Menu



error This forum is not active, and new posts may not be made in it.
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/18/2016 10:40:46 AM

Deadly Airstrikes on Syrian Hospitals: US Blames ‘Regime and its Supporters,’ Turkey Blames Russia, Syria Blames US

By Patrick Goodenough | February 15, 2016 | 7:36 PM EST

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said the MSF-supported hospital in Idlib was destroyed in a missile strike on Monday, February 15, 2016. (Photo: MSF)

(CNSNews.com) – The State Department on Monday accused “the Assad regime and its supporters” after at least two hospitals in northern Syria were bombed from the air, just days before a negotiated “cessation of hostilities” is meant to take effect.

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said a hospital which it supports in Idlib, south-west of the key city of Aleppo, was destroyed in an apparently “deliberate” attack on Monday morning that left at least seven people dead, with at least eight more missing and presumed dead.

MSF did not initially lay blame for the attack – four missiles fired within minutes of each other – but Turkey, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the U.S.-backed Syrian national opposition coalition said it was carried out by Russian warplanes. MSF France president Mego Terzian, told Reuters later that either the Assad regime or Russia was “clearly” responsible.

A mother and child hospital in Azaz city, north of Aleppo, was also bombed, the State Department said. According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, 10 people were killed and more than 30 injured when a missile hit that building.

The U.N. children’s agency UNICEF said a total of four medical facilities – two in Idlib and two in Azaz – had reportedly been struck, along with two schools in Azaz, where six children were reported to have been killed.

State Department spokesman John Kirby in a statement did not accuse Russia directly, instead attributing the attacks to “the Assad regime and its supporters.”

But Kirby said the fact that such attacks are continuing “casts doubt on Russia's willingness and/or ability to help bring to a stop the continued brutality of the Assad regime against its own people.”

An Assad loyalist, Syrian Ambassador to Moscow Riad Haddad, accused the United States of responsibility for the MSF hospital bombing.

“U.S. Air Force have destroyed it, and Russia Aerospace Forces have no connection to it,” Haddad told the Rossiya 24 television network. “Intelligence information proves it.”

But Baghdad-based U.S. military spokesman U.S. Army Col. Steve Warren said he could say “without a doubt” that the U.S.-led anti-ISIS coalition was not operating in the area where the hospitals were struck.

The only airstrikes carried out in Syria by the coalition on Monday were in Raqqah, almost 300 kilometers away, and in Hasakah, almost 400 kilometers away, he said.

Russia launched an airstrike campaign in Syria last September in support of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, targeting what it says are terrorists but the U.S. says are both terrorists and other rebels opposed to Assad.

Over recent weeks Assad’s forces and his Russian, Iranian and Hezbollah backers have stepped up an offensive around Aleppo, Syria’s largest city, which has been divided into regime- and rebel-controlled areas since 2012. Tens of thousands of Syrians fleeing the fighting have headed for the Turkey border.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel in comments published Monday voiced support for a type of “no-fly zone” in Syria – but one preferably negotiated between the regime and its opponents rather than imposed from outside.

“In the present situation it would be helpful if there were an area over which none of the warring parties would fly air attacks – a sort of no-fly zone,” she told a German newspaper.

Up to now the U.S. and other Western countries have resisted calls by Turkey for a no-fly zone in northern Syria, leery of the risks of confrontation between coalition and Russian aircraft.

After a meeting in Munich on Friday of the International Syria Support Group (ISSG), which includes Russia, Secretary of State John Kerry announced an agreement “to implement a nationwide cessation of hostilities to begin in a target of one week’s time.”

Speaking alongside Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, Kerry said the various parties’ willingness to work for that to happen “will be measured by the steps that people take in the next days.”

Lavrov, as he has done before, shrugged off criticism about Russian military actions in Syria as lies and propaganda. He said the targets in Aleppo were terrorists, including the al-Qaeda-affiliated Al-Nusra Front, and that those fleeing the city were “fighters who are just trying to escape.”


