Thursday, May 19, 2011

Washington Sanctions President Assad

In the Western media and here in Lebanon, people keep posing the question: why does the Obama administration have double standards for Libya and Syria? There is a military intervention in Libya and yesterday Washington only placed a second round of sanctions against the Syrian government, this time of a more personal nature. Well considering the regional support for intervention in Libya but not in Syria, as well as the scale of the uprisings in Libya, where a sizable majority of the population requested a no fly zone, and the minority of protesters being repressed in Syria—which does not make their slaughter any less serious—the American response does not appear all that inconsistent. Until you factor in Yemen and Bahrain, where no sanctions or any kind of punishment have been inflicted on the Saleh and Khalifa regimes that are also brutally killing, torturing and repressing the Yemeni and Bahraini people respectively. And yes, these two regimes are likely using American weapons and military support to kill their own people (rendering Iran a very minor player in aiding regional repression in comparison). One standard for "friends" and another for "enemies" is the issue we ought to be focusing on, especially when ordinary people are the ones who are equally suffering injustices.

We all have double standards, none of us are immune from this human trait. Until we recognize this and try to analyze why, unless we really try to understand our contradictions, the repression will always continue somewhere and ultimately we will all be complicit.

Syrian Leader Defiant as U.S. Sanctions Bite Deep

President Bashar Assad claims the country's "crisis" is drawing to a close

By Zeina Karam
Associated Press
Wednesday 15 May 2011

Syrian citizens who fled from violence from the western Syrian villages along the Lebanese-Syrian border, protest as they shout slogans against Bashar Assad and his regime, in the Wadi Khaled area, about one kilometer (0.6 miles) from the Lebanon-Syria border, north Lebanon, on Monday May 16, 2011.

Syrian President Bashar Assad claimed the country's "crisis" is drawing to a close even as forces unleashed tank shells on opponents Wednesday and U.S. sanctions took aim at the Syrian leader and his senior aides for their brutal crackdowns.

The messages from Damascus and Washington highlight a sharp divide: Western governments trying to boost pressure on Syria's regime, but Assad displaying confidence he can ride it out.

Assad received a further boost when a call for nationwide strikes fell flat and longtime ally Russia vowed to stand against any U.N. resolutions that would sanction Syria.

Syria has banned foreign journalists and prevented coverage of the conflict, making it nearly impossible to independently verify accounts coming out of the country or gauge the strength of the unprecedented protest movement in one of the most authoritarian regimes in the Middle East.

But as the regime tightens its lockdown and broadens its campaign of intimidation, the regime could eventually frighten the population enough to eventually keep them off the streets -- a tactic used by Syria's close partner Iran after unprecedented post-election chaos two years ago.

On Wednesday, witnesses said the Syrian army shelled the western border town of Talkalakh with tanks for the fourth consecutive day. Syrians fleeing to Lebanon in recent days have described horrific scenes of execution-style slayings and bodies in the streets in Talkalakh.

Activists say at least 27 people have been killed there since last week.

"They are bombing us with tanks, it's been going on for days," a resident told The Associated Press by phone from just outside the town of the town of some 70,000 people, just hours after fleeing.

"Security forces are making random arrests, there isn't one security apparatus that they have not sent to the town," he said on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

More than 5,000 people have crossed from Talkalakh across a shallow river into Wadi Khaled on the Lebanese side of the border in recent weeks.

Assad "is not a president," said Mohammad, a Syrian who fled Talkalakh three days earlier and was taking shelter along with others in a mosque in Wadi Khaled. "We elected him to protect us and shelter us, not to displace us," he told Associated Press Television News.

The violence across Syria has sparked international condemnation and efforts for new sanctions against the Syrian leadership after more than 850 deaths since the uprising began in March.

In Washington, officials said the Treasury Department planned sanctions on Assad and six members of his inner circle. It would mark the first time that sanctions would hold Assad personally accountable for actions of his security forces. In Berlin, Germany's Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle also pushed for a second round of European Union sanctions that would target Assad.

The Swiss government, meanwhile, passed a measure restricting arms sales to Syria and freezing the assets and banning the travel to Switzerland of 13 senior Syrian officials. The arms embargo is largely theoretical because Switzerland hasn't exported weapons to Syria in over a decade, but any Swiss banks holding assets of the 13 officials will have to declare them immediately to the government.

"The recent events in Syria we believe prove that the country cannot go back to the status quo ante," said White House press secretary Jay Carney. "Syria's future will only be secured by a government that reflects the popular will of its people."

But the Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev, said Assad must be given a chance to fulfill his reform promises and warned against foreign interference in the country.

On Wednesday, Assad was quoted as saying the country's security forces have made mistakes during the uprising, blaming poorly trained police officers at least in part for the bloody crackdown.

Assad's comments, carried Wednesday in the private Al-Watan newspaper, downplayed the extent of the violence—but they were significant because they mark a rare acknowledgment of shortcomings within Syria's powerful security agencies.

Assad said thousands of police officers were receiving new training and that the "crisis" was nearing an end.

Assad also has blamed much of the unrest of thugs and foreign agitators looking to sow sectarian strife.

Syria's state-run news agency said gunmen killed the head of the Political Security Agency in Homs, Colonel Mohammad Ibrahim al-Abdullah, in an ambush along with four of his assistants Tuesday.

It said a group of young Syrians had announced they want to surrender themselves to the colonel personally, and that when he arrived to meet them, they opened fire, killing him instantly.

Human rights activists also said troops used heavy machine guns to attack a neighborhood in the central city of Homs and sent troops and tanks to Nawa, a village near the besieged southern city of Daraa.

An eyewitness said hundreds of security forces also moved in the town of Dummeir east of Damascus from four sides Tuesday, set up machine guns and were storming houses and making random arrests.

The witnesses spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because of fear of reprisals.

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