A thought entered my mind a few minutes ago and it is
this, in modern times with the advent of satellites, drones,
miniature aerial surveillance vehicles and advance computing
and telecommunications it would be practically impossible to
amass a great quantity of troops undetected.
Then I thought what if the conflict in Syria is being
staged to move troops and armaments with the excuse that it
is a civil war when in reality is something much more
sinister as the wiping out of the Christian population of
Syria while moving foreign troops into Syria with the
disguise of a civil war.
I was going to go to google to learn where the Christian
population of Syria lived and the ares of conflict. the
question I asked was: “ Map of the Christian
neighborhoods of Damascus Syria” and the first answer was
the article below.
Keep in mind that the only people killed in the bomb was
the defense minister, a Christian and some other minor
officials who could have been the target of a purge by the
President.
This war is a Satanic plan for the erradication of Israel
and the Christian population of the middle east. In Egypt
the plan is well advanced.
What better time to attack Israel that in the month of Av
where in the past on day 9 this nation has had both Temples
destroyed, the expulsion of the Jews from Spain and the
start of Hitler’s Holocaust.
Let us pray for the Christians that are the target of the
Satanic Islamic movement allied with Russia and other
communist nations about to fulfill Ezekiel 38-39 and Psalm
83 and Isaiah 17.
Nando
Syrian Conflict Draws In Christians
Clashes Engulf Damascus and Aleppo, Forcing Minority’s
Members to Take Sides; Revenge Killings Offer Cautionary
Tale
European Pressphoto
AgencySyrian rebels patrolled on Sunday near
Aleppo, where residents said government forces laid
siege to the Salahuddin neighborhood after clashing with
rebels there over the weekend.
ZAHLEH, Lebanon—Syria’s conflict, increasingly
characterized as a Muslim sectarian war, is now also
threatening to engulf the country’s estimated 2 million
Christians.
As clashes between government forces and rebels spread
over the weekend from the capital Damascus to the northern
city of Aleppo—Syria’s two largest urban centers that are
home to sizable Christian communities—the Christians and
other minorities are being forced to take sides.
Several Christian residents and antiregime activists in
Damascus say the regime is now arming male loyalists in
parts of the capital dominated by Christians and Druze and
Shiite minorities.
Syria’s conflict has until now largely played out between
supporters of President Bashar al-Assad—whose minority
Shiite-linked Alawite sect makes up the core of his security
apparatus—and an opposition dominated by Sunni Muslims,
estimated to make up 70% of the country’s 23 million people.
Christians account for nearly 10% of the population. They
have generally remained neutral or stood by the Assad
regime, which has characterized itself as a secular
government holding together a nation of diverse faiths.
On Sunday, opposition activists in the capital said
government troops conducted raids in several Damascus
districts where rebel fighters have been active for more
than a week. In Aleppo, residents said government forces
laid siege to the Salahuddin neighborhood after they clashed
with rebels there over the weekend giving residents the
chance to leave and rebels an ultimatum to surrender.
They say at least 200 Russian-made AK-47s have been
handed out in one Christian neighborhood in Old Damascus
since Thursday, a day after a bombing killed four top regime
officials including the defense minister Gen. Dawoud Rajha,
a Christian. A recent wave of kidnappings, intimidation and
revenge killings in the town of Qusayr, in an area of Syria
where religious groups have lived side by side for
centuries, provides a cautionary example of what may lie
ahead for other heavily Christian areas particularly in
urban centers.
Syria in the Spotlight
Take a look back over the highlights of the past year
in Syria in a timeline, and review the latest events in
a map.
On Saturday Brig. Gen. Nabil Zougheib, a Christian
missiles expert, was assassinated along with his wife and
son at their home in a Damascus Christian neighborhood,
activists and state media said. Many Christians believe they
are being targeted for being mostly with the regime.
Qusayr’s conflict was sparked when some local Christians
acted as informants to Mr. Assad’s security apparatus, said
several Sunni Muslims from the area. In the months since,
several men from a prominent Christian family have been shot
dead, more than a dozen residents have gone unaccounted for
and the majority of Christians have fled town, said
residents on both sides of the conflict.
“The situation is worsening. People are rejecting each
other,” said a Syrian Christian priest from the western city
of Homs, who attended an interfaith meeting in Geneva in
mid-July that brought together Christian, Alawite and Sunni
religious leaders in a bid to stave off intercommunal
violence.
Those risks appear to be spreading. In an enclave of some
30 villages west of the city of Homs known as Wadi
al-Nasara—the Valley of Christians—a family of pro-regime
Christians has taken up arms alongside Alawite loyalists,
say residents who recently fled the area.
And now many fear the same dynamic is playing out in
major cities where the regime is starting to arm loyalist
civilians from minority groups.
“The slightest skirmish and we are going to be part of
the bloodbath,” said an antiregime Christian activist from
Damascus who says she is the odd one out in a family of
staunch Assad supporters.
