder and loot the possessions of others, then it is not worth the loss of life required to overthrow the dictatorship and we should wait for it to fall peacefully the way the Soviet bloc dictatorships did instead.

The election victory of a relatively secular coalition in Libya is less bad than if hardline Islamists had won, but it remains to be seen whether all the militias in control of different parts of the country will accept the authority of the central government or not.

With torture and murder by armed former rebel militias replacing that by Gadaffi's forces - and no trials involved, suspicion being enough, so far things are not that much better than under Gadaffi - the only change being who is doing the torture and killing and who the victims of it are, with the likelihood that just as under Gadaffi many of those suffering violence are not responsible for the crimes they are accused of. (I don't mean that this would excuse torture or execution or jail without trial even of those who are guilty - none of these things are justifiable).

Whether Libyans end up better or worse off overall depends on how the elected government behaves and whether it is willing and able to disarm and disband the militias. If it can't or won't, things are unlikely to improve.

Sources

PHOTO at top of blog from this Black Presence blog post

(1) = Amnesty International 13 Sep 2011 'Libya: The battle for Libya: Killings, disappearances and torture',http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE19/025/2011/en

(2) = Amnesty International 13 Sep 2011 'Libya: No place of safety: Civilians in Libya under attack', http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE19/027/2011/en

(3) = Amnesty International 04 Jul 2012 'Libya: Militia stranglehold corrosive for rule of law ', http://www.amnesty.org/en/news/libya-militia-stranglehold-corrosive-rule-law-2012-07-04

(4) = Medicines Sans Frontieres 26 Jan 2012 'Libya: detainees tortured and denied medical care',http://www.msf.org.uk/libyaprison360112_20120126.news

(5) = Times 12 July 2012 'Hate and fear: the legacy of Gaddafi', http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/world/middleeast/article3472720.ece

(6) = Amnesty International UK 07 Sep 2011 'Libya: Tawarghas being targeted in reprisal beatings and arrests',http://www.amnesty.org.uk/news_details.asp?NewsID=19674

(7) = Human Rights Watch 30 Oct 2011 'Libya: Militias Terrorizing Residents of ‘Loyalist’ Town', http://www.hrw.org/news/2011/10/30/libya-militias-terrorizing-residents-loyalist-town

(8) = Mary Kaldor (1999) ‘New and Old Wars: Organized Violence in a Global Era’, Polity Press, 1999

(9) = Woodward , Susan L.(1995) Balkan Tragedy - Chaos and dissolution after the Cold war The Brookings Institution , Washington D.C , 1995

(10) = New York Times 02 Mar 2012 'U.N. Faults NATO and Libyan Authorities in Report',http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/03/world/africa/united-nations-report-faults-nato-over-civilian-deaths-in-libya.html?_r=1 ; 'Certain revenge attacks have continued unabated, particularly the campaign by the militiamen of Misurata to wipe a neighboring town, Tawergha, off the map; the fighters accuse its residents of collaborating with a government siege.

Such attacks have been documented before, but the report stressed that despite previous criticism, the militiamen were continuing to hunt down the residents of the neighboring town no matter where they had fled across Libya. As recently as Feb. 6, militiamen from Misurata attacked a camp in Tripoli where residents of Tawergha had fled, killing an elderly man, a woman and three children, the report said. '

(11) = Independent on Sunday 08 July 2012 'Patrick Cockburn: Libyans have voted, but will the new rulers be able to curb violent militias?', http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/patrick-cockburn-libyans-have-voted-but-will-the-new-rulers-be-able-to-curb-violent-militias-7922358.html

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Sanctions on Burma should be re-imposed until the military ends offensives and war crimes against ethnic minorities and gives them full citizenship and their basic rights

Aung San Suu Kyi's release from jail and the elections in Burma are welcome, but the lifting of sanctions on Burma by the US and EUgovernments including Britain is premature while Burmese military atrocities and persecution against Burmese minorities continues (1) - (3).

Human Rights Watch report major and continuing Burmese military offensives against the Kachin people of Northern Burma involving rape, torture and killing of civilians and preventing emergency food and medical aid getting through (4).

Muslim Rohingya refugees fleeing Burma say the Burmese military have taken part in Sectarian violence between Rohingya and mostly Buddhist Rakhine in southern Burma, targeting the Rohingya more than the Rakhine - and that police have joined in attacks on Rohingya, as well as army helicopters having fired on Rohingya refugees' boats as they try to flee to neighbouring countries by sea. No aid has been allowed in to people in the region either. (5) - (7).

For decades Burma's military has refused Burmese Rohingya citizenship, calling them Bangladeshis, forcing them out of their homes, and making them do forcedlabour as slaves building houses for colonists of the supposedly "ethnically pure" Bamar majority (8) - (10).

Many of Aung San's Burmese supporters are also prejudiced against Rohingya, possibly victims of military propaganda themselves. She says she "doesn't know" if they're Burmese. The Independent newspaper quoted Mark Farmaner of the Free Burma Campaign as coming back from a month long trip to Burma saying “Anti-Muslim prejudice is endemic in Burmese society....Derogatory comments about Muslims are so commonplace it is quite shocking.” (11) - (12).

Aung San Suu Kyi is certainly in a difficult position and will fear that unless she compromises the military may ignore election results, place her back under house arrest and jail, torture or kill her supporters again. However while she and her party have the right to compromise on their own rights they have no right to agree to other people losing their basic rights in order to secure their own. Without outside pressure any compromise will not be a genuine one between equals either, but one forced on the majority by the men with guns.

Bangladesh's coast guards, as well as Thailand's and Malaysia's are forcingRohingya refugees back out to sea to die, while Chineseforces prevent Kachin refugees escaping into China , also forcing any they catch who get across the border back (13) - (17). (the photo at the top of this post shows Thai Coast Guards and Rohingya refugees (likely Burmese) in Thailand and comes from Asia News

Sanctions on Burma should be re-imposed until the massacres end, aid is allowed in and minorities are given full citizenship. This would remove Suu Kyi's dilemma and allow her to push for the rights of all Burmese people.

This isn't the first time the Burmese Generals have released Suu Kyi either. They've done it before many times when they're under economic and political pressure, only to jail her again once the pressure eased off. This time they've also released many other dissidents due to pressure from Amnesty International and others, so it might be different - but a democracy based on supposed ethnic superiority and ethnic cleansing would not be a real democracy in any case.

Burmese opposition members point out that the elections were only for 5% of the seats in the Burmese parliament,that 80% are reserved for representatives of the military and its supporters and that the military reserves most power to itself, leaving parliament almost powerless in (18).

While the military has made ceasefires with 17 rebel groups (mostly ethnic minorities) including the Karen National Union, so far the military does not seem to have offered any concessions or made any response to peace proposals from these groups (19).

All democratically elected governments should also suspend aid and trade with countries forcing Burmese Rohingya refugees back until they fulfill their Geneva Convention responsibility to take them in, offering extra aid if they do so.

