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Syria Ceasefire Deadline Observed, Assad Regime Forces Remain In Place

By ELIZABETH A. KENNEDY and ZEINA KARAM 04/12/12 09:12 PM ET AP

Syria Ceasefire
In this Aug. 17, 2011, photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, Syrian President Bashar Assad addresses a meeting of the central committee of the Baath party in Damascus, Syria. (AP Photo/SANA, File)

BEIRUT — Syria's opposition called for widespread protests Friday to test the regime's commitment to an internationally brokered cease-fire that the U.N. chief described as so fragile it could collapse with a single gunshot.

Regime forces halted heavy shelling and other major attacks in line with the truce that began at dawn Thursday, though there were accusations of scattered violence by both sides. The government ignored demands to pull troops back to barracks, however, defying a key aspect of the plan, which aims to calm a year-old uprising that has killed 9,000 people and has pushed the country toward civil war.

"The onus is on the government of Syria to prove that their words will be matched by their deeds at this time," U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told reporters in Geneva. He said the world was watching with skeptical eyes.

"This cease-fire process is very fragile. It may be broken any time," Ban added, saying "another gunshot" could doom the truce.

The presence of tanks and troops could discourage any large gatherings, but the leader of the opposition Syrian National Council, Burhan Ghalioun, urged Syrians to demonstrate peacefully on Friday. "Tomorrow, like every Friday, the Syrian people are called to demonstrate even more and put the regime in front of its responsibilities – put the international community in front of its responsibilities."

A massive protest would be an important test of the cease-fire – whether President Bashar Assad will allow his forces to hold their fire and risk ushering in a weekslong sit-in or losing control over territory that government forces recently recovered from rebels.

So far, the military crackdown has prevented protesters from recreating the powerful displays of dissent seen in Egypt's Tahrir Square, where hundreds of thousands of people camped out in an extraordinary scene that drove longtime leader Hosni Mubarak from power.

If the truce holds, it would be the first time the regime has observed an internationally brokered cease-fire since Assad's regime launched a brutal crackdown 13 months ago on mass protests calling for his ouster.

"The test will come when we start to see protests across the length and breadth of the country," said Salman Shaikh, director of the Brookings Doha Center. "Is the Assad regime willing to accept that there will likely be hundreds of thousands of people on the streets in the next few days? And will they accept those protesters, if they are not breaking any laws, occupying certain spaces and towns and centers of towns, should that start to arise?"

An outbreak of violence at a chaotic rally could give the regime a pretext for ending the truce. And it would be difficult to determine the source of such an attack, given that Syria is largely sealed off from journalists and outside observers.

The U.N. chief's envoy, Kofi Annan, urged the 15-nation U.N. Security Council to authorize an observer mission that would keep the cease-fire going and to demand that Assad order his troops back to barracks, U.N. diplomats said. The council could adopt a resolution on the observers as early as Friday, the diplomats said on condition of anonymity because the meeting was closed.

Western powers, skeptical that Assad will call off the killings, said an end to violence is just the first step.

U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron urged Syria's allies Russia and China to help "tighten the noose" around Assad's regime. Russia and China have blocked strong action against Syria at the Security Council, fearing it would open the door to possible NATO airstrikes like those that helped topple Libya's Moammar Gadhafi.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton noted that Assad failed to comply with key obligations, such as pulling back tanks.

"The burden of fully and visibly meeting all of these obligations continues to rest with the regime," she said. "They cannot pick and choose. For it to be meaningful, this apparent halt in violence must lead to a credible political process and a peaceful, inclusive democratic transition."

The U.S. Embassy in Damascus published an image on its Facebook page that purports to show tanks deployed within the city of Homs.

"Clearly, Assad is not complying," the embassy said.

Bassma Kodmani, a spokeswoman for the opposition Syrian National Council, said a heavy security presence, including checkpoints and snipers, remained in the streets despite the cease-fire.

"There is no evidence of any significant withdrawal," she told reporters in Geneva. "The real test for us today is if people can go and demonstrate peacefully" she added. "This is the real reality check."

But analysts said the apparent halt in government attacks suggests Assad's allies are pressuring him for the first time, after shielding him from international condemnation in the past. Annan has visited Russia, Iran and China to get the broadest possible backing for the plan.