Qusayr lies southwest of the city of Homs, less than 10
miles from the Lebanese border.
The provinces of Homs and adjacent Hama, collectively
known as the Orontes River Valley, have been the epicenter
of Syria’s sectarian civil conflict.
The accounts of Qusayr’s troubles were provided by more
than a dozen people from the town, including Muslim fighters
and members of a prominent Christian family now taking
refuge in the eastern Lebanese city of Zahleh across the
border.
Tensions started more than a year ago, after early
protests against Mr. Assad’s regime turned violent.
Government forces started raiding Muslim homes, these people
said, arresting suspected antiregime activists and
protesters.
Pro-regime residents, many of them Christian, helped
government security forces, opposition fighters and
residents say.
“If you went out to protest, they would write down your
name and send a text message to security forces,” said
Mahmoud Harba, 25 years old, a Sunni rebel from Qusayr
hospitalized after losing a leg in the fighting.
The worst offenders, he and other Muslims from the town
said, were members of the pro-regime Kasouha clan, which is
prominent among the 10,000 Christians in the town of 60,000.
Rebels retaliated against the suspected informants last
summer by killing one of the family’s three adult brothers,
Muslim regime opponents and Christians from Qusayr say.
The murdered man’s brother, Hanna Kasouha, erected a
security checkpoint next to his home and took up arms, aided
by government forces, these people said. Syrian authorities
couldn’t be reached to comment.
One photo of Mr. Kasouha on a relative’s mobile phone
shows a heavyset, bearded man dressed in military fatigues.
Many local Muslims, meanwhile, had joined the ranks of
antiregime fighters. Among them are an increasing number of
Sunni Muslim fundamentalists who see the conflict as a holy
war. Members of Mr. Assad’s Alawite minority are infidels
who should be wiped out, according to this view, which is
barely more tolerant of Christians.
“All Alawites must be slaughtered,” said Hassan Harba,
30, a Sunni Muslim rebel fighter who was being treated
recently at a hospital in Lebanon for wounds sustained
during fighting with pro-government forces. He isn’t against
Christians, he said, but against those who help the regime
in its brutal crackdown on the opposition. “The informant
must die,” Mr. Harba said.
After Mr. Kasouha set up the checkpoint with the help of
security forces, Muslim rebel fighters kidnapped Mr.
Kasouha’s uncle, according to both sides.
Mr. Kasouha then organized the kidnapping of eight local
Muslim men, these people said.
Several times during the height of the crisis, in
February, loudspeakers from mosques in the town told
Christians they should leave the town, say both Muslims and
Christians.
Town elders on both sides of the dispute negotiated a
hostage exchange in late February, a Christian resident
said. As part of the deal, Mr. Kasouha said he would leave.
Instead, he evacuated his mother and surviving brother,
before returning to town and hiding out in his home’s
cellar, relatives say. When Sunni rebel fighters went to the
home, he attacked them. The fighters returned to the home
two days later and killed Mr. Kasouha and his father in a
gunbattle, according to Christian and Muslim residents.
Christians began leaving town, joining a broader flow of
Muslims and others who have relocated within Syria or fled
abroad. Several more remain unaccounted for. The Christians
from Qusayr name brothers, cousins and other relatives who
they say are among more than a dozen Christians from the
community whose fate remains unknown.
In late May, an Italian Jesuit priest working in Syria,
Father Paulo Dall’Oglio, spent eight days in Qusayr at the
request of Christian families to help locate about a dozen
missing relatives. Toward the end of his stay, Father
Dall’Oglio said in an interview, he met with some of the
most influential and militant rebel factions in Qusayr, who
he described as Syrian men wearing long beards and
Afghan-style traditional dress.
He secured the release of two of them, he said, but
concluded that the rest were “most probably killed.”
Father Dall’Oglio, who spent three decades in Syria, was
expelled in June after expressing sympathy with the
opposition’s democratic aspirations. He attributes the cycle
of violence in Qusayr to hardened views on both sides that
he says don’t represent those of most Syrians.
On one side, he said, Mr. Kasouha and some of his family
took extreme actions—while on the other, he said, the mostly
Sunni opposition features an ultraconservative, militant
fringe that the opposition has no power to control.
Some Sunni Muslims say they believe reconciliation is
possible with those who have sided with the regime.
“We have nothing against the Christians and Alawites,”
said Mohammed Idriss, 30, a farmer and taxi driver who also
fled the area. “It’s just the vile regime that has exploited
this.”
Few Christians from Qusayr share his optimism. The
Christian men in Lebanon believe that Christians will have
no place in Syria if Mr. Assad leaves power—saying that the
recent animosity has uncovered the true feelings their
former neighbors had kept hidden for years. “We ate from the
same plate,” said one of the displaced Christians. “And then
they stabbed us in the back.”