Sources

(1) = CNN 12 Jul 2012 'U.S. eases sanctions on Myanmar', http://edition.cnn.com/2012/07/11/world/asia/us-myanmar-easing-sactions/index.html

(2) = guardian.co.uk 24 Apr 2012 'EU lifts Burma sanctions for one year', http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/apr/23/eu-lifts-burma-sanctions

(3) = BBC News 13 Apr 2012 'David Cameron calls for Burma sanctions to be suspended',http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-17698526

(4) = New York Times 15 May 2012 'Where Myanmar Keeps Trampling Rights', by Matthew Smith, consultant to Human Rights Watch, http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/16/opinion/where-myanmar-keeps-trampling-rights.html?_r=2&ref=global; 'In the remote, rugged mountains of the northern Kachin State, the Burmese Army has been engaged in a brutal war with the Kachin Independence Army,K.I.A., since last June, breaking a 17-year cease-fire agreement. In its renewed military operations against the K.I.A. — Myanmar’s second-largest armed rebel group, which has existed for 51 years — the army has attacked ethnic Kachin civilians and villages, pillaged properties, and committed severe abuses.

I have traveled twice to the conflict areas, spending more than six weeks interviewing more than 100 people. Burmese soldiers have raped Kachin women,tortured civilians, used forced labor on the front lines, and opened fire on villagers with small arms and mortars, causing tens of thousands to flee.

Of those displaced, an estimated 45,000 fled to 30 makeshift camps in K.I.A.-controlled territory along the Myanmar-China border, where the Burmes eauthorities have denied them access to international humanitarian aid.

President Thein Sein has granted U.N. agencies humanitarian access to the area only once, in December, six months after the conflict began.Grassroots organizations are providing aid but are in need of international support. Items like food, medicine, blankets and warm clothing are in short supply.

(5) = Amnesty International 19 Jun2012 'Myanmar: Meet immediate humanitarian needs and address systemic discrimination ',http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/ASA16/008/2012/en/fc40e2b7-00e9-4df8-8eaf-acc27d64098b/asa160082012en.html;

The widespread violence in at least eight areas that began on 8June has reduced considerably, but human rights abuses continue to take place among the Buddhist Rakhine, Muslim Rakhine, and Muslim Rohingya communities, as well as by state security forces. This is especially the case in Maungdaw and Rathidaung.

According to the government, at least 50 people have been killed, and over 30,000 displaced by the violence. Several thousand homes have been destroyed.

The basic humanitarian needs of these people must be met immediately, as many still lack adequate food, water, shelter, and medical attention. The Myanmar authorities should allow local and international aid agencies full and unhindered access to all displaced persons—including an estimated 1,500 persons illegally denied refuge across the border last week by Bangladesh.

Yesterday the border guards similarly detained at least 150Rohingya men who were trying to enter Bangladesh in small boats on the Naf River. They were fleeing a wave of mostly arbitrary arrests by Myanmar border forces and the army since 15 June in Maungdaw. ....

(6) = Human Rights Watch 11 Jun 2012 'Burma: Protect Muslim, Buddhist Communities at Risk', http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/11/burma-protect-muslim-buddhist-communities-risk, 'Brutal violence in Arakan State in western Burma erupted on June 3, 2012,when an estimated 300 Arakan Buddhists attacked a bus of traveling Muslims,killing 10 passengers. The angry mob was reacting to information that an Arakan girl was allegedly raped and murdered in late May by three Muslim suspects. At the time of the attack, the suspects were reportedly in police custody. Clashes have intensified since, with the police opening fire and allegedly killing Rohingyas, and Rohingya mobs burning Arakan homes and businesses. Mobs of Rohingya and Arakanese, armed with sticks and swords, have reportedly committed violence that resulted in a number of deaths. The violence has spread from Maungdaw to the state’s capital and largest town, Sittwe.

On June 7, the Burmese government announced an investigation into the violence. As clashes worsened, on June 10,President Thein Sein issued a state of emergency in the area, ceding complete authority to the Burmese army.

(7) = Channel 4 News 25 Jun 2012'Dangerous waters for Burma's Rohingya minority', http://www.channel4.com/news/dangerous-waters-for-rohingyas-forgotten-people;

Information is scarce, but the camera team found people willing to talk.They spoke to Rohingya refugees who'd made the crossing to Bangladesh.

One illegal entrant, called Shahara, said: "My sisters, brothers and other relatives were burnt alive. They burnt my own children. We couldn't bear it anymore so we came to Bangladesh. The coastguard turned us back three times - andwe floated at sea for four days and four nights. Then we managed to sneak in.Three of our children were burnt to death in Burma. Another two died in the boat getting here."

Her husband Mohammad said that local policemen and members of the military in Burma had sided with the ethnic Buddhists - participating in attacks on Muslims. He said he saw a Burmese helicopter attack boats packed with refugees:"There were three boats together when we set off - and another three followed us. The three boats that lagged behind where attacked by a helicopter and caught fire."

He thinks almost 50 people were killed

(8) = Amnesty International 19 Jun 2012 'Myanmar: Meet immediate humanitarian needs and address systemic discrimination ', http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/ASA16/008/2012/en/fc40e2b7-00e9-4df8-8eaf-acc27d64098b/asa160082012en.html, 'systemic discrimination against the Rohingya characterizes decades of state policy in Myanmar. Tens of thousands of Rohingyas were forcibly displaced by security forces in 1991-1992. Despite being a state party to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, Myanmar continues to deny Rohingya children the right to a nationality. Refused citizenship the under the 1982 Citizenship Act,the ethnic and religious minority is restricted to various degrees in their rights to study, work, travel, marry, practice their religion, and receive health services.

(9) = Human Rights Watch 11 Jun 2012'Burma: Protect Muslim, Buddhist Communities at Risk, http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/11/burma-protect-muslim-buddhist-communities-risk

For decades, the Rohingya have routinely suffered abuses by the Burmese army, including extrajudicial killings, forced labor, land confiscation, and restricted freedom of movement.Arakan people have also faced human rights violations by the army. Using the army to restore order risks arbitrary arrests, enforced disappearances, and torture, Human Rights Watch said.

For decades the Rohingya have borne the brunt of the earlier military government’s brutal state-building policies.The Rohingya have been formally denied citizenship and were excluded from the last census in 1983. They are widely regarded within Burma as “Bengalis” –people of Bangladesh nationality. Since the 1960s there have been multiple campaigns led by the Burmese authorities to expel the Rohingya from Burma,resulting in a litany of human rights violations. There are an estimated800,000 Rohingya in Burma, and about 200,000 live in Bangladesh, of which30,000 live in squalid refugee camps. '

(10) = guardian.co.uk 01 'Dec 2011'Little help for the persecuted Rohingya of Burma', http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2011/dec/01/rohingya-burma; 'When the military junta under General Ne Win, an ethnic Burmese, came to power in 1962, it implemented a policy of "Burmanisation". Based on the ultra-nationalist ideology of racial "purity", it was a crude attempt to bolster the majority Burmese ethnic identity and their religion Buddhism, in order to strip the Rohingya of any legitimacy. They were officially declared foreigners in their own native land and erroneously labelled as illegal Bengali immigrants.

