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Ahmad Jibril Ahmad Jibril Popular front for the Liberation of Palestine (general command) Syria-Lebanon-Iran 20051027 Link
  Ahmad Jibril Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine- General Command Syria-Lebanon-Iran 20051027 Link
  Ahmad Jibril PFLP - General Command Syria-Lebanon-Iran 20020611  
  Ahmad Jibril Peoples Front For the Liberation of Palestine - General Command Middle East 20020628  

Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Deadly blast at Palestinian terror group base in Lebanon; Israel denies involvement
2023-06-01
[IsraelTimes] 5 dead in large explosion at PFLP-General Command site in the Bekaa Valley near Syrian border; Lebanese security source says old rocket went kaboom! at arms depot
Such accidents are filed on Page 2: WoT Background. Page 1 is only for deliberate acts.
Five members of a Paleostinian terror group in Leb
...an Iranian colony situated on the eastern Mediterranean, conveniently adjacent to Israel. Formerly inhabited by hardy Phoenecian traders, its official language is now Arabic, with the usual unpleasant side effects. The Leb civil war, between 1975 and 1990, lasted a little over 145 years and produced 120,000 fatalities. The average length of a ceasefire was measured in seconds. The Lebs maintain a precarious sectarian balance among Shiites, Sunnis, and about a dozeen flavors of Christians. It is the home of Hezbollah, which periodically starts a war with the Zionist Entity, gets Beirut pounded to rubble, and then declares victory and has a parade. The Lebs have the curious habit of periodically murdering their heads of state or prime ministers...
were killed in a mysterious blast blamed on Israel on Wednesday morning, Arabic-language media reported. Israeli officials denied any involvement and a Lebanese security source said the earth-shattering kaboom was accidental.

According to reports by Al Jazeera and other networks, the blast occurred at a base belonging to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Paleostine — General Command (PFLP-GC), near the town of Qousaya in the Bekaa Valley in eastern Lebanon, near the border with Syria.

PFLP-GC accused Israel of carrying out a strike at the base. Images posted to social media showed a crater, a damaged building, and a damaged car, apparently as a result of the earth-shattering kaboom.

Israeli officials, however, said that the Israel Defense Forces did not carry out any strike in the area.
“Wudn’t us. Work accident, looks like. When they’re colourblind the red and green wires look the same, donchaknow.”
A Lebanese security source who spoke to AFP said the blast was accidental. "An old rocket went kaboom! in an arms depot on the base and five fighters were killed," the source said.
Oh dear. That’s really pathetic — worse than a colourblind bomb maker mixing up the red and green wires.
PFLP-GC front man Anwar Raja said Israel had carried out "overnight raids" on the Qusaya base.

"Five fighters were killed" and 10 maimed, he told AFP, adding that "for now we do not have more detailed information on the operation."

In past cases when Israel reportedly carried out strikes in the Bekaa Valley, it appeared to have acted in order to stop the transfer of advanced arms from Iran
...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneously taking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militias to extend the regime's influence. The word Iran is a cognate form of Aryan. The abbreviation IRGC is the same idea as Stürmabteilung (or SA). The term Supreme Guide is a the modern version form of either Duce or Führer or maybe both. They hate Jews Zionists Jews. Their economy is based on the production of oil and vitriol...
to the Hezbollah terror group, via Syria.

The IDF reportedly struck a PFLP-GC base in the Bekaa Valley in 2019.

The PFLP-GC — not to be confused with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Paleostine, from which it split in 1968 — was responsible for a number of vicious terror attacks in Israel in the 1970s and 1980s, including one against a school bus in northern Israel that killed nine children and three adults.

