Here's all the videos and pictures of the CW attack linked munition I've
come across http://imgur.com/a/1nziC  <http://t.co/e9riWKuOHS> https://www.
youtube.com/watch?v=YLcqi_dE9SU&list=PLPC0Udeof3T4_ws0Xhv4O2ABwjrxYJVK9
…<https://t.co/znZpq8X353>


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http://www.therevoltingsyrian.com/
The Chemical Massacre in Syria

Some of the latest photos from the chemical gas attack by Assad’s forces on
the neighborhoods of the Eastern Ghouta area in the suburbs of Damascus.
More than 1,750 deaths from the attack on Aug 21, 2013 have been documented
so far.

Photos source from flickr
here<http://www.flickr.com/photos/96200686@N02/9569643299/in/photostream/>
.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/96200686@N02/9569643299/in/photostream/

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http://syriafreedomforever.wordpress.com/2013/08/24/%D8%B1%D8%B3%D8%A7%D8%A6%D9%84-%D8%AA%D9%86%D8%B3%D9%8A%D9%82%D9%8A%D8%A7%D8%AA-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%84%D8%AC%D8%A7%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%89-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B9%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%85-coordination-committees-m/

Local Coordination Committies

The more the barbaric regime goes on in suppressing the Syrian revolution,
the more the people insist to continue to achieve their aspirations of
freedom and dignity. As Syrians have took to the streets in Friday of ‘The
Terrorist Bashar kills Civilians with Chemical Weapons as the World
watches’ following the horrific massacre committed by the regime against
the children and women in Ghouta, Damascus Suburbs, with a shameful
international silence.

Moreover, the coordination committees in Douma, Madaya, and Zabadany in
Damascus Suburbs, and Tafas and Dael in Daraa, as well as Jable in Lattakia
have conveyed unified messages condemning the use of chemical weapons by
the regime, using sarcastic illustrations to express the inability of the
International Community to protect civilians, especially while the regime
has committed violations against international laws and used
internationally-prohibited weapons in light of the presence of the
International Inspection Committee in the heart of the capital Damascus,
which have not achieved serious steps yet to protect the innocent Syrian
civilians.


http://syriafreedomforever.wordpress.com/2013/08/24/imperialism-sectarianism-and-syrias-revolution/#more-4344
Imperialism, sectarianism and Syria’s revolution
Posted on August 24,
2013<http://syriafreedomforever.wordpress.com/2013/08/24/imperialism-sectarianism-and-syrias-revolution/>

[image: 
282232_374787675932794_1672348593_n-2]<http://syriafreedomforever.files.wordpress.com/2013/08/282232_374787675932794_1672348593_n-2.jpg>



Interview published in Solidarity magazine :
http://www.solidarity.net.au/59/imperialism-sectarianism-and-syrias-revolution/

23 August, 2013

Joseph Daher is a member of the Syrian Revolutionary Left Current and runs
the blogsyriafreedomforever.wordpress.com. He spoke with Solidarity’s Mark
Goudkamp about the Syrian revolution.

*How would you characterise the current balance of forces in Syria?*

The military balance of forces is clearly on the side of the regime. It has
been continuously provided [arms] by its allies (Iran and Russia), high
inflows of money and in the case of Hezbollah has participated directly on
the field, while training some new soldiers.

On the other side, the Free Syrian Army (FSA) completely lacks any real
material and financial support. The Islamists reactionary forces such as
Jabhat al Nusra and the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) are
being well-funded by some Gulf countries.

They fund the Islamist reactionary forces to transform the Syrian
revolution into a sectarian war. The victory of the revolution in Syria and
its spread to the region would be a threat to their own regimes.
We must not forget also that the tensions between FSA groups and Islamist
forces of Jabhat al Nusra and ISIL have expanded recently. The latter are
accused of murdering members of the FSA, including Fadi al-Qash, the head
of a FSA battalion and his two brothers.

The ISIL also expelled FSA forces from several regions the FSA liberated
and declared their will to establish Islamic emirates, while refusing to
fight on the front lines in Aleppo, Homs and Khan al Asal.
Despite the clear advantage of the regime militarily and their destruction,
the determination of the Syrian popular movement has not diminished. There
are continuous demonstrations and other forms of resistance in many regions
throughout Syria.

*How is it that in the face of such unequal military force, the Syrian
people continue?*

There is no coming back to the era of Assad regime and no alternative to
the continuation of the revolution. One of the main slogans in Syria
chanted by the protesters is “Rather death than humiliation”. In addition
the Syrian popular movement knows very well that if they stop they will
face terrible repression from the regime.

*Can you explain some of the economic and social factors underpinning the
uprising?*

The regime’s bourgeois credentials started in 1970 when Hafez al-Assad put
an end to some radical policies of the 1960s of the left wing of his Baath
Party. They were accelerated with the implementation of neoliberal economic
policies when [his son] Bashar al-Assad took power in 2000. These policies
especially benefited a small oligarchy.

Rami Makhlouf, the cousin of Bashar al-Assad, represented the mafia-style
process of privatisation led by the regime. A process of privatisation
created new monopolies in the hands of relatives of Bashar al-Assad, while
the quality of goods and services declined. These neoliberal economic
reforms allowed the appropriation of economic power by rich and powerful.

At the same time the financial sector has developed with private banks,
insurance firms, the Damascus stock exchange and money exchange bureaus.
Neoliberal policies have satisfied the upper class and foreign investors,
especially from the Arab Gulf, at the expense of the vast majority of
Syrians, who have been hit by inflation and the rising cost of living.