By officially denying them citizenship, the government institutionalised the long-held and unofficial discriminatory practices in the Arakan State. As a result, the Rohingya have no rights to own land or property and are unable to travel outside their villages, repair their decaying places of worship, receive education, or even marry and have children without rarely granted government permission. In addition to the complete denial of their rights, the Rohingya were subjected to modern-day slavery, forced to work on infrastructure projects which include constructing "model villages" to house the Burmese settlers intended to displace them.'

(11) = Independent 21 Jun 2012 'Row over Aung San Suu Kyi threatens to split Burmese pro-democracy movement in Britain', http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/row-over-aung-san-suu-kyi-threatens-to-split-burmese-prodemocracy-movement-in-britain-7873238.html

Burmese Democratic Concern, which organised today’s meeting with Miss Suu Kyi, is one of the exile groups most vehemently opposed to Rohingyas. Its website contains numerous reports laying the blame for sectarian conflict squarely at the door of the Rohingyas – a view which is disputed by most human rights groups and the UN.

Myo Thein, the group’s founder, told The Independent: “There is no tension in Burmese community over Kachin community because we are behind our brothers and sisters there. We fully support them.But regarding the Rohingya issue we do have a problem. We don’t accept they are part of Burma or Burmese citizens. We see them as illegal immigrants, Bengalis from Bangladesh.”

Mark Farmaner, from the Free Burma Campaign, says there is little chance anti-Muslim prejudice will go away any time soon. He recently returned from a one month visit to Burma.

“Anti-Muslim prejudice is endemic in Burmese society,” he said. “Derogatory comments about Muslims are so commonplace it is quite shocking.”

(12) = Channel 4 News 21 Jun 2012 'AungSan Suu Kyi facing the challenge of a divided nation',http://blogs.channel4.com/world-news-blog/aung-san-suu-kyi-facing-the-challenge-of-a-divided-nation/22639

When asked about the crisis on her European tour, Aung San Suu Kyi skirted well-around it.

When asked whether the Rohingya should be regarded as Burmese, she replied,“I don’t know.” Ms Suu Kyi added, unhelpfully, that the problem was that,“there are no-clear cut rules regarding who qualifies as a citizen.”

(13) = Guardian 04 Dec 2009 'After 20 days adrift, Burmese boat people land with tales of abuse and starvation', http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/feb/04/burmese-boat-survivors

(14) = Human Rights Watch 20 Jun2012 'Bangladesh: Stop Boat Push-backs to Burma',http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/19/bangladesh-stop-boat-push-backs-burma

(15) = See (4) above

(16) = Independent 15 May 2012 'Nowhere to run: rebels trapped in Burma's escalating ethnic war', http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/nowhere-to-run-rebels-trapped-in-burmas-escalating-ethnic-war-7746811.html ; 'The leadership of the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) – Christians who have fought, on and off, for self-determination since 1961 – are now sandwiched between Burmese artillery and the Chinese border, which runs directly through the centre of Laiza....Each Monday, in full view of the town's bustling marketplace, Chinese troops across the bridge hold drill sessions behind shields and rifles, apparently in preparation for a sudden rush of people fleeing a Burmese attack. "We have nowhere to flee," said a 23-year-old fisherman. "That is why we must defend ourselves to the last man."

(17) = guardian.co.uk 26 Jun 2012 'China accused of forcing Burma refugees back to war zone', http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jun/26/china-accused-returning-burma-refugees ; 'Chinese authorities are forcing back into Burma some ethnic Kachin refugees who have fled civil war, and is denying basic care to many who remain, Human Rights Watch has said. '

(18) = guardian.co.uk 02 Apr 2012 'Aung San Suu Kyi's victory does not bring Burma freedom', http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/apr/02/aung-san-suu-kyi-victory-burma-freedom

(19) = BBC News 12 Jan 2012 'Burma government signs ceasefire with Karen rebels', http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-16523691

Friday, June 15, 2012

The US and its allies and Russia are each arming their proxies in Syria, with both sides committing atrocities - only negotiations can avoid a Lebanese or Iraq style sectarian civil war across the Middle East

The atrocities in Syria are sickening, especially those against children, but both sides are committing them, including torture, killing civilians by targeting them and killing them as 'collateral damage' in indiscriminate artillery and suicide car bombing attacks (1).

The US and its allies keep arming the rebels and Russia keeps arming Assad's regime. If both sides continue to do this, rather than pushing for negotiations, then Syria, Lebanon and Iraq are likely to collapse into a long, bloody, civil war like that in Lebanon in the 1980s. Past military interventions in the Middle East have led to more civilians being killed instead of less.

The only military intervention in the Middle East that saved lives was the Iraqi Kurdistan no-fly zone established at the end of the 1991 Gulf War (which also involved an estimated 10,000 to 25,000 civilians killed by US bombing and US forces ordered not to intervene while Saddam's forces massacred Shia rebels and their families in Southern Iraq) (2) - (6)

After NATO went far beyond their Security Council mandate by using the Libyan no-fly zone for regime change, Russia and China won't approve another - and with Russia showing it's backing for Assad not only with arms but with a Russian fleet in a Syrian port, intervening without Russian approval could also mean World War Three (7).

The US and its allies are arming the rebels in Syria - and almost certainly extreme sectarian Sunni ones

The Saudi and Qatari monarchies are funding the Free Syrian Army with "wages" which are also being used by rebels to buy arms on the black market; as well as arming the 'Free Syrian Army' with the Obama administration providing co-ordination and intelligence. It is not clear how far US involvement goes, but it could be similar to that in Libya, where the Obama administration got the Saudis and Qataris to arm the Libyan rebels to keep the US profile low and allow it to be presented as an Arab solution to an Arab problem (despite the Arabs in question all being dictators or military rulers, most of whom also kill democracy protesters in their own countries). (8) - (11).

Former CIA officer Phillip Giraldi also says NATO is flying its own special forces trainers as well as arms and fighters from Libya to the Free Syrian Army's base in Turkey on the border with Syria, with plans for Turkish forces to invade and create a 'safe haven' in Northern Syria, supposedly to protect civilians, but probably also a base for rebel forces to carry out regime change from, as in Libya (12).

When the US and the Saudis co-operated to arm Libyan rebels, many of them were, like the Saudi monarchy, hardline Sunni extremists, some, like the former Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, allied to Al Qa'ida (13).

This resulted in the US and its allies - including the British government - aiding rebels who included people they had kidnapped and sent to Gaddafi for torture as suspected al Qa'ida sympathisers a few years previously (14).

This, like Saudi and CIA co-operation to arm, train and fund the most extreme Sunni fundamentalist factions among the Mujahedin in Afghanistan in the 1980s and the Taliban in the 1990s, was to ensure they would exclude Russian and Iranian influence by targeting Russian backed Uzbeks and Iranian supported Hazara, who are Shia (15) - (16) (for full details and sources on Saudi and Clinton administration co-operation to support the Taliban in the early and mid 1990s see this page and sources 57 - 68 on it)

Assad and his regime are mostly Alawites, a minority Shia sect; and allied to Shia ruled Iran and the Shia Lebanese Hezbollah. So it's likely that the Sunni rebels the US and Saudi are arming in Syria will include those sectarian extremists who can be guaranteed not to make peace with Assad too (17).