The PFLP-GC largely went underground in the late 1980s, working behind the scenes with the Lebanon-based Hezbollah terror group, but it reemerged in 2011 with the outbreak of the Syrian civil war, fighting alongside Syrian dictator Bashir al-Assad.
Related:
PFLP-GC: 2021-08-06 Germany arrests alleged Syrian war criminal
PFLP-GC: 2021-07-08 Good Morning
PFLP-GC: 2021-07-08 Ahmad Jibril, Syria-based Paleo terror group PFLP-GC #1, dead at 83; #2 Talal Naji new #1
Related:
Bekaa Valley: 2021-12-30 Hezbollah deploys air defense systems in Syria's Qalamoun mountains
Bekaa Valley: 2021-09-19 Lebanon seizes dangerous fertiliser in country's east
Bekaa Valley: 2019-10-27 Deep State Hates America First Policy
Link


Europe
Germany arrests alleged Syrian war criminal
2021-08-06
[DW] A 54-year-old Syrian man in Berlin is accused of firing a grenade in Damascus in 2014, killing at least seven people. German prosecutors have pursued several war crimes cases.

German police on Wednesday arrested a Syrian man in Berlin for alleged war crimes in Damascus.

Authorities in Germany have investigated several similar cases as Syrian refugees seek justice for war crimes they witnessed in their home country. t

German prosecutors accused the suspect, 54, of having fired a grenade into a crowd of civilians gathered on a square in 2014.

The blast killed at least seven people and injured three, including a 6-year-old child.

"The accused is strongly suspected of having committed war crimes. In connection with this, he is also charged with seven counts of murder and three counts of grievous bodily harm," prosecutors said.

FORMER MEMBER OF ARMED MILITIA
According to prosecutors, the man was a member of the Free Paleostine Movement at the time of the attack. He was previously a member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Paleostine General Command (PFLP-GC)
... founded in 1968 by Ahmed Jibril after splitting from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) based on claims that it was producing impotent intellectuals, and not making any meaningful progress in terms of armed struggle to liberate Palestine. Theoretically Marxist, in reality their recruits were young, exiled, poor, illiterate, and angry, making them perfect tools...
armed militia.

PFLP-GC was tasked by the Syrian regime with controlling the southern Damascus neighborhood of Yarmuk, which emerged from a Paleostinian refugee camp.

After the Syrian war started, the majority of Yarmuk's 160,000 residents fled the city. Those who stayed faced severe food shortages under government siege.

The United Nations
...a lucrative dumping ground for the relatives of dictators and party hacks...
relief agency for Paleostine refugees UNRWA was able to distribute food in Yarmuk until April 2015, when Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not really Moslems....
jihadists entered the area.

The suspect's victims were waiting for UNRWA's food when he allegedly fired the grenade.
Related:
PFLP-GC: 2021-07-08 Good Morning
PFLP-GC: 2021-07-08 Ahmad Jibril, Syria-based Paleo terror group PFLP-GC #1, dead at 83; #2 Talal Naji new #1
PFLP-GC: 2020-11-25 Lockerbie Bomber Appeal Set to Start in Scotland
Link


Good Morning
2021-07-08

''We'll convert your children''
Thursday July 8th, 2021

BarbaraFerrisBath
Taliban launch first assault on a provincial capital, are pushed back; 600 turbans toes up across Afghanistan yesterday
Only Kashmiris have the right to decide their future: Bilawal Bhutto
Rocket attack targets US embassy in Baghdad's Green Zone -Iraqi security
Fund set up for British teacher who went into hiding after receiving death threats for showing image of Muhammad in religious studies class
Situation in Afghanistan worsens: Taliban marches north
Ashrafi urges minorities not to be afraid of anyone as Constitution guarantees equal rights
Maria Bartiromo interviews Tucker Carlson (video)

Link


-Obits-
Ahmad Jibril, Syria-based Paleo terror group PFLP-GC #1, dead at 83; #2 Talal Naji new #1
2021-07-08
[IsraelTimes] Jibril’s group responsible for deadly terror attacks against Israelis, a famous prisoner exchange that saw 1,150 Paleostinian security prisoners freed; PA’s Abbas sends condolences.

