Posted on 04/07/2015 1:26:22 PM PDT by C19fan
In the Assad regime's heartland, dead officers are sent home in ambulances, while the corpses of ordinary soldiers are returned in undecorated pick-up trucks. Then come the press gangs: military recruiters raid houses to find replacements by force for the dwindling ranks of Syria's military. Sharing their sect with President Bashar al-Assad, Alawites have long been the core constituency for the Syrian regime. As the civil war drags into its fifth year, the minority sect is seen by opposition rebels as remaining unwaveringly loyal.
(Excerpt) Read more at telegraph.co.uk ...
That is why they are bringing in Iranian divisions.
Press gangs are a familiar item from Civil wars throughout the ages.
How is this any different than what ISIS is doing in the territories they control?
Or in Ukraine, or during the American Civil War?
100% of them will be dead if ISIS wins. As the article states, they are apostates. The men will be killed and the women will be sold into sexual slavery.
War is simply demographics sped up.
Syria's military age Alawites would be males aged 12-49, or roughly 660K men (12% Alawites x 50% males x 50% 12-49 individuals x 22m Syrians). 1/3 of that is 220K Alawite dead. Seem a little high, considering the total death toll is estimated at 200K.
The Alawites may be paying a high price for their loyalty to Assad, but they don’t have a choice.
They are an obscure ethnicity and Shia sect. They are a distinct minority in Syria, and as a general rule, if minorities rule a nation in control over a majority, that rule will not be peaceful or kind.
If ISIS took over or some other Sunni group (probably supported by Saudi Arabia) the Alawites would be slaughtered.
Nonetheless, Washington seems to be pursuing a policy of regime change on the cheap in Syria. The United States has halved Syria's economic growth by stopping Iraqi oil exports through Syria's pipeline, imposing strict economic sanctions and blocking European trade agreements. Regular reports that the United States is considering bombing Syria, and freezing transactions by the central bank have driven investors away. Next week, United Nations investigators will begin interviewing top officials in Damascus about the bombing death of the anti-Syrian politician Rafik Hariri in Lebanon, a matter that many expect the United States will bring before the Security Council. Politicians and businessmen alike here are convinced that Washington wants to bring down the regime, not merely change its behavior.
Nonetheless, the two countries have much to talk about: both are trying to solve their Iraq problems. They share a common interest in subduing jihadism and helping Iraq build stability. But instead of helping Syria help the United States, Washington prefers to make demands. The Bush administration believes it will be an easy matter for Mr. Assad to crack down on the Syrian Sunnis, who are giving comfort and assistance to mostly Arab fighters traveling though Syria.
On the contrary, it would be extremely costly for Mr. Assad. Sunni Arabs make up 65 percent of the population and keeping them content is crucial for any Syrian leader.
Syria has already taken the easy steps. It has built a large sand wall and placed thousands of extra troops along its 350-mile border with Iraq. Foreign diplomats here dismiss the American claims that the Syrian government is helping jihadists infiltrate Iraq. All the same, Syria has not undertaken the more painful internal measures required to stop jihadists before they get to the border, nor has it openly backed America's occupation of Iraq.
Nor is Mr. Assad - who inherited his job from his father, Hafez, in 2000 - willing to make a wholesale change in his authoritarian policies. But he has worked hard to repair sectarian relations in Syria. He has freed most political prisoners. He has tolerated a much greater level of criticism than his father did. The religious tolerance enforced by the government has made Syria one of the safest countries in the region. Washington is asking Mr. Assad to jeopardize this domestic peace.
Worse, if Mr. Assad's government collapsed, chances are the ethnic turmoil that would result would bring to power militant Sunnis who would actively aid the jihadists in Iraq. Mr. Assad is a member of the Alawite minority, a Shiite offshoot that fought a bloody battle against Sunni extremists in the 1980's. For Mr. Assad to help the United States, he must have sufficient backing from Washington to put greater restrictions and pressure on the Sunni majority. It would be suicide for him to provoke Sunnis and extremists while Washington seeks his downfall.
The headline is disingenuous. Alawites aren’t loyal to Assad - they’re merely convinced that as apostates in Sunni eyes, they will be exterminated if Sunni Arabs win, in accordance with the Koranic injunction to kill apostates in the most painful ways possible.
Assad’s Russian tanks after meeting combat-engineer-trained guerrillas: crematoria.
Assad’s Russian tanks after meeting combat-engineer-trained guerrillas: Crematoriums.
[Little spelling correction there.]
I would accept either answer as correct.
I read one article that said Alawites were 12 and a half percent of the population. Americans believe in democracy for America but how can these figures translate into other countries? Clearly, this is one factor in that troubled situation.
It’s hard to see how Assad can hang on to power, perhaps he is getting a good amount of help from Iran and Hezbollah. Dirty war.
An article was posted here or I saw it somewhere is that the Alawites have long been a minority over there but in the late ‘60s or ‘70s, they were able to seize power. The Alawites have always had to fend for themselves.
Here is some more curious reading. I confess I do not understand the situation well.
I lived in Syria for over a year and have many very close friends there. Officially there are very few Christians there but actually Christians might be as high as 35%. When in Syria I saw that the people were forcibly keep under control by the army. On every corner of the city of Damascus, where I lived, was at least one army guard watching the people. Thirty years ago the then dictator, Hafez al-Assad, tried to kill all the Christians and Jews, but realized that they were the economic foundation of Syria and it was not in his best interest.
However even when I was there, the Christians were a second class race of people. I had a full time driver who taught me a great deal. They have a jail that is at least 15 floors deep in the ground with a bear at the bottom. Any people causing disruption in the prison are fed to the bear. That prison and the Palestinian camps cannot be photographed or even looked at.
Finally the unarmed people had enough of this violent Dictator and rose up in mass against him more than a year ago. I am so proud of these people. In spite of having no protection and being slaughtered day after day, for over a year now they have daily gone back into the streets to demonstrate for freedom. Such brave people I have never seen in my life.
Unity Publishing , so Rick who has run this website for many years really doesn't have any special interests and writes about Syria largely as an observer, common-man type.
If youd like to be on or off, please FR mail me.
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Interesting article......bump
That is already happening to the Yazdis.
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