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+2
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/18/2016 11:04:31 AM

Syrian Rebels Forgotten by Obama, UN



Kerry discusses Syrian policy. (AP)

By Herbert London | Tuesday, 16 Feb 2016 09:00 AM



In its emphasis on defeating ISIS, the U.S. delegation in Geneva has sold out the rebels fighting against Syria’s Bashar al-Assad.

A new chapter in the Middle East has unfolded as America’s perceived interests have tilted in the direction of Iran and Russia. Instead of a transitional government that would ease the Syrian dictator out of power, Secretary of State John Kerry said there should be a national unity government for the foreseeable future — a euphemism for Assad stays. In fact, that is the essence of the recently signed cease-fire accord.

Last year, by contrast, when the rebels advanced across Syria seriously weakening Assad, the U.S. supported them. In fact, rebel success on the battlefield triggered Moscow’s intervention. With Russian airpower deployed in his behalf, Assad can call on Shiite troops, including Iranian Qud forces, to achieve a victory unavailable to him since the civil war began in 2011.

Despite Russian claims to the contrary, the majority of its strikes have hit non-Islamic fighters mowing down the mainstream rebellion in western Syria. Clearly Russia has achieved its short term objective: Forcing the U.S. to choose Assad or ISIS. With the virtual collapse of rebel forces in the Aleppo region thousands of dejected fighters could abandon their arms and gravitate to ISIS.


The encirclement of Aleppo is emerging as a humanitarian disaster of extraordinary magnitude, but the U.N. and world opinion are silent in the face of this tragedy.

More significantly, the Obama administration, in its effort to seal ties to its “ally” in the region, has been conspicuously silent on the matter. Neither Kerry nor U.N. envoy Staffon de Mistura is willing to pressure Russia and Assad for fear of jeopardizing the Geneva talks. For our State Department negotiation is the answer for any crisis.

Moscow understands that without Assad, there isn’t any justification for its Middle East intervention. There may be reservations Putin shares about Assad, but he needs him as the devil needs devoted dupes. When the Russian onslaught began, U.S. officials hailed Russian intervention as the best way to check ISIS, but thus far the Russian campaign has strengthened the jihadist group in central Asia. This is seemingly the price Washington is willing to pay in order to keep the Geneva process afloat.

Moreover, the concessions to Russia have been accompanied by a weakening of the supply network to rebel groups. The result is that the rebels sense betrayal. The Saudis believe the U.S. is unreliable and the regional leaders increasingly turn to Putin as the answer to Middle East instability.

Surely there is some justification for a political process, but exposing the rebels to the Assad-Russian-Iranian onslaught without contingency planning is outrageous. President Obama is intent on walking away from the Middle East, but the Middle East cannot walk away from its pathologies. It is haunted by an American position of capitulation.

Over the horizon is an American president in 2017, a condition that guarantees a year of brinkmanship and misery as the actors in Syria and Iraq try to solidify their positions. Whoever the next president may be, he or she will have to recognize Vladimir Putin as the real force in Syria.

He will have ousted the West from a NATO neighboring country, which is pivotal for control of the Mediterranean. As the czar of Mare Nostrum, Putin can determine the strategic consequences for the United States. In 1973 the U.S. employed its influence to oust the Soviet Union from the Middle East; in 2016 we can observe a situation in which Putin, with the acquiescence of Obama, will oust the U.S. from the Middle East.

In this year of upheaval, the predication of Alexandr Dugin that the Russian empire would be recreated has some merit. If that assessment seems dubious, just ask the rebels who have been betrayed by their American “protectors.”

Herbert London is president emeritus of Hudson Institute and author of the books "The Transformational Decade" (University Press of America) and "Decline and Revival in Higher Education" (Transaction Books). Read more reports from Herbert London — Click Here Now.

© 2016 Newsmax. All rights reserved.



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+2
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/18/2016 11:12:30 AM

25 killed in Monday's bombing of Syria hospital: MSF

AFP

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said several of the incidents were so-called "double-tap" attacks, in which a second strike followed shortly after the first (AFP Photo/Ghaith Omran)

Beirut (AFP) - At least 25 people were killed in the bombing of a hospital supported by Doctors Without Borders in northwestern Syria this week, the aid group said on Wednesday.