Evidence of this can be seen in the many suicide car bombings against government targets in Syria, similar to those carried out by Al Qa'ida elsewhere, including some targeting Shia shrines, similar to sectarian attacks mostly targeting Shia in Iraq from 2004 on (which also included bombings of Shia shrines and mosques). Hundreds of civilians have died in the Syrian bombings along with the Syrian army and intelligence targets (18) - (20).

Some Syrian rebels complain they have not had any supplies of heavy or advanced weapons - that isn't unusual either. In Afghanistan in the 1980s Pakistan's ISI were the conduit for US arms for the mujahedin - with CIA approval they armed Hekmatyar and other hardline Islamists, while less Islamists factions like Massoud's recieved only a handful of stinger missiles - and only at the end of the war (21) - (22).

Past actions of the US and it's allies show they that if they arm rebels or intervene they'll kill more civilians , not save them

As for western arms or intervention preventing a collapse into civil war, you can judge how likely that is from US occupied Iraq, where the US played divide and conquer by first backing Shia dominated paramilitaries like the Wolf Brigade to target Sunnis, then switching to paying the same Sunni militias they'd been fighting to target the Shia Madhi army and Sadrists. Sectarian bombings targeting Shia are still taking place regularly in Iraq (and despite American attempts to shrug this off as 'Iraq was always a mess' they only began after the 2003 invasion) (23) - (28).

As for saving civilians, Coalition forces - especially US military - often targeted them on orders, as in the April 2004 assault on Fallujah when eye-witnesses reported US snipers targeting civilians and ambulances, killing around 600 civilians, half of them women and children (29) - (30). The same happened in other Coalition offensives on entire towns and cities - including Samarra in October 2004 and Falluja again in November 2004 (31) - (32).

Coalition forces in Iraq - like NATO and the rebels it backed in Libya - also used heavy artillery, tanks, and air-strikes in assaults on entire towns and cities - something they call a war crime in Syria and called war crimes when Gadaffi's forces did it (33) - (34).

Or look at what happened when forces from NATO countries including the US, France, Italy and the UK intervened in Lebanon in 1982, with UN approval, when US forces immediately took sides in the war, carrying out air strikes and battleship shelling of Syrian positions in Lebanese villages, killing civilians and intensifying the war, before withdrawing two years later, with the civil war continuing with everyone involved committing atrocities till 1990 (35).

A month after the UN contingent arrived Israeli forces in Lebanon allowed fascist Christian Phalangist militias into the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps to massacre thousands of Palestinian civilians (35).

The fact that the UN forces didn't prevent this is not surprising since Bashir Gemayal, the head of the Phalangists and Lebanese Prime Minister, was also backed by the CIA (36).

After the UN force withdrew from Lebanon, the CIA carried out a car bombing attempt to assassinate a Shia cleric which killed more than 80 civilians (37) - (38). (The CIA also funded car bombings in Iraq in the 1990s by a group led by US protege and former assassin for Saddam Ayad Allawi.) Could the CIA today be up to old tricks in Syria?

Their current arming and support for other dictatorships that torture and kill unarmed protesters also show protecting civilians can't be the aim of the US and its allies in Syria

If the motive for intervention or arming rebels in Syria today was to save civilians NATO governments wouldn't still be arming and supporting the Bahraini, Saudi, Yemeni and Egyptian dictatorships and military regimes, who continue to jail, torture and kill democracy protesters.

At the height of the killing, which in Bahrain (with Saudi involvement) included police and snipers shooting unarmed protesters , ambulances and medics - and raiding hospitals to drag away the wounded, doctors and nurses for torture, some to death, a few arms licences were suspended by the British government, but soon sales went back to normal and continue (39) - (40).The Bahraini , Saudi, Yemeni and Egyptian delegations were all invited to arms fairs in London as usual (41).

Tear gas and other arms sales to Bahrain also continue to be approved by the Obama administration despite constant deaths from it's use in high concentrations in Bahrain. Obama has also sneakily decided not to report any arms sales valued at under $1 million , allowing the US to approve any amount of arms sales to murdering dictatorships without telling the media or congress so long as they're split up into small shipments (42) - (44).

US military aid to Egypt of $1.3 bn a year has been continued (with the decision having been explained as avoiding any loss of sales by US arms companies) despite Amnesty International reporting that torture and killings of civilians under the military regime not only continue but are even worse than under Mubarak (45) - (46).

In Yemen US and British military aid funding also continues along with arms sales, despite the US and British trained units loyal to the government there using sniper rifles, mortars, tanks and artillery to kill unarmed protesters over and over and over again. The value of US arms sales to Yemen has increased by 6 times during this, while British arms sales to Yemen doubled for 2011 compared to 2010 (47) - (55).(for more details on Yemen see the blog post on this link, scrolling down to sub-heading 'Yemen' and sources for it)

All this leaves the US government and its allies with no moral high ground from which to condemn Russia and China for arming Assad's dictatorship as it kills protesters and civilians.

The real motive of the US and its allies in Syria - Isolating Iran to prepare for a war of regime change there

Israeli academic, Gabriel Ben-Dor, the head of Security Studies at the University of Haifa says the real motive is "to isolate Iran even more by depriving it of its only major ally in the Middle East” and weaken the "to dismantle the axis of Iran, Syria and Hezbollah, and to somehow weaken this entire coalition " (56).

The war in Syria is between proxies of a US led alliance including Saudi Arabia on one side and a looser Russian and Chinese backed one that includes Iran, Syria and Lebanese Hezbollah. As with Iraq, Russia and China only back the latter to try to ensure they continue to get Iranian oil contracts which the US and its allies want to get for their own companies by carrying out "regime change" (57).

Syrian rebels are committing sectarian atrocities and killing civilians too

While the majority of civilian deaths in Syria are currently likely to be due to indiscriminate artillery fire by the Syrian army and killings by pro-government militias, the rebels are also killing civilians in atrocities including suicide car bombings, which have killed hundreds (58) - (59).

Human Rights Watch also report that rebel "Abuses include kidnapping, detention, and torture of security force members, government supporters, and people identified as members of pro-government militias, called shabeeha." as well as "executions by armed opposition groups of security force members and civilians." (60).

The German Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper reports Syrian opposition sources saying the Houla massacre was committed by Sunni rebels, with the victims being Alawites and Sunnis who had converted to become Shia, as well as a Sunni MP. (Many jihadist groups consider taking part in elections to by unIslamic and to be collaboration with the enemy.) The newspaper also says the opposition sources wish to remain anonymous because armed rebel groups have already killed opposition members who spoke out against an armed uprising (61).