Ahmad Jibril, the leader of a major Paleostinian terrorist group, died in a Damascus hospital on Wednesday night, Lebanese media reported.

Jibril, the leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Paleostine — General Command, was 83. The PFLP-GC is classified by the United States, Israel and the European Union
Link


Home Front: WoT
Is Dearborn, Michigan, the Model of American Muslim Integration Meet the Press Claims It Is?
2015-01-13
[PJMEDIA] A bizarre report from NBC News by Ayman Mohyeldin this morning broadcast during Meet the Press highlighted the city of Dearborn, Michigan, which has the highest Moslem population concentration of any city in America, as a beacon of American Moslem integration.

As Jeffrey Myers at Newsbusters observed, Mohyeldin blamed U.S. foreign policy for increased radicalization inside the Moslem community:

For some, radicalization and attacks against the U.S. stems from anger at American foreign policies and wars in the Middle East. While the overwhelming majority of muslims have successfully assimilated and integrated into U.S. society, the challenge remains to find individuals who may be on the fringes of the communities and are also alienated.

There are some curious omissions from Mohyeldins report that directly question his claims of successful assimilation and integration of Moslems in Dearborn.

For instance, last August The Intercept published an internal assessment by the National Counterterrorism Center showing that Dearborn a town of less than 100,000 had the second largest number of known terrorism suspects in the country behind New York City.

Needless to say, the Moslem community in Dearborn expressed outrage at the NCTCs data analysis. And despite the fact the NCTC report was the B.O. regimes own document and the finding was the expression of raw data, Detroit U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade joined local activists at a news conference to denounce those findings.

Also missing from Mohyeldins Meet the Press report is that the most influential Islamic holy man for Western supporters of terrorist groups, including ISIS and Jabhat al-Nusra
...the current nom de guerre of al-Qaeda in the Levant, which isn't to be confused with al-Qaeda in Iraq and the Levant...
(Al-Qaedas official Syrian affiliate), is Dearborn-based Ahmad Jibril.
Link


Terror Networks
PFLP-GC Chief Says Syria, Iran, Hezbollah Armed Hamas
2014-07-29
[IsraelTimes] The head of a Paleostinian terrorist group told a Lebanese news outlet that Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, has received arms and training from Syria, Iran and Hezbollah.

PFLP-GC Secretary-General Ahmad Jibril spoke to Leb's Al-Manar TV on July 17 and said that the Islamist terror group controlling the Gazoo Strip has received "a lot of help both in the scientific sense and in transferring weapons and equipment" from Tehran and its allies in Damascus and Leb.

"After 2008, hundreds of our young people left the Gazoo Strip for Syria, Leb, and Tehran, to train and to learn how to improve these weapons," Jibril said referring to Hamas's missiles. "Allah be praised, these weapons indeed were improved."

In the interview, translated by MEMRI, Jibril described the route by which arms were smuggled from Syria to the blockaded Gazoo Strip, explaining that the armed from Iran can't be transferred by the Persian Gulf because it "is under surveillance."

"We transferred [the missiles] from the airports in Damascus to Khartoum, from Khartoum to Port Sudan, and from there to the Sinai. From the Sinai, they were transferred via tunnels to the Gazoo Strip," the Paleostinian faction leader explained. "The brothers in Hezbollah established cells of Bedouin and so on in the Sinai Desert. You could transfer the weapons to them, and they would get them into Gazoo."

Israel intercepted an arms shipment earlier this year in the Red Sea which the IDF said was destined for Hamas via Iran, Syria and Sudan. A US official and two Middle East analysts postulated that the arms shipment may have been bound for Sinai rather than the Gazoo Strip.

