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Syria Crackdown: Homs Bombarded, Dozens Killed

Syria

First Posted: 02/ 6/2012 6:13 am Updated: 02/ 6/2012 10:48 am


By Dominic Evans

BEIRUT, Feb 6 (Reuters) - Syrian forces bombarded Homs on Monday, killing 50 people in a sustained assault on several districts of the city which has become a centre of armed opposition to President Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian National Council opposition group said.

The bombardment came a day after the United States promised harsher sanctions against Damascus in response to Russian and Chinese vetoes of a draft U.N. resolution that would have backed an Arab plan urging Assad to step aside.

"The tally that we have received from various activists in Homs since the shelling started at six this morning is 50, mostly civilians," Catherine al-Talli of the Syrian National Council told Reuters.

The opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it had the names of 17 people killed so far, adding it expected the death toll to rise. Arab satellite television channels broadcast live footage showing smoke rising from buildings, with explosions echoing in the background.

"This is the most violent bombardment in recent days," said one activist in Syria who was in touch with Homs residents. Another activist said forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad were using multiple rocket launchers in the attack.

Activists said more than 200 people were killed on Friday night when tanks and artillery blasted the Khalidiya neighbourhood of Homs. It was the highest reported death toll in a single day since the uprising against Assad's rule, inspired by uprisings across the Arab world, erupted last March.

Damascus denies firing on houses and says images of dead bodies on the Internet were staged. State media said on Monday "armed terrorist groups" were firing mortars in the city, setting fire to tyres and blowing up empty buildings to give the impression that Homs was under fire from Assad's forces.

Reports from activists and authorities are hard to verify because Syria restricts access for independent media.

The latest assault appeared to be widely targeted, with explosions in Khalidiya, Baba Amro, Bayada and Bab Dreib neighbourhoods, the activists said.

"They want to drive the Free Syrian Army out," said Baba Amro resident Hussein Nader by telephone, referring to the rebel force of army deserters and gunmen who have controlled parts of the city for months.

"Rockets are falling seconds apart on the same target."

Activists said an explosion ripped through an oil pipeline feeding a main refinery in Homs, the second attack on the pipeline in a week, and said the opposition-held town of Zabadani, near the Lebanese border, came under fire on Monday.

Syrian army defectors announced they were organising a new "Higher Revolutionary Council" to supersede the Free Syrian Army (FSA) as the main armed force battling Assad's rule. The new body would be commanded by General Ahmed al-Sheikh, the highest-ranking officer to defect to Turkey from government forces.



SECURITY COUNCIL FAILURE

Monday's assault on Homs follows the failure Western and Arab nations to win U.N. Security Council approval for a resolution which would have condemned Assad's crackdown and supported an Arab League call on him to give up powers.

The Syrian National Council said the Russian and Chinese vetoes of the resolution had given Assad a "licence to kill".

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called the veto a "travesty", and it was denounced in strong terms by a succession of Western and Arab countries.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov defended the veto on Monday, saying it prevented the Security Council from taking sides in a civil war. He said Russia was pressing Assad's government to implement reforms more swiftly.

Russia still hopes to play a diplomatic role with Assad, a long-term ally and customer of Moscow's arms exports. Lavrov is due to fly to Damascus on Tuesday. On Monday he met the foreign minister of Bahrain, one of the Gulf states that have led the Arab League in turning against Assad.

French Defence Minister Gerard Longuet kept up criticism of the veto on Monday: "It's a disgrace for the countries that refuse to assume their responsibilities," he said.

"There are political cultures which deserve a kick in the ass," he added on Europe 1 radio. "To accept that a dictator can operate freely is disgraceful for governments that accept it."

Germany said on Monday that Russia and China would now be responsible for continued bloodshed, echoing statements by other Western and Arab countries since Saturday's veto.

The latest offensive by Assad's forces may have been planned for some time, and was signalled in a speech last month when he vowed to strike "terrorists" with an iron fist.

"The regime 10 days ago took a decision to confront the opposition in a different manner," said Ayham Kamel, of the Eurasia Group risk consultancy. "The tactics before were targeted. Now they are set on more direct confrontation with the FSA and opposition activists".

Clinton said the United States would work with other nations to try to tighten "regional and national" sanctions against Assad's government "to dry up the sources of funding and the arms shipments that are keeping the regime's war machine going".

"We will work to expose those who are still funding the regime and sending it weapons that are used against defenseless Syrians, including women and children," she said. "We will work with the friends of a democratic Syria around the world to support the opposition's peaceful political plans for change."

Clinton did not say which nations might band together or precisely what they might do. But it appeared that the United States might seek to help organise a "Friends of Syria" group - proposed by French President Nicolas Sarkozy after the veto - to advance the Arab League initiative given the inability to make headway at the U.N. because of Russian and Chinese opposition.