On Thursday, the Russian and Chinese ambassadors called the Syrian cease-fire an important step and said they supported implementation of all points in the Annan plan – including the troop and equipment withdrawal.

"We're encouraged that we do now have a cessation of violence in Syria," Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said. "We hope it holds. Everybody needs to behave with maximum prudence for that to happen."

"Frankly, there is one thing which Mr. Annan, I hope, is going to accomplish very soon – clear-cut agreement by opposition leaders to enter into dialogue with the Syrian government," Churkin added. "This so far has not happened."

There were signs of how easily the Annan plan could fray.

In the hours after the 6 a.m. deadline, at least four civilians were reported killed – three of them by sniper fire – and the state-run news agency said "terrorist groups" set off a roadside bomb that killed a soldier. But there was no sign of the heavy shelling, rocket attacks and sniper fire that have become routine.

Troops also intensified searches at checkpoints, tightening controls ahead of possible large-scale protests Friday.

Although Syria promised to comply with the cease-fire, the regime carved out an important condition – that it still has a right to defend itself against the terrorists that it says are behind the rebellion.

The government denies that it is facing a popular uprising. Instead, the regime says, terrorists are carrying out a foreign conspiracy to destroy Syria. Because the regime has treated any sign of dissent as a provocation, many observers fear that an abrupt end to the bloodshed will be all but impossible.

In the early days of the Syrian rebellion, Syrian forces used tanks, snipers and machine guns on peaceful protesters, driving many of them to take up arms. Since then, the uprising has transformed into an armed insurgency, with more and more protesters taking up arms and rebels forming a fighting force to bring down the regime.

The rebel Free Syrian Army, made up largely of army defectors, has said it will observe the cease-fire. But the opposition is not well-organized, and there are growing fears of groups looking to exploit the chaos.

Saudi Arabia and Qatar have called for arming the rebels, but even if they follow through there is no guarantee that such efforts could cripple Assad's well-armed regime.

Western powers have pinned their hopes on Annan's plan, in part because they are running out of options. NATO-style military intervention has been all but ruled out, in part because the conflict is so explosive. Syria has had a web of allegiances to powerful forces including Lebanon's Hezbollah and Shiite powerhouse Iran, and conflict could spark a regional conflagration.

With Thursday's relative ease in violence, many see a U.N. observer team as a key next step.

"It is difficult to fully assess the situation on the ground, in the absence of U.N. observers," Ban told reporters. "And therefore we are working with the Security Council to send an observer team as promptly as possible."

___

Associated Press writers Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations, Frank Jordans and John Heilprin in Geneva, Matthew Lee in Washington, Jamey Keaten in Paris and Selcan Hacaoglu in Ankara, Turkey, contributed to this report.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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In this March 29, 2012 photo, Syrians walk between destroyed buildings in the Inshaat neighborhood of Homs, Syria. (AP Photo)

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syria car bomb Syrian policemen inspect the site of a car bomb explosion on Mazzeh highway in the capital Damascus on July 13, 2012. AFP PHOTO/STR (Photo credit should read -/AFP/GettyImages)


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U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Susan Rice tweets:

@ AmbassadorRice : #Syria regime turned artillery, tanks and helicopters on its own men & women. It unleashed knife-wielding shabiha gangs on its own children.

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Russia says international envoy Kofi Annan will visit Moscow on Monday to discuss the ongoing crisis in Syria. Russia also called for an inquiry into an alleged massacre that took place in the village of Tramseh on Thursday. "We have no doubt that this wrongdoing serves the interests of those powers that are not seeking peace but persistently seek to sow the seeds of interconfessional and civilian conflict on Syrian soil," Russia's foreign ministry said in a statement, according to Reuters. Moscow did not apportion blame for the killings.

Read more on Reuters.com.

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The Associated Press obtained a video that purports to show the aftermath of an alleged massacre in the village of Tramseh, near Hama.

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How do Syria's fighters get their arms? An overview put together by Reuters explains that there are three gateways to the country -- Lebanon, Turkey, and Iraq.

Syrian rebels are smuggling small arms into Syria through a network of land and sea routes involving cargo ships and trucks moving through Turkey, Lebanon and Iraq, maritime intelligence and Free Syrian Army (FSA) officers say.