These policies, accelerated by the savage repression of any popular or
working class protest since the early 2000s, have had devastating effects.
Capital’s share of Gross Domestic Product rose to 72 per cent in 2005, over
a third of the population fell below the poverty line (less than US $1 a
day) and nearly half live around this threshold ($2 or less a day). Before
the revolution there was between 20-25 per cent unemployment, reaching 55
per cent for under-25s (in a country where people under 30 are 65 per cent
of the total population). The percentage of Syrians living under the
poverty line rose from 11 per cent in 2000 to 33 per cent in 2010. That is,
about seven million Syrians live around or below the poverty line.

The uprisings in Idlib and Deraa … and including the suburbs of Damascus
and Aleppo, [these areas] are historic bastions of the Baath Party that had
not taken part on a massive scale in the insurrection of the 1980s. This
shows the involvement of the victims of neoliberalism in this revolution.

*What role do the Local Coordinating Committees play in the opposition
controlled areas and what kind of support do they have?*

The LCC is only one actor in larger popular movement, concentrating its
work especially on the provision of information, videos of demonstrations,
but also working at a ground level with local popular councils, while
providing services to local population and internal refugees.

We have to understand more generally the crucial role played by the popular
committees and organisations in the continuation of the revolutionary
process, they are the ultimate actors that allow the popular movement to
resist. This is not to undermine the role played by the armed resistance,
but even they are dependent on the popular movement to continue the battle,
otherwise without it we would not stand a chance.

*What is your response to some on the left who assert that the Syrian
opposition are proxies for Western imperialism and the oil rich Gulf states?
*

The problem with some of the Western left, especially the Stalinists, is
that they have been analysing the Syrian revolutionary process from a
geo-political perspective, ignoring completely the socio-economic and
political dynamism on the ground in Syria. Many of them also consider Iran,
Russia, or Syria to be anti-imperialist states struggling against the USA,
which is wrong on every aspect. Our choice should not be to choose between
on one side the USA and Saudi Arabia and on the other side Iran and Russia,
our choice is revolutionary masses struggling for their emancipation.

As Pierre Frank, French Trotskyist, wrote : “Let us note that the greatest
theoreticians of Marxism did not at all define the political nature of a
bourgeois regime by the positions which the latter held in the field of
foreign policy but solely and simply by the position it occupied in
relation to the classes composing the nation”

In addition, both sides have been trying to impose a solution from above
that would maintain the regime with a Yemeni solution (change the head of
the regime, while maintaining its structure). The only difference between
the positions of the Western governments and the Gulf monarchies on one
side and Iran, Russia, and China’s positions on the other, remains the
same: what fate for the dictator Bashar al-Assad? Russia wants to maintain
the dictator, while Western powers want a new leader, even more open to
their interests than Bashar al-Assad.

*There have been reports of armed Islamist groups attacking other groups in
the opposition. What impact has this had on the opposition and how have the
revolutionary forces responded?*

The Syrian revolutionary masses have increasingly opposed the authoritarian
and reactionary policies of these groups. In the city of Raqqa, which has
been liberated from the forces of the regime since March 2013, many popular
demonstrations occurred against the authoritarian actions of Jabhat al
Nusra and ISIS in the city. Similar demonstrations took place with masses
challenging this kind of behavior in Aleppo and other cities.

It should be said as well that Jabhat al Nusra has not hesitated to strike
deals with the Assad regime, for example the regime is paying more than
$150 million Syrian lire [AU $2.4 million] monthly to them to guarantee oil
is kept pumping through two major pipelines in Banias and Latakia. Jabhat
al Nusra fighters have also been involved in other businesses.

The Syrian National Council, instead of defending the principles of the
revolution and doing everything possible to develop the democratic
components of the FSA, have let these groups, which are and were part of
the counter-revolution since their establishment, to develop without
condemning them and actually providing them with cover. These groups, just
like the Syrian regime want to divide the Syrian people into sectarian and
ethnic entities. The Syrian revolution wants to break the sectarian and
ethnic division.

*What has been the response to the recent attacks by Islamist groups on
Kurdish areas?*

We have seen support from various popular committees in Syria for the
Kurdish masses against the actions of the Islamist groups. Sections of the
FSA are divided. Some are fighting alongside Islamists, but others joined
the Kurdish militias and denounced abuses committed by Islamist groups.

The traditional opposition, from Islamists to nationalists and liberals, is
in favour of Kurdish cultural rights, but not autonomy. The Current of the
Revolutionary Left in Syria has reaffirmed its commitment and support to
the self-determination of the Kurdish people in Syria. Support for
self-determination of the Kurdish people does not prevent us from wishing
to see the Kurdish people to be a full partner in the struggle against the
criminal regime of Assad, and in the building of a future democratic,
socialist and secular Syria.

We also condemned the behaviour of Islamists and other reactionary forces
and their attempts to divide the Syrian people. Similarly, the refusal of
some in the Syrian opposition, including the Syrian National Council (SNC),
to recognise the rights of the Kurdish people in Syria are unacceptable and
are no different of the nationalist policies of the Assad regime.

*What distinct left wing organisations and forces exist inside the Syrian
revolutionary movement?*

Different leftist forces have been involved in the Syrian revolutionary
process since the revolutionary process began. We can find numerous smaller
leftist groups and youth in Syria participating in the revolutionary
process, in popular committees on the ground, organisation of
demonstrations and of the provision of services to the population. The left
has mostly been engaged in the civil work, in opposition to the armed work.

>From the very beginning, despite our modest capacities, we, the Current of
the Revolutionary Left has not once faltered in our engagement with the
revolution, calling for democracy and socialism. We have struggled
alongside the people and all democratic forces for the victory of this
great popular revolution, just as we struggle for the formation of a
socialist workers’ party.

Read the Current of the Revolutionary Left’s statement on Assad’s chemical
weapons massacre:bit.ly/1dtVGzH


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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