All 13 other members of the Security Council voted to back the resolution, which would have "fully supported" the Arab League plan for Assad to cede powers to a deputy, withdraw troops from towns and start a transition to democracy.

China has been seen as largely having followed Russia's lead in vetoing the resolution. China's state-run media said Western intervention in Libya, Afghanistan and Iraq showed the error of forced regime change.

"Currently, the situation in Syria is extremely complex. Simplistically supporting one side and suppressing the other might seem a helpful way of turning things around, but in fact it would be sowing fresh seeds of disaster," the People's Daily said.

Russia's veto has been interpreted as a signal that Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, likely to win a six-year presidential term next month, wants to protect Russian interests from what Moscow sees as U.S. and European plans to impose their will.

In an article in a government newspaper published on Monday, former Russian Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov said Washington was seeking to oust Iranian ally Assad as part of a strategy to increase its influence in the Arab world and isolate Tehran.

"Syria has become a victim for the most part because it is close to Iran," wrote Primakov, a Middle East expert who has also been Russia's foreign minister and spy chief.

"The United States and its NATO allies want to exploit the situation that arose in the spring of 2011 in the Arab world with the aim of getting rid of Arab regimes it dislikes." (Additional reporting by Khaled Yacoub Oweis in Amman, Nastassia Astrasheuskaya and Alissa de Carbonnel in Moscow, Chris Buckley in Beijing, Arshad Mohammad in Sofia, Annika Breidhardt in Berlin and Leigh Thomas in Paris; Writing by Dominic Evans; Editing by Peter Graff)

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By Dominic Evans BEIRUT, Feb 6 (Reuters) - Syrian forces bombarded Homs on Monday, killing 50 people in a sustained assault on several districts of the city which has become a centre ...
By Dominic Evans BEIRUT, Feb 6 (Reuters) - Syrian forces bombarded Homs on Monday, killing 50 people in a sustained assault on several districts of the city which has become a centre ...
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08:45 PM on 02/09/2012
Obama found no WNDs... just a whole bunch of dead Syrians.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
siegfried728711
i81u812
06:55 PM on 02/07/2012
I read a lot of the posts & too bad it won't mean a Damm thing because our crooks oops, I mean politicians cannot listen to the public ;/
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
siegfried728711
i81u812
06:32 PM on 02/07/2012
The US promised harsher sanctions against Damascus, are we black-mailers or, are we black-mailers, that is the Question !!
that's why the US is not well received with many countries, we try to control all but our own, let them do what THEY WANT AND IF IT COMES THIS WAY, THEN THAT'S ANOTHER PAGE.
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OzzieTonto
“Hatred, the only thing that lasts.”
05:28 PM on 02/07/2012
Allan Hunkin, you have memory problems. Why would these countries bother to make a new body when they can coerce the UN quite effectively into tearing a country apart? Or using arm-twisting to get a resolution enabling an illegal war like Iraq?
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07:08 PM on 02/07/2012
ah ozzie. i was going to hunt for you hp killed your last post to me.
yes the chiritians, my family in homes are all orthodox christians they have been for 2000 yrs. my sister and i are extermely concerned for the orthodox church the parishoners and the patriarch. when the two families that were murdered about a week ago only had one letter off from my grandmothers madien name as you know transliteration from arabic is dicey at best. I finally got the courage to try to find it today if there is a names list...couldnt find one. the christians most likely will be killed every one of them. so much of this is civil what control assad really has is very questionable. the old guard have been on him like a dog on a bone since he took power.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AllanHunkin
Create Elegant Solutions
11:14 AM on 02/07/2012
Perhaps it is time for all countries that support the overthrow of Syrian's government to seriously consider walking away from the UN and forming a new organization more committed to genuine human rights. Yes or no… What do you think?
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OzzieTonto
“Hatred, the only thing that lasts.”
08:23 AM on 02/07/2012
Quote: 'images of dead bodies on the Internet were staged. State media said on Monday "armed terrorist groups" were firing mortars in the city, setting fire to tyres'... The first disinfo appears above, the second is on the UK HuffPost.
It would be funny, seeing idle FSA thugs burning tyres if they hadn't also killed 'over a thousand Syrians' according to the Arab League inspectors.
This destabilisation of Syria needs to end and the Muslim Brotherhood killers, the Salafists backed by the House of Saud, the French NATO black ops critters etc need to get out of Syria and let them mend their own fences.