Of course it's impossible to know whether this is the truth, or whether the first reports we heard of Sunnis massacred by Alawite government militias at Houla are ; killing civilians and children, whether with guns or knives, is still a sickening crime; and it doesn't mean Assad's forces haven't committed crimes ; but we know from past wars that we should not assume all claims by the rebels are true, or that they have committed no atrocities themselves.

It took Amnesty International several months to discover the story about Kuwaiti babies thrown from incubators by Iraqi troops in 1991 was false ; and similarly months to find out that some (though not all) of the Libyan rebels' claims about atrocities by Gadaffi's forces were false (e.g orders to rape all women, handing out condoms, using anti-aircraft weapons on civilians) - and that some rebel militias were (and are) committing atrocities themselves (62) - (63).

The fact that the BBC have now reported that, contrary to previous reports, none of those killed at Houla had their throats cut, is more evidence that we should treat the claims of some of the Syrian opposition with as much scepticism as we treat the Assad regime's claims (credit to Media Lens for noticing this first) (64).

The UN has also found that the Free Syrian Army rebels are recruiting children as soldiers (65).

Channel 4 journalist Alex Thomson also says Syrian rebels, asked to lead them home, instead tried to lead him and his crew into the middle of a fire-fight to try to get them killed to provide another atrocity by Assad story. (66)

Negotiations are the only way to avoid a Lebanese style civil war spreading across the Middle East

Negotiations are the only way to avoid a long, bloody civil war, with atrocities by all sides, like Lebanon's in the 1980s. If governments outside Syria instead continue to arm their own proxies or intervene militarily themselves then Syria, Lebanon and Iraq are likely to all collapse into civil war.

This might suit the US government and it's allies as even if it doesn't get it's own client regime in Syria but only chaos, this would still weaken the Iranian-Syrian-Hezbollah alliance, making it harder for Iran to get arms to Hezbollah and so easier for the US or Israel to attack Iran without Hezbollah counter-attacks on Israel being as strong. It would also mean a huge number of deaths, a Sunni-Shia war spreading across the Middle East and chaos that would allow Al Qa'ida and other terrorist groups to operate with ease.

There have already been at least 10 people killed in fighting between Sunnis demonstrating against Assad and Shia who support him in Lebanon (67).

Many Alawites, Christians and other religious minorities in Syria also fear being targeted by Sunni extremists if Assad is overthrown (68) - (69). A look at Iraq today or Lebanon any time in the past 30 years shows their fears may be well founded, with almost all surviving Assyrian Christians in Iraq having fled to Syria for instance, after Islamic extremists told them to convert to Islam or be killed (70). Those refugees are now under threat in Syria too.

The Killers aren't protecting their communities - they're putting their own families lives at risk

Of course those Syrians on both sides who have murdered civilians or shelled entire towns or villages with artillery also bear responsibility. They may try to tell themselves they are protecting their own communities, but in fact with every person they kill they are putting their families, their friends and their neighbours in more and more danger of revenge killings by the other side.

Sources

(1) = Human Rights Watch 11 Jun 2012 'Syria: Stop Grave Abuses of Children',

http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/11/syria-stop-grave-abuses-children

(2) = Bennis , Phyllis & Moushabeck , Michael (Editors) (1992) ‘Beyond the Storm’ ; Canongate Press , London , 1992, p326 – 355

(3) = Lee , Ian (1991) ‘Continuing Health Costs of the Gulf War’, Medical Educational Trust , London , 1991

(4) = BBC News 21 Aug 2007 ‘Flashback: the 1991 Iraqi revolt’, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/2888989.stm

(5) = Aburish , Said K (2000) ‘Saddam Hussein - The Politics of Revenge’ Bloomsbury , London , 2000 - 2001 paperback edition, Ch11,p308 and footnote 60 p379

(6) = Galbraith, Peter W. (2006) ‘The End of Iraq’, Pocket Books paperback, 2007, Ch4, page 46

(7) = Reuters 28 Nov 2011 ''Russia sending warships to its base in Syria', http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/28/us-russia-syria-warships-idUSTRE7AR0S820111128

Sources for : The US and its allies are arming the rebels in Syria - and almost certainly extreme sectarian Sunni ones

(8) = BBC 04 Apr 2012 'Russian warns against arming Syrian opposition', http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-17607547 ; 'Mr Lavrov's comments come three days after Gulf Arab states agreed to pay the "salaries" of Free Syrian Army (FSA) fighters. The money will be distributed through the opposition Syrian National Council (SNC). '

(9) = Washington Post 16 May 2012 'Syrian rebels get influx of arms with gulf neighbors’ money, U.S. coordination', http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/syrian-rebels-get-influx-of-arms-with-gulf-neighbors-money-us-coordination/2012/05/15/gIQAds2TSU_story.html

(10) = Independent 13 Jun 2012 'Exclusive: Arab states arm rebels as UN talks of Syrian civil war', http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/exclusive-arab-states-arm-rebels-as-un-talks-of-syrian-civil-war-7845026.html

(11) = Independent 07 Mar 2011 ‘America's secret plan to arm Libya's rebels  - Obama asks Saudis to airlift weapons into Benghazi ’, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/americas-secret-plan-to-arm-libyas-rebels-2234227.html

(12) = The American Conservative 19 Jan 2012 'Giraldi: 'NATO and CIA secretly arming Syrian rebels with Libyan weapons' , http://deepjournal.com/p/43/a/en/3049.html

(13) = BBC News 31 Aug 2011 'Fears over Islamists within Libyan rebel ranks', http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-14728565

(14) = guardian.co.uk 18 Apr 2012 'Jack Straw faces legal action over Libya rendition claims', http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2012/apr/18/jack-straw-libya-rendition

(15) = Steve Coll (2004) , 'Ghost Wars : The secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan and Bin Laden' , Penguin , London , Chapters 16 to 18

(16) = Ahmed Rashid (2000) 'Taliban', Pan MacMillan, London, 2011, Chapters 10 to 12

(17) = Foreign Policy 14 Jun 2012 'Islamism and the Syrian uprising', http://mideast.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2012/03/08/islamism_and_the_syrian_uprising

(18) = Reuters 23 Dec 2011 'Analysis: Syria bombings signal deadlier phase of revolt', http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/12/23/us-syria-bombings-idUSTRE7BM18T20111223 , 'Beirut-based commentator Rami Khouri said he doubted the government would have hit its own security targets, suggesting that the bombings could have been the work of armed rebels, who he said include hardline Salafi Islamists in their ranks....Hilal Khashan, political science professor at the American University of Beirut, also said he did not believe that the Syrian government was behind the bombings.'