Israeli Naval commandos intercepted 40 M-302 missiles, 181 122-mm mortars, and 400,000 7.62 caliber rounds in the arms cache on the ship while it was sailing off the coasts of Eritrea
...is run by the People's Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ), with about the amounts of democracy and justice you'd expect from a party with that name. National elections have been periodically scheduled and cancelled; none have ever been held in the country. The president, Isaias Afewerki, has been in office since independence in 1993 and will probably die there of old age...
and Sudan.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Liveblogging The Gaza War: Day 21
2014-07-28
[IsraelTimes] Latest: Security Council to hold emergency session on Gazoo, to follow Obama's lead calling for immediate, unconditional ceasefire

The Times of Israel is liveblogging events as they unfold through Monday, the 21th day of Operation Protective Edge. US President Barack Obama
If you have a small business, you didn't build that...
called Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu late Sunday to urge an immediate ceasefire, after Secretary of State John F. I was in Vietnam, you know Kerry
Former Senator-for-Life from Massachussetts, self-defined war hero, speaker of French, owner of a lucky hat, conqueror of Cambodia, and current Secretary of State...
flew home amid Israeli and PA criticism of his handling of the crisis. With the Gazoo corpse count said to top 1,000, Israeli military sources noted that several hundred Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, gunnies were among those killed. The IDF corpse count rose to 43.

PFLP-GC Secretary-General Ahmad Jibril tells Leb's Al-Manar TV that Hamas received arms and training from Syria, Iran and Hezbollah.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria Warns Palestinians to 'Keep Away from Terrorist Gangs'
2012-11-08
[An Nahar] Syria's foreign ministry warned Paleostinians against becoming embroiled in the country's uprising on Wednesday, telling them to stay well clear of armed opposition groups, state television
... and if you can't believe state television who can you believe?
said.

"Syria will strongly oppose any attempt to bring the Paleostinians into what is happening in Syria," a ministry source said, urging them to direct their efforts at the Paleostinian cause, Syria TV reported.

"All Paleostinian factions must keep away from every effort of armed terrorist gangs," the source added, accusing the rebels of supporting Israel against the Paleostinians.

The statements came amid festivities in the Yarmouk Paleostinian refugee camp in southern Damascus,
...Capital of the last remaining Baathist regime in the world...
which have been ongoing for several days.

Members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Paleostine-General Command (PFLP-GC), led by Damascus ally Ahmad Jibril, fought alongside regime troops while Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, fighters joined in on the rebel side, Syrian activists said.

Damascus has long supported Paleostinian Islamist group Hamas, offering it safe haven and facilities, but opposition activists say some Hamas fighters have recently joined forces with rebels fighting Hereditary President-for-Life Bashir Pencilneck al-Assad
Light of the Alawites...
regime.

Syrian members of the Moslem Brüderbund movement, from which Hamas sprung, were among the first to participate when protests erupted against Assad's rule in March last year.

As peaceful demonstrations turned into an armed rebellion, reports said Hamas had quietly moved its offices from Syria, evacuating most of its members, while publicly denying it had shifted its headquarters.

On Monday, the Syrian authorities officially closed the Hamas offices in Damascus.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Over 30 Killed in 24 Hours at Damascus Palestinian Camp
2012-11-06
[An Nahar] More than 30 people were killed in a 24-hour period in a Paleostinian refugee camp south of the Syrian capital Damascus
...The capital of Iran's Syrian satrapy...
amid fierce festivities between the army and rebels, Paleostinian sources said on Monday.

Seven people were killed Monday when a mortar landed on a mini-bus traveling along the western edge of the Yarmouk Paleostinian camp, according to Paleostinian sources and Syrian state television
... and if you can't believe state television who can you believe?
"All night through to Monday, the residents heard deafening sounds of shelling, but this morning there are many people in the streets, the shops are open and traffic is normal," a resident told Agence La Belle France Presse on condition of anonymity.

The day before, 24 people were killed when at least 10 shells fell on a southern part of the camp, according to a Facebook page called "Yarmouk Camp News" run by local residents, which listed the names of the victims.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported five killed, including three children and one woman, in Monday's mortar attack.

The Britannia-based Observatory, which relies on a network of activists, lawyers and medics, had reported eight killed on Sunday by mortar fire.