Western and regional powers deny any suggestion they are involved in gun running. Their interest in the sensitive border region lies rather in screening to ensure powerful weapons such as surface to air missiles do not find their way to Islamist or other militants.

Read the full report here.

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syria This citizen journalism image made from video provided by Shaam News Network SNN, purports to show a victim wounded by violence that, according to anti-regime activists, was carried out by government forces in Tremseh, Syria about 15 kilometers (nine miles) northwest of the central city of Hama, Thursday, July 12, 2012. The accounts, some of which claim more than 200 people were killed in the violence Thursday, could not be independently confirmed, but would mark the latest in a string of brutal offensives by Syrian forces attempting to crush the rebellion. (AP Photo/Shaam News Network, SNN)


syria This citizen journalism image made from video provided by Shaam News Network SNN, purports to show a man mourning a victim killed by violence that, according to anti-regime activists, was carried out by government forces in Tremseh, Syria about 15 kilometers (nine miles) northwest of the central city of Hama, Thursday, July 12, 2012. (AP Photo/Shaam News Network, SNN)


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According to the Hama Revolutionary Council, a Syrian opposition group, more than 220 people have been killed in a new alleged massacre in Taramseh. Earlier reports said more than 100 people were killed. "More than 220 people fell today in Taramseh," the Council said in a statement. "They died from bombardment by tanks and helicopters, artillery shelling and summary executions."

Fadi Sameh, an opposition activist from Taramseh, told Reuters he had left the town before the reported massacre but was in touch with residents. "It appears that Alawite militiamen from surrounding villages descended on Taramseh after its rebel defenders pulled out, and started killing the people. Whole houses have been destroyed and burned from the shelling," Sameh claimed.

Read more on Reuters.com.

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Syrian activist Rami Jarrah tweets that Syrian State TV has confirmed deaths in Tremseh. "Terrorists" is often the term used by the Syrian regime for opposition forces.

@ AlexanderPageSY : Syrian State TV: clashes between security apparatus & terrorists in #Tremseh of #Hama leaves large numbers of terrorists killed #Syria

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@ Reuters : UPDATE: DEATH TOLL IN SYRIAN FORCES' ATTACK ON VILLAGE IN SYRIA'S HAMA REGION IS MORE THAN 200, MOSTLY CIVILIANS - OPPOSITION ACTIVISTS

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@ Reuters : At least 100 killed in Syrian village: opposition activists http://t.co/FG3fJwu8

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BEIRUT — Syria's opposition called for widespread protests Friday to test the regime's commitment to an internationally brokered cease-fire that the U.N. chief described as so fragile it could c...
BEIRUT — Syria's opposition called for widespread protests Friday to test the regime's commitment to an internationally brokered cease-fire that the U.N. chief described as so fragile it could c...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ligligl
feelthy liberal! ...and not just a pretty face!
06:25 PM on 04/17/2012
Gotta watch them quiet Opthamologists...
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07:54 PM on 04/13/2012
Is target practice over ??
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roger Cottrell
05:47 AM on 04/13/2012
With heavy armour still deployed in or near various Syrian cities I still doubt the Syrian regime's sincerity in holding to this ceasefire agreement. mayvbe their allies, particularly Russia, are losing patience with them but threats by Syrian secret police to potential protesters this morning that they will be killed if they participate in protests after Friday prayers bodes ill. Also, even if the Syrian forces don't fire on the protests what's to stop the secret police picking up people afterwards? Regime change is still the only option in Syria.
02:52 AM on 04/13/2012
Only the naive beleive these butchers will observe a cease fire. This is a political lullaby for magical dreamers who won't confront evil and therefore allow it to triumph. If Syria had oil like Iraq and Libya, western powers would have intervened long ago.Peter Klika, Kapaau, Hawaii
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rtrout9496
makeing Koolaid for the mass's !
03:30 AM on 04/13/2012
really.. and how much Oil did hawaii have when we came in there to put a base because your countrymen and women were affraid that Japan wanted to take over those Islands... your a fool.. we are helping over there the best way we can with International law.. ect... what ??? you dont think the CIA is over there with a stash of cash ready to help a lending hand... think about it... its a very nice place to be if you want to keep an eye on other countrys in the area,.... mmmm iran... Turkey...and many more... but first we like to see countrys have elected people in office.. where the people can say whatever they want... your lucky that Hawaii became a State... or you would be part of Japan and back in that era.. they treated their people like crap and your ansesters..... mmmm how would they have been treated... you prolly wouldnt even have been born....the Japanese wpould have prolly killed everyone on those islands...stop and think about.. better yet.. go ask your Grand parents what would have happened if Japan would have taken over those islands Pre WW2...
01:14 AM on 04/13/2012
With around 10,000 dead does Assad think that everyone will simply go back to what they were doing before the uprising?
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02:14 AM on 04/13/2012
The American Civil war how many dead?!