(19) = New York Times 10 May 2012 'Dozens Killed in Large Explosions in Syrian Capital', http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/11/world/middleeast/damascus-syria-explosions-intelligence-headquarters.html?pagewanted=all ; 'Twin suicide car bombs that targeted a notorious military intelligence compound shook the Syrian capital, Damascus, on Thursday, killing and wounding hundreds of people ...It was the largest such terrorist attack since the uprising began 14 months ago, with the Health Ministry putting the toll at 55 dead and nearly 400 wounded — civilians and soldiers. '

(20) = USA Today /AP 14 Jun 2012 'Car bomb damages major Shiite shrine in Syria'

http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/story/2012-06-14/syria-shrine-bombing/55592110/1

(21) = Reuters 14 Jun 2012 'Syrian rebels in Turkey doubtful over new Arab arms supplies', http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-rebels-turkey-doubtful-over-arab-arms-supplies-145503668.html

(22) = Steve Coll (2004) , 'Ghost Wars : The secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan and Bin Laden' , Penguin , London, Chapters 9 - 10 and Prologue (page 12 of paperback edition),

Sources for : Past actions of the US and it's allies show they that if they arm rebels or intervene they'll kill more civilians , not save them

(23) = BBC News 11 Jun 2005 ‘Profile: Iraq's Wolf Brigade’, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/4083326.stm

(24) = Guardian.co.uk 28 Oct 2010 ‘Iraq war logs: 'The US was part of the Wolf Brigade operation against us'’, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/oct/28/iraq-war-logs-iraq

(25) = The New Yorker 05 Mar 2007 ‘Annals of National Security - The Redirection’, http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/03/05/070305fa_fact_hersh

(26) = NPR 17 July 2008, 'U.S. Trains Ex-Sunni Militias as Iraqi Police', http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=11240000

(27) = Sunday Times 25 Nov 2007, ‘American-backed killer militias strut across Iraq’, http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=102x3076670

(28) = Guardian.co.uk 13 Jun 2012 'Iraq bombs kill scores of Shia pilgrims and police', http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jun/13/iraq-bombs-kill-shia-police?newsfeed=true

(29) = BBC News 23 Apr 2004 'Picture Emerges of Falluja Siege', http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3653223.stm

(30) = Iraq Body Count 26 Oct 2004 'No Longer Unknowable: Falluja's April Civilian Toll is 600', http://www.iraqbodycount.org/analysis/reference/press-releases/9/

(31) = Independent 04 Oct 2004 'Civilians Bear Brunt as Samarra 'Pacified' ',http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/1004-02.htm (i've given this web address as the article no longer seems to be available in the Independent newspaper's archive)

(32) = Independent 24 Nov 2004 'Witnesses say US forces killed unarmed civilians', http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/witnesses-say-us-forces-killed-unarmed-civilians-534372.html

(33) = CNN 02 Jan 2004 'U.S. soldier killed as copter shot down in Iraq', http://articles.cnn.com/2004-01-02/world/sprj.nirq.main_1_baghdad-mosque-military-helicopter-coalition-forces?_s=PM:WORLD ; 'Meanwhile, several explosions were heard late Friday just southwest of Baghdad, where officials at the Coalition Provisional Authority said there was an ongoing offensive operation in progress. The officials said the offensive is utilizing attacks from the air, artillery fired from the ground and coordinated raids.'

(34) = guardian.co.uk 07 Oct 2011 'Battle for Sirte: Libyan forces launch largest assault yet', http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/oct/07/battle-sirte-libyan-forces-assault 'Forces of Libya's new government have launched their largest assault so far on the coastal city of Sirte in the hope of taking the last major Gaddafi stronghold by the end of the week. After a massive dawn barrage of artillery and rockets, hundreds of fighters attempted to enter the city in columns of vehicles...Earlier in the week, fighting focused on a collection of buildings near the Ibn Sana hospital which became the target of the tanks, rocket launchers and anti-aircraft guns of Libya's revolutionaries lined up on the low sandy ridge that overlooks Sirte. On Thursday a pall of white smoke hung across this district as shells exploded every few minutes'

(35) = James Bovard (2003) 'Terrorism and Tyranny' , Palgrave Macmillan, 2003, NY & Houndsmill, Chapter 2, pages 14-15 and 23 of the paperback edition

(36) = Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade magazine, Issue 51 , May 2003, '1976- 1983 : Lebanon - Another CIA President in Lebanon' , by Bob Woodward,

http://coat.ncf.ca/our_magazine/links/issue51/articles/51_28-29.pdf ; 'excerpted from Bob Woodward (1987) 'Veil : Secret wars of the CIA 1981-1987'

(37) = James Bovard (2003) 'Terrorism and Tyranny' , Palgrave Macmillan, 2003, NY & Houndsmill, Chapter 2, page 23 of paperback edition

(38) = BBC News On This Day 8th of March '1985: Beirut car bomb kills dozens ', http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/march/8/newsid_2516000/2516407.stm

Sources For:

Their current arming and support for other dictatorships that torture and kill unarmed protesters also show protecting civilians can't be the aim of the US and its allies in Syria

(39) = Independent 15 Jan 2012 'Britain accused of hypocrisy over Arab arms sales ', http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/britain-accused-of-hypocrisy-over-arab-arms-sales-6289847.html , 'Government figures posted on the web last week show that between July and September last year, when Bahrain's riot police were clashing with protesters and security services were routinely raiding homes, licenses were granted for £2.2m-worth of UK weapons to be exported, more than £1.3m of which were for military use. In the same period, £1.5m of arms exports to Egypt were licensed by the UK, of which more than £1m were specifically for military use. ...Last March, a month after President Mubarak was ousted, the Government revoked 44 arms licences for Egypt, but by the third quarter of last year they were allowing the passage of millions of pounds of military equipment. '

(40) = guardian.co.uk 14 Feb 2012 'Bahrain receives military equipment from UK despite violent crackdown', http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/feb/14/bahrain-military-equipment-uk

(41) = Campaign Against the Arms Trade (CAAT) 09 Sep 2011 ‘Government tries to hide embarrassing truth about arms fair invitees’, http://www.caat.org.uk/press/archive.php?url=20110909prsOn Thursday, 8 September, the government supported events promoting arms sales to countries including Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Yemen.’

(42) = Amnesty International USA 30 Jan 2012 'U.S. Arms Sales to Bahrain: 4 Questions for the Obama Administration', http://blog.amnestyusa.org/middle-east/u-s-arms-sales-to-bahrain-4-questions-for-the-obama-administration/

(43) = Physicians for Human Rights 'Tear-Gas Related Deaths in Bahrain : March 2011 - March 2012', http://physiciansforhumanrights.org/issues/persecution-of-health-workers/bahrain/bahrain-tear-gas-deaths.html

(44) = Physicians for Human Rights 16 Mar 2012 'Tear Gas or Lethal Gas? Bahrain’s Death Toll Mounts to 34', http://physiciansforhumanrights.org/blog/tear-gas-or-lethal-gas.html

(45) = New York Times 23 Mar 2012 'Once Imperiled, U.S. Aid to Egypt Is Restored', http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/24/world/middleeast/once-imperiled-united-states-aid-to-egypt-is-restored.html

(46) = Amnesty International 22 Nov 2011 'Egypt: Military rulers have 'crushed' hopes of 25 January protesters', http://www.amnesty.org/en/news/egypt-military-rulers-have-crushed-hopes-25-january-protesters-2011-11-22

(47) = BBC 26 Mar 2011 ‘Saleh departure in Yemen: A matter of 'when', not 'if'’,http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-12868544 , ‘second last sentence reads ‘While some other military units have joined the opposition, the elite US- and British-trained troops, headed by Mr Saleh's son and nephew, remain loyal to the president.’

