Tag: hezbollah
Syria’s Assad Says He’s ‘Not Worried’ Despite Battlefield Setbacks

Syria’s Assad Says He’s ‘Not Worried’ Despite Battlefield Setbacks

By Patrick J. McDonnell, Los Angeles Times (TNS)

ISTANBUL — Syrian President Bashar Assad said Wednesday he was “not worried” about battlefield setbacks and exhorted supporters to avoid succumbing to “frustration” as the Syrian conflict rages on without an end in sight.

“In wars, there are wins and losses,” Assad said, while not explicitly conceding any recent rebel victories.

“But this doesn’t prevent us from warning people that the beginning of frustration leads to defeat,” the Syrian president declared at a ceremony in Damascus marking Martyrs Day, a national holiday.

The comments reported in the state-run media were Assad’s first public declarations since al-Qaida-linked rebels in March and April seized a number of towns in Syria’s northwest, including the provincial capital of Idlib and the strategic town of Jisr al-Shughur.

The remarks seemed designed to reassure supporters at a difficult moment. Despite Assad’s confident tone, the comments indicate some degree of concern within ruling circles in Damascus and a need to bolster public confidence.

In his address, Assad noted that a war could involve “thousands of battles,” with many “wins and losses, and ups and downs, but the important thing is for faith in the inevitability of victory to remain unchanging.”

The recent opposition gains have triggered international media speculation that Assad’s government may be wavering after more than four years of war. The overstretched Syrian army is fighting on multiple fronts and has suffered heavy losses, though the government maintains firm control of the capital, the Mediterranean coast, and major cities such as Homs and Hama.

Opposition forces — including the al-Qaida-affiliated Nusra Front and Islamic State, the al-Qaida breakaway faction — also hold large stretches of Syria.

Recent reports have indicated that Islamist rebel factions, including Nusra Front, have regrouped and received renewed financial and military aid from outside allies, including Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Qatar. The three nations have been major supporters of the armed effort to oust Assad.

But the Syrian president dismissed conjecture about his government faltering as part of an orchestrated “propaganda campaign” meant to stir doubts among the population. Similar reports that his leadership was nearing collapse after the war erupted in 2011 proved to be illusory, Assad noted, citing an even more tenuous period for his rule.

“I’m not worried over this, because as the first propaganda campaign…at the beginning of the crisis failed, this campaign will fail,” said Assad in his comments at a school honoring “martyrs” lost in the current conflict.

He also vowed that Syrian forces would rescue pro-government forces trapped in a hospital in the northern town of Jisr al-Shughur, now in rebel hands.

The comments appeared aimed largely at Assad’s core backers, including minorities, business leaders, security personnel and others who have remained loyal through the punishing war that has left more than 200,000 dead, destroyed large swaths of the country, and forced millions to flee Syria. Many supporters fear that an overthrow of Assad’s secular government would result in sectarian cleansing and a hard-core Islamist regime in Damascus.

Opposition representatives who routinely label Assad as delusional dismissed his latest comments as indicative of his lack of a grasp of the mounting military losses, economic setbacks, and popular discontent undermining his rule.

“Assad is completely out of touch with reality,” said George Sabra, an exiled opposition figure contacted by telephone in France. “Either he does not know the reality, or he truly is out of the picture….He is not ruling the country, but is merely imprisoned in it.”

Assad’s speech comes a day after a key ally, Hassan Nasrallah, who heads Lebanon-based Hezbollah, also labeled as “futile” and “baseless” a “wave of rumors” suggesting that Assad’s rule was foundering.

Nasrallah vowed that Hezbollah and its patron, Iran, would stand by the Syrian government despite the “psychological war” against Syria. Military and financial aid from Hezbollah and Iran have been crucial in maintaining Assad’s rule in Syria.

“The Syrian state and army are strong and they can change the course of the battle,” Nasrallah declared Tuesday.

Photo: watchsmart via Flickr

Israel, Hezbollah Clash Along Border; Two Israelis, U.N. Peacekeeper Killed

Israel, Hezbollah Clash Along Border; Two Israelis, U.N. Peacekeeper Killed

By Batsheva Sobelman, Nabih Bulos and Patrick J. McDonnell, Los Angeles Times (TNS)

JERUSALEM — The Israel-Lebanon border region was tense Wednesday after an exchange of fire involving Israel and Hezbollah, a dominant military and political force in Lebanon, left two Israeli soldiers and a U.N. peacekeeper dead.