Then WWII and WWII

I guess, this war is not over, but do you

Remember Franco and

Augusto José Ramón Pinochet Ugarte, more commonly known as Augusto Pinochet (Spanish pronunciation: [auˈɣusto pinoˈtʃet]),[note 1] (25 November 1915 – 10 December 2006) was a Chilean army general and dictator who assumed power in a coup d'état on 11 September 1973. He was the Commander-in-Chief of the Chilean army from 1973 to 1998, president of the Government Junta of Chile from 1973 to 1981 and President of the Republic from 1974 until transferring power to a democratically elected president in 1999

How about McCarthy in the USA or even Religious war in the USA
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12:49 AM on 04/13/2012
Call it what you want. The Fighting is western paid for and armed. That is war!

The Turks allowed them to fire from their soil and that means a wider conflict as the Russians move into balance out the power - balance!
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darkinhereo
We're Going The Wrong Way !
12:37 AM on 04/13/2012
How does Assad expect to lead after this ? I'm sure that he's very isolated. At some point he'll step out and somebody will be waiting for him.
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02:15 AM on 04/13/2012
You mean Mossad!
11:47 PM on 04/12/2012
No don’t due that, let them keep killing each other.
11:18 PM on 04/12/2012
When we turn on the AM news at 7:00, the first thing we will hear is 'Breaking News. Syrians are back at war'
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12:46 AM on 04/13/2012
Sorry the world is heading to war. The Israeli government (IG) is pulling us all into a 3rd world war with the Neocons:

Summer
Russia Planning Troops Deployment On Iran's Northern Border

By F. Michael Maloof

The Russian military anticipates that an attack will occur on Iran by the summer and has developed an action plan to move Russian troops through neighboring Georgia to stage in Armenia, which borders on the Islamic republic, according to informed Russian sources. Continue
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article31069.htm

The whole world is on the edge and the Russians as the Iranians have been preparing for this -
05:56 PM on 04/14/2012
The world is not heading to war. All we need is North Korea, Iran, or Syria, to be successful at the one thing we DON'T want them to be successful at, and we will be at war.

Armageddon
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ligligl
feelthy liberal! ...and not just a pretty face!
06:29 PM on 04/17/2012
...and this screed has what, to do with Syria...?
10:32 PM on 04/12/2012
Obama tells Assad to stop killing his people. What about all the people who die every year from lack of healthcare in this country?
10:15 PM on 04/12/2012
The current US administration is not very eager to see the overthrow of Assad. Russia just provides cover.
Could be they fear AQ.
09:39 PM on 04/12/2012
Hillary Clinton said in a press conference that the cease fire should lead to a transition of government. Now isn't that a good inducement to continue a cease fire while the Sauidis/Turks/US fund and arm the rebels.
10:25 PM on 04/12/2012
Hillary is SO bright!! She really learned how to talk to people while she was employed as crank at Walmart.
09:25 PM on 04/12/2012
I give it another 3 days...max.
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BeamMeUpScottie
None of the Above should be on every US ballot.
12:24 AM on 04/13/2012
Why so optimistic?.
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checkmoot
We have met the enemy and he is us.
08:57 PM on 04/12/2012
Problem is, that if the Rebs suceed in overthrowing the Syrian government, there is no government in the wings to take on the job of running the country. Libya still doesn't have a central government, regional militias fighting each other over local control.
07:15 PM on 04/12/2012
Don't have time for more. Be aware of Israel and its settlements in now the West Bank
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ligligl
feelthy liberal! ...and not just a pretty face!
06:32 PM on 04/17/2012
Huh?