According to the resident, fighting on the outskirts of the camp lasted 24 hours, pitting the rebel Free Syrian Army against government troops, backed by members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Paleostine-General Command (PFLP-GC).

"Dozens were killed or maimed on Sunday during fighting when the so-called Free Syrian Army (FSA) tried to infiltrate the camp... but were pushed back," PFLP-GC front man Anwar Raja told AFP.

According to the Observatory, festivities began in the border districts of al-Hajar al-Aswad and moved to the outskirts of Yarmouk, where PFLP-GC fighters joined on the side of the regime and other Paleostinian factions fought with the rebels.

Fighting had erupted last Tuesday between rebels and pro-regime Paleostinian fighters backed by troops in Yarmouk, the largest Paleostinian refugee camp in Syria with some 148,000 residents.

The PFLP-GC is headed by Ahmad Jibril, a staunch ally of Hereditary President-for-Life Bashir Pencilneck al-Assad
Lord of the Baath...
, who has been fighting an unprecedented revolt against his regime that began as a peaceful uprising in March 2011 and steadily militarized under repression.

In early August, Paleostinian President the ineffectual Mahmoud Abbas
... a graduate of the prestigious unaccredited Patrice Lumumba University in Moscow with a doctorate in Holocaust Denial...
condemned shelling on the camp, which killed 21 civilians including two children, and chided the PFLP-GC for its role in dragging Paleostinians into the bloody conflict.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Analysis: The Myth Of Palestinian Neutrality In Syria
2012-07-28
[Ma'an] On July 14, thousands of Paleostinian refugees marched in a funeral procession for 11 unarmed protesters rubbed out by Syrian security forces in the al-Yarmouk refugee camp. Raucous and seething with rage, mourners chanted for Syria and Paleostine, called for the downfall of Bashir al-Assad's regime, and sang for freedom.

Whether this burgeoning civil disobedience movement will grow into an open, durable rebellion remains to be seen, but the significance and the potential influence of the latest wave of protests that has swept Syria's largest Paleostinian camp cannot be overlooked.

As the Syrian uprising gathered momentum and the Syrian regime escalated its repression against what started out as a peaceful revolt, concerns have emerged about the impact of the uprising on Paleostinian refugees in Syria, who make up just over 2 percent of Syria's total population.

The Paleostinian political elite in Syria have been divided. Some factions have desperately attempted to appear neutral, distancing themselves from the unrest. Others, such as Ahmad Jibril's PFLP-GC, Fatah al-Intifada, and the Paleostinian-Baathist militia al-Sa'iqa, have actively supported the regime, bolstering its propaganda campaigns and crushing civil dissent inside the camps.

In stark contrast to the moribund, aging politicianship, Paleostinian-Syrian youth activists, who prior to the eruption of the uprising had focused their activism on Paleostine, have participated in the uprising since the very beginning as demonstrators; organizers of aid and relief work for maimed and internally-displaced Syrians; or as citizen journalists, photographers and media activists. The hub of their activism, however, remained outside the camps for most of the uprising.

Never were the tensions among Syria's Paleostinians as discernible as during the aftermath of last year's Naksa Day protests on June 5, when dozens of unarmed Paleostinians were killed by the Israeli occupation army in the occupied Golan Heights border area. Yarmouk inhabitants and deaders' families set the PFLP-GC building ablaze in a strong denunciation of the faction's role in mobilizing to instigate the youths to march back home without any protection despite the anticipated deadly reaction by the Israeli army.

The faction engaged in a pathetically naked attempt to deflect attention from the regime's crackdown. Several Paleostinians were killed in the festivities that ensued between Yarmouk residents and armed PFLP-GC gunnies following the funeral. However,
a person who gets all wrapped up in himself makes a mighty small package...
with the exception of the Syrian navy's attack on the al-Raml refugee camp last summer and the occasional Syrian army shelling on refugee camps in Daraa, Hama and Homs, the situation in the refugee camps remained cautiously quiet.