(48) = Amnesty International 19 Sep 2011 ‘Yemen violence surges as protesters are killed’,http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/yemen-violence-surges-protesters-are-killed-2011-09-19 , ‘The Yemeni authorities must immediately stop the killing of peaceful protesters by security forces, Amnesty International said today following reports that dozens of people have been shot dead in the capital Sana'a since Sunday….Hundreds more are said to have been injured after security forces used snipers and rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs) against protesters marching to demand the resignation of President Ali Abdullah Saleh.,,Around 26 people were killed on Sunday. The continuing violence has seen more killed in Sana'a today

(49) = AP 22 Oct 2011 ‘Clashes in Yemeni capital kill 20’, http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45000453/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/t/clashes-yemeni-capital-kill/#.TsvornKKyuI , ‘Clashes between Yemeni government troops and a renegade army unit killed at least 20 people, including three civilians, in the capital Sanaa on Saturday, officials said.’

(50) = Al Arabiya 11 Nov 2011 ‘At least 15 Yemenis killed as Saleh’s loyalist forces shell southern city of Taez’, http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2011/11/11/176529.html

(51) = AFP 25 Oct 2011‘15 dead as Yemen truce fails, Saleh says ready to go’, http://news.yahoo.com/five-civilians-killed-yemen-protests-110515565.html , ‘In Sanaa and in Yemen's second largest city Taez at least 15 people were killed, according to medical officials and tribal sources… A seven-year-old child and a woman were among seven people killed in Taez, after what residents said was random shelling by government forces of neighbourhoods.The interior ministry said four policemen also died.

(52) = Voice of America news 11 Nov 2011 ‘Yemeni Government Forces Kill 6 Civilians’, http://blogs.voanews.com/breaking-news/2011/11/11/yemeni-government-forces-kill-6-civilians/

(53) = AFP 05 Apr 2011 ‘No plans to suspend military aid to Yemen: US’, http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/04/05/no-plans-to-suspend-military-aid-to-yemen-us/

(54) = Reuters 05 Apr 2011 ‘U.S. urges Yemen transition, no aid cut-off-Pentagon’, http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/05/us-yemen-usa-pentagon-idUSTRE7346V720110405

(55) = CAAT Country Data Yemen, http://www.caat.org.uk/resources/countrydata/?country_selected=Yemen ,(shows £800,000 worth of arms export licences approved in 2011 – more than twice the value of approved arms exports in 2010)

Sources For :The real motive of the US and its allies in Syria - Isolating Iran to prepare for a war of regime change there

(56) = Jerusalem Post / Reuters 14 Nov 2011 'Syria urges Arab League to reconsider suspension',http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=245466

(57) = Washington Post 15 Sep 2002, 'In Iraqi War Scenario, Oil Is Key Issue : U.S. Drillers Eye Huge Petroleum Pool', http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&contentId=A18841-2002Sep14 ; 'A U.S.-led ouster of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein could open a bonanza for American oil companies long banished from Iraq, scuttling oil deals between Baghdad and Russia, France and other countries, and reshuffling world petroleum markets, according to industry officials and leaders of the Iraqi opposition...."It's pretty straightforward," said former CIA director R. James Woolsey, who has been one of the leading advocates of forcing Hussein from power. "France and Russia have oil companies and interests in Iraq. They should be told that if they are of assistance in moving Iraq toward decent government, we'll do the best we can to ensure that the new government and American companies work closely with them." But he added: "If they throw in their lot with Saddam, it will be difficult to the point of impossible to persuade the new Iraqi government to work with them.'

Sources for : Syrian rebels are committing sectarian atrocities and killing civilians too

(58) = Reuters 23 Dec 2011 'Analysis: Syria bombings signal deadlier phase of revolt', http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/12/23/us-syria-bombings-idUSTRE7BM18T20111223 , 'Beirut-based commentator Rami Khouri said he doubted the government would have hit its own security targets, suggesting that the bombings could have been the work of armed rebels, who he said include hardline Salafi Islamists in their ranks....Hilal Khashan, political science professor at the American University of Beirut, also said he did not believe that the Syrian government was behind the bombings.'

(59) = New York Times 10 May 2012 'Dozens Killed in Large Explosions in Syrian Capital', http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/11/world/middleeast/damascus-syria-explosions-intelligence-headquarters.html?pagewanted=all ; 'Twin suicide car bombs that targeted a notorious military intelligence compound shook the Syrian capital, Damascus, on Thursday, killing and wounding hundreds of people ...It was the largest such terrorist attack since the uprising began 14 months ago, with the Health Ministry putting the toll at 55 dead and nearly 400 wounded — civilians and soldiers. '

(60) = Human Rights Watch 20 Mar 2012 'Syria: Armed Opposition Groups Committing Abuses', http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/03/20/syria-armed-opposition-groups-committing-abuses

(61) = Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (Germany) 07 Jun 2012 'Abermals Massaker in Syrien', http://www.faz.net/aktuell/politik/neue-erkenntnisse-zu-getoeteten-von-hula-abermals-massaker-in-syrien-11776496.html ; for English translation see http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=de&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.faz.net%2Faktuell%2Fpolitik%2Fneue-erkenntnisse-zu-getoeteten-von-hula-abermals-massaker-in-syrien-11776496.html

(62) = Christian Science Monitor 06 Sep 2002 ‘When contemplating war, beware of babies in incubators’, http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0906/p25s02-cogn.html

(63) = Independent 24 Jun 2011 'Amnesty questions claim that Gaddafi ordered rape as weapon of war', http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/amnesty-questions-claim-that-gaddafi-ordered-rape-as-weapon-of-war-2302037.html

(64) = BBC World News 07 Jun 2012 'Reporting conflict in Syria', http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors/2012/06/reporting_conflict_in_syria.html ; 'In the aftermath of the massacre at Houla last month, initial reports said some of the 49 children and 34 women killed had their throats cut. In Damascus, Western officials told me the subsequent investigation revealed none of those found dead had been killed in such a brutal manner. Moreover, while Syrian forces had shelled the area shortly before the massacre, the details of exactly who carried out the attacks, how and why were still unclear. Whatever the cause, officials fear the attack marks the beginning of the sectarian aspect of the conflict. '

(65) = Human Rights Watch 11 Jun 2012 'Syria: Stop Grave Abuses of Children', http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/11/syria-stop-grave-abuses-children

(66) = Channel 4 News 08 Jun 2012 'Set up to be shot in Syria's no man's land', http://blogs.channel4.com/alex-thomsons-view/hostile-territory/1863

Sources For : Negotiations are the only way to avoid a Lebanese style civil war spreading across the Middle East

(67) = Los Angeles Times 03 Jun 2012 'Lebanon clashes raise fear of 'spillover' in Syria violence',http://articles.latimes.com/2012/jun/03/world/la-fg-syria-violence-20120603 ; 'Gunfights raged Saturday in the Lebanese coastal city of Tripoli, where supporters and opponents of Syria's President Bashar Assad exchanged machine-gun fire and rocket-propelled grenade volleys across a densely populated urban cityscape...By early evening, Lebanon's official National News Agency reported at least 10 people had been killed and more than two dozen wounded .'