Revising a previous toll of 11 dead, an MSF spokeswoman said nine hospital staff and 16 other people, including patients and a child, had died after the bombing of the hospital on Monday in Idlib province.

At least 11 others were injured, including 10 hospital staff, the spokeswoman said.

MSF has not assigned blame for the attack but the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group, has said a suspected air Russian air strike hit the hospital.

Moscow, which has been carrying out air strikes in support of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad since September, has denied any responsiblity.

The bombing, which along with others on medical facilities and schools in northern Syria killed at least 50 people earlier this week, was widely condemned by Western governments.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+2
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/18/2016 1:46:40 PM

Panic and horror strike again in Turkey's jittery capital Ankara

AFP

An injured person receives medical treatment by rescue workers after an attack targeted a convoy of military service vehicles in Ankara on February 17, 2016 (AFP Photo/)


Ankara (AFP) - It started with a rumble that sounded like thunder or an earthquake, sending startled residents rushing to their balconies, who watched in horror as plumes of smoke rose over central Ankara.

It wasn't long before their worst fears were confirmed: Turkey's capital, still reeling from twin blasts that killed over 100 last year, had been hit again.

Sirens blaring, ambulances and police cars raced to the scene of the explosion near a military compound and the Turkish parliament, in a frenzied blur of activity that shattered the evening calm and triggered fresh panic among the city's five-million strong population.

The government said at least 28 people were killed and dozens more wounded in the car bomb attack that targeted buses carrying military personnel.

"I was at a main boulevard some 500 metres (1,640 feet) from the scene," 25-year-old Gurkan told AFP.

"People started to run in all directions in panic as soon as we heard a strong explosion. I saw a huge fireball growing."

Turkey's sprawling capital has been on edge ever since 103 people were killed in October, when two suicide bombers blew themselves up among a crowd of peace activists in the bloodiest attack in the country's modern history.

Another suicide bombing last month in the heart of Istanbul, Turkey's largest city, did little to calm nerves. Eleven people, all German tourists, lost their lives.

Both attacks were blamed on Islamic State jihadists, while Kurdish rebels have been accused of carrying out other recent deadly strikes in the country.

No one has yet claimed responsibility for Wednesday's bombing.

- 'Blow to morale' -

The explosion that rocked Ankara's downtown area could be heard in several neighbourhoods.

Turkish police threw a security cordon around the blast site, blocking civilians and members of the press from crossing the barricade for security reasons, warning of the possibility of a second attack.

A police helicopter hovered over the scene, where some of Turkey's key institutions are concentrated including parliament and the headquarters of the air force, navy and general staff.

Another blast later rocked the area, causing further disquiet among onlookers, but officials told AFP this was just police detonating a suspicious parcel.

Just in front of the police cordon, scuffles erupted between security forces and civilians who were barred from approaching the scene. One angry middle-aged man shouted: "Is this our way of protecting the country?"

Among the first to arrive were opposition MPs, who had rushed over from the nearby parliament building.

"I was at the General Assembly at the time of the attack. I heard the sound and walked into the compound of the naval forces command," said Engin Altay of the opposition Republican People's Party (CHP).

"Everyone including security forces was in panic. Firefighters were hardly able to proceed into the area. There was a big blaze. I saw buses on fire. I was only 50 metres away.

"It's a sad sight, and a fresh blow to people's morale," he told AFP.

While the lawmaker said he knew that Turkey faced security threats, he decried that no one had been able to prevent another attack.

"It can happen at any time, at any occasion," he said. "And nobody knows what to do."

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+2
Luis Miguel Goitizolo

1162
61587 Posts
61587
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/18/2016 1:57:28 PM

Report: Russia Killed More Civilians in Syria in January Than Either Assad Regime or ISIS

By Patrick Goodenough | February 17, 2016 | 5:00 AM EST

The aftermath of an airstrike in Talbiseh, Syria on Sept. 30, 2015, the day Russia launched its air campaign in support of the Assad regime. (AP Photo/Syria Civil Defense, File)

(CNSNews.com) – As Russia again dismisses accusations that its air force is bombing hospitals in Syria, a new report by an independent human rights group said Russia’s supposed anti-Islamic State of Iraq and Syria air campaign was responsible for more civilian deaths last month than either the Assad regime or ISIS.