Intifada in the camps

Since February, the al-Yarmouk camp has regularly held protests in solidarity with the besieged Syrian cities and towns. It participated in the Damascus
...The place where Pencilneck hangs his brass hat...
general strike on May 29, 2012. The protests would normally pass quietly without being attacked by Syrian security forces.

The straw that broke the camel's back was the abduction and then killing of 13 Paleostinian Liberation Army fighters from the Nayrab refugee camp in Aleppo
...For centuries, Aleppo was Greater Syria's largest city and the Ottoman Empire's third, after Constantinople and Cairo. Although relatively close to Damascus in distance, Aleppans regard Damascenes as country cousins...
. Though the identity of the killers is unknown, the killings sparked a large protest in Yarmouk on July 12, and an even larger protest the next day. Buoyant chants of "God bless the Free Syrian Army", "From Syria to Paleostine, one people not two", and "Long live Syria and down with Assad" echoed in the camp's streets. The Syrian army shot up protesters and for the first time, festivities between the regime army and the FSA broke out inside the camp, marking a significant tipping point. The Local Coordination Committee of Yarmouk camp called for mass protests and a general strike to protest the killings.

Jihad Makdissi, the front man of the Syrian Foreign Ministry, described Paleostinians in Syria as "guests" and cynically told them to "leave Syria for one of the Arab democracies" if they misbehave. Makdissi's Facebook statement, which he later deleted, fired up the rubes and highlighted the complicated nature of Paleostinian participation in the uprising.

"We always warned against pushing the camp into the uprising, but no one listened," tweeted an anti-Assad Yarmouk resident following the massacre. The International Committee of the Red Thingy recently described the situation in Syria as a civil war. Thus, concerns of being "stuck" in the middle of a civil war or intervening in "internal" affairs are perfectly legitimate and understandable. Active opposition to the Syrian regime poses serious risks to Paleostinian refugees.

The most imminent scenario is that the general violence that has marred the country for the last 16 months would spill over to the camps. Despite their under-privileged status as stateless refugees, Paleostinians in refugee camps have been relatively safer than neighboring Syrian districts in besieged cities, leading several internally displaced families to seek asylum in the Paleostinian camps. Meanwhile,
...back at the Esquimeau village our hero was receiving a quick lesson in aeronautics......
the regime has mostly avoided launching direct attacks on refugee camps, particularly Yarmouk, in order not to alienate an already divided population.

However,
a person who gets all wrapped up in himself makes a mighty small package...
as shown by the attack on unarmed protesters in Yarmouk, the Syrian regime has not backed down on attacking Paleostinian refugees, dare they "misbehave."

The situation could further deteriorate in the event of festivities between the regime army and armed opposition fighters. Yarmouk camp is a strategically important area that borders Midan, Tadamun, and al-Hajar al-Aswad -- Damascene neighborhoods that have seen intense festivities between the army and the FSA in the last few days. This raises the possibility that the camp could turn into a niche area of battle. A less likely -- but perhaps more dangerous -- scenario is an intra-Paleostinian collision between regime loyalists and opponents. The festivities that followed the Naksa Day protests last year served to expose the tensions enveloping the Paleostinian community in Syria; the current unrest could foment them.

The searing memories of the destruction of Nahr al-Bared refugee camp in north Leb are still haunting and vivid five years on; the fears of a similar scenario taking place in Syria are not completely far-fetched despite the glaring differences between the two situations.

The myth of neutrality

In spite of the aforementioned perils, the participation of Paleostinian-Syrian youth in the uprising seems inevitable and unavoidable. Contrary to Paleostinian refugees in neighboring Leb who are dehumanized and denied basic rights, Paleostinians in Syria have long enjoyed rights equal to those of Syrian citizens in most respects, including health, education and employment. Equality is not a favor that the Assad family bestowed upon Paleostinians: Law 60, which grants Paleostinian refugees near equality with Syrian nationals, was passed in 1956 by a democratically elected parliament under the leadership of the widely admired former president, Shoukri al-Quwatli. Though strongly bound to the Paleostinian cause, many Paleostinians in Syria, particularly second- and third-generation refugees, have assimilated into Syrian society.