We know this is all about Iran, and it's all about Israel, the bleeding sore of the ME. I'm so tired of Israeli bastardry, I'm thinking of becoming an anti-semite...
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10:23 AM on 02/07/2012
sorry for thge sloppy post, didnt sleep much last night!
you can be against the policies of israel and not be an anti semite. my maternal side is syrian and from homs, both my grandparents were from homs. i dont hate the jews, or israel but i hate the policies. my last relationship i had before my husband was with a man who had been a pilot in the idf...i had no problem with him.
and YES you are correct, this is about israel it always has been. israel feels insecure, its like the bully on the playground and america propitiates to them constantly. almost every american doesnt care what israel has done or will do, heck they excuse war crimes against arabs already. . i wonder where the country i grew up in went. its went to hell. many days i am ashamed. a couple of months ago i saw a twitter feed from syria. they say the us has been chumming the water for this. syria has large amounts of undeveloped oil in the north east. this is why i felt the boarder incursion between syrian and iraq during the war was put into place. america wants the oil fields. americans dont know the connection between BP and israel that keeps the gazans from having their coast line.
07:12 AM on 02/07/2012
Maybe we can dress Nanny Peloski up in a head scarf and send her back over there to straighten Asado out.
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Birdman 49
Living day by day
09:31 AM on 02/07/2012
I know lets send Bush over there and see if they will talk to him
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10:25 AM on 02/07/2012
people are dying children being killed and you wanna make a jab at bush? shame on you too.
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10:25 AM on 02/07/2012
to use this situation of bloodshed and horror to bring out childish name calling for your personal political agenda is too low for words. shame on you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
muck-raker
give me liberty or give me death
06:21 AM on 02/07/2012
Washington's longstanding policy is regime change in Iran and Syria. At issue is replacing independent regimes with client ones and securing unchallenged control of valued Middle East resources.

On February 4, Russia and China vetoed a largely one-sided anti-Assad resolution. A previous article called him more victim than villain. Yet he's falsely blamed for months of externally generated violence.
Since violence erupted last March, Syria was blamed for Western-backed insurgents against him. It's part of Washington's "New Middle East" project to control North Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia to Russia and China's borders.

For over a decade, regime change plans targeted Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon, Iran, Somalia, Sudan, Libya, Syria, and other countries outside the region.

Replicating Libya's model is Washington's template for future NATO aggression. Whether it's employed fully in Syria remains to be seen.

So far, heavily armed insurgents entered from regional countries. Anti-government violence followed. Trapped between warring sides, civilian casualties mount. No end of conflict approaches. In fact, the worst is yet to come.

On February 5, Israel's Mossad-connected DEBKA/file said Russia put "Rapid Reaction Force (aka Spetsnaz) units in Black Sea bases on (alert) to set out for Syria to defend Damascus."