Of 1,382 civilians killed during January, 679 were killed in Russian strikes, including 94 children and 73 women, according to the Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR), which says it documents records, with victims’ names where possible, from a network of activists across the country.

Over the same period, regime forces killed 516 civilians, including 83 children and 69 women, and ISIS killed 98 civilians, including one child and 21 women, it said.

SNHR reported that “armed opposition groups” killed 42 civilians, including nine children and ten women, while “unidentified groups” killed another 41, including 12 children and 11 women. The al-Qaeda affiliated Jabhat al Nusra and Kurdish groups killed three civilians each.

The greatest loss of life attributed to Russia in January, 226 deaths, were recorded in Deir al-Zour province in central Syria, followed by 212 in Aleppo, the site of a major offensive by Russian-backed regime and Iranian forces.

SNHR charged that Assad regime and Russian forces had “violated the principles of the human rights international laws which protect the rights to life,” adding that evidence and eyewitness accounts indicated that more than 90 percent of attacks targeted civilians and civilian areas.

On Monday, at least four hospitals and two schools were reported to have been hit in airstrikes in northern Syria, with a total of at least 46 people killed and dozens more wounded, according to the U.N. and the charity Medecins Sans Frontieres, which supports one of the destroyed hospitals.

The Kremlin on Tuesday denied claims that it targeted the hospitals – a war crime under international law, if deliberate – with spokesman Dmitry Peskov saying that “those who come up with such charges prove unable to somehow confirm their groundless accusations.”

Peskov said the Syrian government should be relied upon as the “root source” for any such allegations, and noted that Syria’s ambassador to Moscow earlier blamed the U.S.-led coalition. A coalition spokesman said the nearest airstrike carried out by coalition warplanes on Monday was 300 kilometers away from the closest of the four hospitals hit.

In a separate recent report, SNHR said that since Russia began its air campaign in Syria last September, it has recorded at least 15,027 civilian deaths resulting from the airstrikes.

By comparison, the monitoring group said airstrikes by the U.S.-led international coalition – which have been carried out for 12 months longer than the Russian campaign – have cost the lives of 267 civilians.

“The magnitude of the crimes and violations that were committed by the Russian forces greatly exceeds that of the international coalition,” SNHR said.

“Even though we believe that it is not enough, international coalition forces admit to making some mistakes regarding the shelling incidents. It also conducted some investigations,” it said.

In contrast, “Russian authorities categorically deny any killing or shelling incident and falsely accuse SNHR of fabricating this information or any shelling incidents perpetrated by its ally, the Syrian regime.”

The Russian military has repeatedly rejected allegations by Western governments, humanitarian agencies and parties on the ground that civilians are being killed in its operation – which Moscow claims is directed against ISIS and Jabhat al Nusra, but the U.S. contends is also targeting non-ISIS, non-Jabhat al Nusra rebel groups opposed to President Bashar al-Assad.

In a statement to reporters Tuesday, defense ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov repeated those denials, and accused Turkey – which earlier blamed Russia for the hospital attacks – of having launched an “aggressive information campaign” against Russia, in a bid to prevent losing control over northern and northwestern Syria.

“It is to be reminded one more time, that the Russian Armed Forces jointly with the partners have deployed a multi-level reconnaissance system which provides acquisition of true information 24 hours a day concerning the activities of terrorists on the territory of Syria and some of the country’s neighbors,” Konashenkov said.

“All the strikes on the terrorists’ objects are carried out only after multiple check of the received data and coordination of actions to exclude risks for civilians.”

The state news agency ITAR-Tass said Tuesday that since Russia last September 30 launched “pinpoint” strikes against terrorists in Syria, it has targeted “military hardware, communications centers, transport vehicles, munitions depots and other terrorist infrastructure facilities.”

Well over 250,000 people have been killed in the five-year civil war and at least 11 million have been displaced.


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

+1


facebook
Like us on Facebook!