(68) = Los Angeles Times 07 Mar 2012 'Syria Christians fear life after Assad', http://articles.latimes.com/2012/mar/07/world/la-fg-syria-christians-20120307

(69) = Independent 18 Feb 2012 'Syrians flee their homes amid fears of ethnic cleansing',http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/syrians-flee-their-homes-amid-fears-of-ethnic-cleansing-7079802.html ; 'Members of Syria's minority Alawite community are fleeing their homes and going into hiding, terrified that avenging rebels will hunt them down as more areas of the country come under the control of fighters trying to topple President Bashar al-Assad. '

(70) = New York Times 08 May 2007 'The assault on Assyrian Christians', http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/08/opinion/08iht-edisaac.1.5618504.html

Thursday, June 14, 2012

The Houla massacre - no throats slit, uncertainty over whether government or rebel forces responsible and who victims were - many media reports wrongly assume all Syrian opposition claims are true

Media reports on the Houla massacre in Syria were previously quoting people who said they were survivors on all the victims being Sunnis killed by pro-Assad Alawite militia, with children having had their throats cut (1) - (2).

There clearly was a sickening massacre of civilians including children in Houla, but it turns out that few or none of the victims' throats may have been cut. It also seems that we don't know who the killers were, how some of the victims were killed, nor who many of the victims were.

I'm not saying all those who say they are survivors are definitely lying - some or all of them may be entirely truthful, but we simply don't know one way or the other.

As Media Lens has pointed out, Jon Williams, an editor at BBC World News, has written on the BBC website that :

"In the aftermath of the massacre at Houla last month, initial reports said some of the 49 children and 34 women killed had their throats cut. In Damascus, Western officials told me the subsequent investigation revealed none of those found dead had been killed in such a brutal manner. Moreover, while Syrian forces had shelled the area shortly before the massacre, the details of exactly who carried out the attacks, how and why were still unclear. Whatever the cause, officials fear the attack marks the beginning of the sectarian aspect of the conflict. " (3)

Another BBC reporter, Paul Danahar, adds that "There is a sense in Damascus shared by many diplomats, international officials and those opposed to President Assad that his regime may no longer have complete and direct day-to-day command and control of some of the militia groups being blamed for massacring civilians. ........

........Members of the international community in Damascus say that, contrary to initial reports, most of the people in Houla were killed by gunfire spraying the rooms, not by execution-style killings with a gun placed to the back of the head. Also people's throats were not cut, although one person did have an eye gouged out. " (4)

This has not made any headlines, though it should be making them to correct the inital reports (though I think it's pretty unlikely that Assad's regime has no control over pro-government militias - this seems like the same excuse Ariel Sharon tried to use when he let the Phalangist militias into Sabra and Shatila refugee camps to massacre Palestinian civilians)

As with the Kuwaiti babies thrown from incubators story during the 1991 Iraq war and some of the claims made by Libyan rebels of atrocities by Gadaffi's forces turning out to be false (for instance handing out condoms to soldiers, orders to rape all women, anti-aircraft guns used on protesters) we should not be taking every claim made by anyone in the Syrian opposition as true - some may not be (5) - (6).

The German newspaper the Frankfurt Allgemeine Zeitung has also reported some Syrian opposition sources saying the Houla massacre was committed by Sunni rebels with the victims being Alawites and Shia converts who used to be Sunnis, as well as a Sunni MP. (Many jihadist groups consider taking part in elections to by unIslamic and to be collaboration with the enemy.) The newspaper also says the opposition sources wish to remain anonymous because armed rebel groups have already killed opposition members who spoke out against an armed uprising (7).

The FAZ report says Houla is 90% Sunni - something that all reports, including those blaming government militias, agree on, though the FAZ report says Sunni rebels were the killers, able to carry out the killings of a minority in their own community, while other reports say Houla's residents were targeted because they were Sunnis and so are the rebels.

Which version is true is impossible to say in the middle of a civil war with both sides and all their foreign allies spreading their own propaganda - I am not saying that we can know for certain that Assad's militias weren't responsible either , but that is what every media report should be saying until full investigations can be carried out.

While Assad's military and militias who support him are likely to be guilty of many murders, rebels have killed civilians too.

Instead reports which later turn out to be almost competely false are being churned out and aiding calls to send in NATO troops to a potential third world war with Russia and China, or arm the rebels, who are committing atrocities of their own - including car bombings which have killed hundreds of civilians (8) - (9).

(1) = guardian.co.uk 28 May 2012 'Houla massacre survivor tells how his family were slaughtered', http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/may/28/houla-massacre-survivor-boy-syria

(2) = Channel 4 News 30 May 2012 'The Searing Grief of Houla's survivors', http://blogs.channel4.com/alex-thomsons-view/searing-grief-houlas-survivors/1739

(3) = BBC World News 07 Jun 2012 'Reporting conflict in Syria', http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors/2012/06/reporting_conflict_in_syria.html

(4) = BBC News 'New 'massacre' reported in Syria's Hama province', http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-18348201 (see right hand column headed 'Analysis' half way down the page)

(5) = Christian Science Monitor 06 Sep 2002 ‘When contemplating war, beware of babies in incubators’, http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0906/p25s02-cogn.html

(6) = Independent 24 Jun 2011 'Amnesty questions claim that Gaddafi ordered rape as weapon of war', http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/amnesty-questions-claim-that-gaddafi-ordered-rape-as-weapon-of-war-2302037.html

(7) = Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (Germany) 07 Jun 2012 'Abermals Massaker in Syrien', http://www.faz.net/aktuell/politik/neue-erkenntnisse-zu-getoeteten-von-hula-abermals-massaker-in-syrien-11776496.html ; for English translation see http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=de&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.faz.net%2Faktuell%2Fpolitik%2Fneue-erkenntnisse-zu-getoeteten-von-hula-abermals-massaker-in-syrien-11776496.html

(8) = Human Rights Watch 20 Mar 2012 'Syria: Armed Opposition Groups Committing Abuses', http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/03/20/syria-armed-opposition-groups-committing-abuses

(9) = New York Times 10 May 2012 'Dozens Killed in Large Explosions in Syrian Capital', http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/11/world/middleeast/damascus-syria-explosions-intelligence-headquarters.html?pagewanted=all ; 'Twin suicide car bombs that targeted a notorious military intelligence compound shook the Syrian capital, Damascus, on Thursday, killing and wounding hundreds of people ...It was the largest such terrorist attack since the uprising began 14 months ago, with the Health Ministry putting the toll at 55 dead and nearly 400 wounded — civilians and soldiers. '