In a statement, Hezbollah said one of its units had targeted an Israeli military convoy with an anti-tank missile fired from Lebanon. The Israeli military later confirmed that two soldiers were killed and seven wounded in the attack.

Al Manar TV, Hezbollah’s media outlet, reported that a Spanish soldier participating in the United Nations peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon was killed in a retaliatory Israeli barrage on the Lebanese border area.

Andrea Tenenti, spokesperson for the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, confirmed that a peacekeeper was killed on Wednesday but would not identify the soldier’s nationality or say how the peacekeeper perished.

“We are looking into the circumstances of the unfortunate death,” Tenenti said. UNIFIL has deployed about 10,000 troops from 36 countries along the so-called Blue Line separating Israel and Lebanon.

U.N. authorities were in touch with both sides in the conflict and were urging “restraint,” Tenenti said.

Hezbollah and Israel waged a one-month war in 2006, and the two remain entrenched adversaries, but the “line of withdrawal” between northern Israel and southern Lebanon has been mostly calm since then, though there have been isolated flare-ups of violence.

In the wake of Wednesday’s incident, residents of Metula and other Israeli communities along the border with Lebanon have received instructions to remain indoors. Safed and other towns in the area were preparing to open public bomb shelters, and municipalities were coordinating with security authorities for the transportation of school students as parents were instructed not to pick them up themselves.

According to Israeli media, civilian airports in northern Israel were ordered closed due to heavy air force traffic. For the second time in as many days, the ski resort of Mt. Hermon was shut down and evacuated, along with nature reserves in northern Israel.

Officials in the region had been bracing for some kind of response from Hezbollah, and possibly from Iran, after a Jan. 18 airstrike in southwestern Syria killed six Hezbollah members and an Iranian commander, Gen. Mohammad Ali Allahdadi. Israel never publicly confirmed that it was behind the strike, but Israeli sources indicated later that they had been unaware that the Iranian official was present in the targeted convoy.

Observers in Israel and Lebanon said any Hezbollah response would likely be measured. The movement is already deeply mired in the war in Syria, where thousands of Hezbollah militiamen are fighting on behalf of the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Hezbollah leaders would likely wish to avoid a full-scale conflict with Israel that could trigger a large-scale attack on Lebanese territory and sap domestic support in Lebanon, analysts said. However, the situation is volatile and many said they feared a misstep by either side could lead to a larger conflict.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was holding emergency consultations with Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon at the Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv on Wednesday.

Speaking in the southern town of Sderot, Netanyahu issued a warning: “To those trying to challenge us on our northern border, I suggest looking at what happened not far from here in the Gaza Strip,” he said, referring to the 50-day war Israel waged against Hamas in July and August of 2014.

Photo: Israeli soldiers are seen at the entrance of the Mount Hermon Resort after it was hit by two rockets in the Golan Heights, northern Israel, on Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2015. (Gil Eliyahu-Jinipix/Xinhua/Zuma Press/TNS)

Germany Raids Hezbollah Support Organization

Germany Raids Hezbollah Support Organization

BERLIN — German police on Tuesday raided the local offices of a support organization for the Lebanese Shiite militia movement Hezbollah, the Interior Ministry said.

The Lebanon Orphan Children Project, founded in 1997 and headquartered in the western city of Essen, was banned by Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, and their offices in six states were searched by police.

In an investigation dating to 2009, it is accused of collecting around $4.5 million for the so-called Shahid (Martyrs) Foundation, which authorities say provides support to families of suicide bombers and attempts to find “martyrs” for future attacks among the children of previous bombers.

No arrests were made during the raids. Cash, files and other documents were confiscated by the 150 police officers said to have participated in the nationwide operation. In addition, two bank accounts connected with the organization were frozen.

The military arm of Hezbollah is listed as a terrorist organization by the European Union.

Germany’s domestic security agency BfV estimates there are 1,000 Hezbollah supporters in the country.

AFP Photo