Russia's determined to avoid another Libyan-style intervention. In response, Obama said Washington, key NATO partners, and Gulf allies will (in DEBKA/file's words) "redouble their efforts to unseat Bashar Assad."
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10:32 AM on 02/07/2012
excellent post.
06:06 AM on 02/07/2012
The Arab world is circling the drain. Not because of foreign intervention, but because of a few simple facts. The Arab world produces nothing the world wants...except for oil. The Arab world has unsustainable population growth mired in societies with endemic corruption and tribalism.
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ladyrosedeky
01:22 AM on 02/07/2012
So far Bashar hasn't pulled a papa Assad and hasn't sent in steam rollers into Homs like his father did back in 82 which ended in leveling all of Homs. However, a lot of this violence could end if all the outside players would stop providing everyone inside Syria with weapons. This includes Russia who is Syria's main supplier via all the military contracts Russia has with Syria. Then there is Iran which for its own purposes are sending money, military, and weapon support. (Wouldn't you love to be a hurting Iranian citizen knowing your goverment is spending treasure on this.) Now add Qatar, the Arab League; and the Saudis funneling weapons into the Free Syrian Army. Like I said, all the outside players need to step back and stop providing the hardware which is encouraging this blood bath. In this matter, we also have to remember Russia and China have different interest than we do. Russia doesn't want the Syrian government to be unstable because they boarder Syria and have a lot bussiness interest with Syria. China doesn't want Syria's government to fail because they need Syria's port to stay open. It is the only port in that region available to them. So they do want things resolved and peace but sometimes we need to be willing to take a lighter, less bullying hand when working with others on negotiation. This was something the late Richard Holbrook was a master of.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
muck-raker
give me liberty or give me death
04:04 AM on 02/07/2012
excellent post...it would seem today that the entire Middle East is enraged...I have just started to look at who are the REAL Players here...What I see is the Saudis who all of a sudden seem to be a driving force. We have friction between the Sunnies and Shites. Then we have the Arab League which seem to be stirring the pot. the Arab League facilitates political, economic, cultural, scientific and social programs designed to promote the interests of the Arab world.[3][4] It has served as a forum for the member states to coordinate their policy positions, to deliberate on matters of common concern, to settle some Arab disputes, and to limit conflicts such as the 1958 Lebanon crisis.
The POWER behind the curtain is certainly the USA...Russia..and Israel who works 24-7 to make Iran look like one of the problem children here. It has all of the ear marks of a proxy war all over again. Countries vying for markets to sell their products. Countries looking to keep NUCLEAR power to themselves, no others need apply.
more when I find it. The Middle East is on the cusp of massive CONFLAGRATION
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Nico Jordaan
Double Standards dont apply to me!
05:41 AM on 02/07/2012
The UEA will also stop trading oil in dollars, does this mean they will see "democracy"there soon too?
http://peakoil.com/publicpolicy/china-and-uae-ditch-us-dollar-will-use-yuan-for-oil-trade/comment-page-1/#comment-18973
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ladyrosedeky
04:18 PM on 02/07/2012
Well Qatar has been providing money and weapons to the Free Syrian Army. There are more groups in Syria than just Beshar's Alawite backed government and the Sunnis. There are Christians, Kurds, and Druids are the other large groups in Syria. All these so far back Assad because they have been protected under him and don't know if they would be protected and have the same life under Sunni rule. However, with Iran getting into the mix of aiding Assad and his Army, they may turn against him. Even high ranking officers have started to defect from the army such as Gen. Ahmed al-Sheikh but they haven't been joining the Free Syrian Army. They have been fleeing to Turkey. Time will tell and if you have listened to detailed interviews with the Russians, their argument has some moral high ground for what their actions were at the U.N. and we may have hurt ourselves in the long run.
01:19 AM on 02/07/2012
China and Russia - scum
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
01:42 AM on 02/07/2012
How many times have we vetoed resolutions? A dozen times as often as either of them. We have vetoed every resolution against Israel. We vetoed every resolution against the treatment of blacks in S. Africa.
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Nico Jordaan
Double Standards dont apply to me!
02:46 AM on 02/07/2012
Yes you did, I live in South Africa, I also know far more secrets then most people regarding your Sculls & bones, Rhodes, petrodollar, globalization plans ect...eh that is all Family history. just remember all those dictatorships the US supports in the Emirates, Qatar ect...
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siegfried728711
i81u812
06:35 PM on 02/07/2012
toss, we owe china a lot of $$
01:04 AM on 02/07/2012
But Hillary you were quite happy when you arm twisted other countries to veto the Palestinian quest for freedom.
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gattic619
12:37 AM on 02/07/2012
send in the CIA to kill the tyrant in SYRIA
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
01:35 AM on 02/07/2012
Why?

We already have sacrificed almost all we profess to believe in. Are we now going to jump in to executing everyone we are mad at?
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gattic619
10:19 AM on 02/07/2012
WHY NOT.. he is real;ly bad and killing too many innocent people...Dont invade just kill him and a few close assosciates
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dim
one in a can
02:09 AM on 02/07/2012
Won't help. They've got a tyrant breeding program there. They'll just replace him with another tyrant.
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10:37 AM on 02/07/2012
you seem to think we arent like that. look at camp delta. the black op sites. please we have no moral highground in the west.
12:27 AM on 02/07/2012
Great to see Sunni Saudi Arabia man up to defend their fellow Sunnis in Alawite controlled Syria.

Oh, wait, the Saudis punked out. All hand wringing and no action.
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siegfried728711
i81u812
06:38 PM on 02/07/2012
hey mike, that hand-wringing, does that have to do with a chicken??
or, in other words, slapping-a-monkey???
12:04 AM on 02/07/2012
China & Russia. Still part of what Reagan called "Evil Empires". Over 25 years have passed and nothing has changed. At least they do not flip-flop, they are always consistant. Both China & Russia always love the bad guys.
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gattic619
12:37 AM on 02/07/2012
Look..the term BAD guys needs to be analyzed....sometimes we are the BAD guys too!!!
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siegfried728711
i81u812
06:39 PM on 02/07/2012
gattics, does that mean we're good??
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ladyrosedeky
01:12 AM on 02/07/2012
Gee, guess you don't know America's long friendly history it had with Saddam and Mubarak. America was great friends and even helped him take power in Iraq because we wanted him to be the one in charge. Saddam was great as long as he was fulfilling our needs but when that changed he had to go. And poor Mubarak, he was another one the American political machine skrewed over. And oh boy, was America ever good buddies with the National Party that used to rule South Africa. You remember, the apartheid government. Grant it was a very long time ago but we were very friendly and partnered with them too. Seems we have our fair share of loving the bad guys too. Heck, don't we do business with China even after seeing what they did to the students in Tiananmen Square? Heck, they even do a great organ transplant business. Do you know why and how? The majority of the people's organs they use don't have any say either. These are the organs of executed prisoners of which they have a lot.