So, how all of a sudden, have Paleostinians become "outsiders" who should refrain from intervening in "internal" Syrian affairs?

The irony is especially striking since the Syrian regime has long crowned itself as the guardian of the Paleostinian cause and Pan-Arabism. Moreover, it has -- since the uprising -- used the Paleostinian cause to whitewash its crimes and defend the indefensible. Another question that begs to be asked is: What are 'internal' Syrian affairs, and what constitutes an intrusion in those affairs? Should Paleostinians cease providing shelter and aid for maimed and displaced Syrians in the name of respecting "internal" affairs? Should they abstain from protesting against Assad's military tyranny in the name of respecting Syria's illusory sovereignty? Not only are the boundaries extremely vague, neutrality in the Syrian crisis is a myth.

Additionally, it is impossible to expect Paleostinians who were born, raised, educated in Syria -- who have lived their entire lives there -- to sit on the fence. It is also a false dichotomy to think that a sense of belonging to Syria negates the Paleostinian identity and roots of refugees, who have a sacred, inalienable right of return to Paleostine. Moreover, to claim that they are "used by both sides" is a profound insult to the Paleostinians who freely chose to protest against the Syrian regime. Such a claim suggests that anti-regime Paleostinians have no free will or autonomy. The Paleostinian population in Syria is diverse and no one, including prominent Paleostinian intellectuals and activists outside Syria, has the right to speak in their name and decide for them.

When one considers all the complexities and uncertainty plaguing the situation in Syria, staying on the sidelines no longer appears to be a feasible option.

It is both painfully ironic and incredibly moving that Yarmouk, built to host ethnically cleansed Paleostinians, has now turned into a safe haven for Syrians fleeing the shelling on Tadamon and Midan; that UNRWA schools became shelters in the last few days; and that Paleostinian residents of the camp have donated mattresses, meals and medicine for their maimed Syrian neighbors. These acts of solidarity have been beacons of inspiration amid the endless cycle of violence and grief that has descended upon Syria.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
PFLP-GC members shoot it out in Leb
2010-04-09
[Al Arabiya Latest] Clashes broke out briefly in eastern Lebanon on Thursday when a dispute between members of a Syrian-backed Palestinian faction escalated into violence, the army said. "Preliminary information indicates that the fight was a result of an internal disagreement," an army spokesman told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

A Palestinian official said automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades were fired during the clashes, which broke out at the Liberation of Palestine - General Command (PFLP-GC) group's Ain al-Bayda base near the town of Kfar Zabad in the Bekaa Valley.

One person was injured in the clashes which quickly died down, the Palestinian official added. PFLP-GC commanders were unreachable. "The situation is calm now," the army spokesman said Thursday afternoon, adding that an officer and three other members of the PFLP-GC had turned themselves in to the army.

The PFLP-GC, led by Ahmad Jibril, was founded with Syrian backing during the 1975-1990 Lebanese civil war. Along with Palestinian group Fatah al-Intifada, Jibril's movement has bases in the Bekaa near the Syrian border. The PFLP-GC also has a base in Nehmeh, south of the capital Beirut.

Unlike most Palestinian factions in Lebanon, which are located inside the country's 12 refugee camps and remain loyal to Gaza or the West Bank, Fatah al-Intifada and the PFLP-GC continue to be backed by Damascus.

The two movements' arsenal remains a thorny issue between Lebanon and its powerful neighbor. In January a leader of Fatah al-Intifada said his group would not disarm outside of the camps but was willing to discuss where in Lebanon it holds its arms. The Lebanese government has called for Palestinian groups outside refugee camps to disarm, saying the issue was not up for negotiation.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Tehran's jet-setting genocide man
2010-04-04
What a heady whirl of a month it has been for Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the world's most fabulous jihad kingpin and leading proponent of genocide. Everyone seems to want a piece of him, in a good way, of course. American enemies, American "allies" -- they're all palsy-walsy. Where that leaves Uncle Sucker is another matter.

First, the enemies. At the end of February, A-jad was off to Damascus -- ah, Damascus in February -- for a joint summit with Bashar al-Assad to denounce the United States and Israel, and then, a group summit, or "war council" as Arab media called it, with both Assad and Hezbollah's Hassan Nasrallah. All three denounced, for variation, Israel and the United States.

Then, it was quick back to Tehran for a two-day conference with the Palestinian "resistance" all-stars, as translated by the Middle East Media Research Institute: Hamas head Khaled Mash'al (who told Iranian Ayatollah Khameini "if the resistance breathes ... today it is by virtue of Khameini"), Islamic Jihad leader Ramadhan Shallah (who doubles as an entry on the FBI's most wanted list), and PFLP-GC leader Ahmad Jibril (like his colleagues, an all-around great guy).

Talk of a third intifada was bandied about while, MEMRI notes, "Ahmadinejad made particularly virulent anti-Israel statements." MEMRI ought to know; the group translates scores of them. A-jad's remarks no doubt thrilled the genocide-eager crowd: "Zionist regime ... purge the region of your existence ... insult to all humanity ... racist group... not committed to a single human principle ... their presence on even a single centimeter of Palestine and the region leads to ... consecutive wars ... Zionists are the source of all wars ... end of its road ... downward slope ... completely dead end ... completely eliminated. ..."

Brilliant stuff. Another speech like that, and they'll all be ready for the "peace process."

As MEMRI notes, "Iran has been noticeably ratcheting up its efforts to arouse the Palestinian resistance organizations against Israel," thus boosting "its position in the Islamic world." But in spite of Gen. David Petraeus' assertion that the Israeli-Palestinian issues "set the strategic context within which we operate in the Central Command [region]," there are in fact other contexts involving Iran that have nothing to do with Israel, and everything to do with us.

I'm talking about Iran's relationships with our putative (non-Israel) allies in the region, the ones American troops have actually died for, Afghanistan and Iraq.

In March, Afghanistan's Hamid Karzai visited A-jad in Tehran to make merry for the Nowruz holiday; then, following Karzai's three-day visit to Beijing, Karzai reciprocated, giving A-jad what the New York Times called "the red-carpet treatment" in Kabul where he "delivered a fiery anti-American speech inside Afghanistan's presidential palace." That would be the same presidential palace that is ultimately protected by U.S. troops. With Karzai at his side, A-jad "accused the United States of promoting terrorism."

Kind of takes the bounce out of the "surge" to have your own puppet pull your strings.

And what did Karzai say back? According to Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Karzai riffed on brotherly love, praising "Tehran for spending hundreds of millions of dollars in rebuilding roads, providing electricity, education and health care in parts of Afghanistan." No mention of Iran's generous military assistance, including improvised explosive device assistance, to the Taliban.

RFE/RL continued, noting suspicions in Kabul over Iran's "investments in Afghan media and support for Afghan Shi'ite communities, in particular the Hazaras," who "now enjoy a major share in the Afghan government and are also making significant progress in education and private sectors -- partly because of generous assistance from Iran's clerical regime." Great. Anyone want to bet that Iran won't be the big winner again at the end of America's latest "surge?"

Back to A-jad's busy whirl. Even as he was shaking Kabul's dust from his boots, he was preparing to receive a delegation from Iraq. Seems that Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is trying to build a parliamentary bloc large enough to transform his whisker-close second-place finish in March elections into ultimate victory -- and what better place to do Iraqi political horse-trading than in Iran?

Last week, Maliki delegations visited A-jad in Tehran and Moqtada al-Sadr in Qom. Gee. Maybe someday, if we "surge" long enough, Afghanistan's elections can be worked out in Iran, too.
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