Syrian rebel commander urges Israel to support uprising, strike Iran-backed forces
Syrian rebel commander urges Israel to support uprising, strike Iran-backed forces
Just a moment...
In interview with ToI, a Free Syrian Army officer expresses hope for friendly relations with Jewish state, warns of Iranian militias propping up Assad: ‘They will come for Israel, too’
The commander interviewed by The Times of Israel participated in the recent seizure of Aleppo and his troops are now fighting government forces, Hezbollah and Iran-backed militias in the area, and pushing south.
The rebel leader, in his early 60s, agreed to be interviewed by phone on condition of anonymity and spoke of the objectives of the ongoing campaign, his vision for the future of Syria and relations with Israel, and the role the Jewish state can play, in his view, in support of the rebels.
I wonder if all the people in the other thread downvoting me for saying that no matter who won between Assad's regime and the rebels, everyone else in Syria loses still feel that these rebels are "the good guys?"
I think you are highly oversimplifying the situation.
The rapid fall of the Assad regime means the end of the Syrian civil war, which is a good thing. Syria has been plagued by war for more than a decade now, perhaps some peace will finally settle and the millions of Syrian refugees will finally return to their homes. As for what happens after, it remains to be seen. The rebels are no monolith, they contain everything from Turkish backed mercenaries, jihadists to mostly secular Syrian anti-Assad nationalists.
Those who simply assume that the rebels are wholly "good" are no doubt naive, but there is certainly hope that the more reasonable elements of the movement will prevail and institute a more free society, perhaps by cooperating with the Kurdish autonomous zone in the east. If that happens however, or something else like a taliban-esque islamist theocratic tyranny is instituted instead remains to be seen.
Assad is 100% a super bad. But the rebels are ex Al Qaeda and ISIS.
The US and Israel will support whichever group fights against their enemy.
Assad was supplying Iranian weapons to Hezbollah through Syria. And instead of fighting Israel these rebels used the opportunity to backstab the people who were fighting Israel because Assad was weakened.
In the short term this would be a win. But in the long term Israel is planning to take over Syria and not stopping Israel now will prove an incredibly stupid mistake.
Previously there was Saddam Hussein at the Sunni side who was growing too powerful. Thus the US and Israel supported the Shia's. Now it is the other way around.
The US and Israel keeps switching sides to support the weakest party until they all kill eachother. Then they steal their land.
Dude, they're literally asking for a genocidal regime's help and you're turning this around and making it about who the U.S. and Israel supports.
Weak.
That makes a lot more sense when you consider that many of these grew from militants fighting the US invasion of Iraq, so of course they were involved with Al Qaeda and ISIS (less ISIS because they're ISIS), who were also fighting the US invasion in Iraq. "Former Al Qaeda" says literally nothing about the people involved here other than they're maybe Islamist. "Al Qaeda" isn't a bad word that destroys anything it touches. Also you say backstab like Assad was acting for the good of Syria (or literally anyone other than himself), but this man is/was hated by most of Syria and the Arab world. Why you want anyone to tolerate him because he's doing one good thing I have no idea, but to the people being oppressed by that bastard they can't just tiddle their thumbs until he finishes liberating Palestine (hint: He wasn't going to do that, because he was too busy committing warcrimes against his own people).
I wish people in general stopped looking for good guys and bad guys. My maxim as I grow older and weary is everyone is awful, unless proven otherwise. Or, in other words, it’s all geopolitics and a complex web of conflicting interests. Combating factions choose their alliances less on principle and more on what serves their long term goals and immediate tactical aims. In the meantime we are fed whatever narrative paints one or the other side “good” and depending on our politics and possible stake in a conflict convince ourselves that we are “on the right side of history”. But history is largely written by the victor and in hindsight it is always easier to say what was good or bad. In the heat of the moment, when lives, money, and land are at stake, the enemy of my enemy is my friend.
I mean this is the FSA, the explicitly US-supported organization. Why did you expect anything else? The main actor was the HTS AFAIK, and they aren't like... that. Also Syrians (and the rest of the Arab world) are celebrating this so obviously they don't think they're losing here.
They're apparently currently asking the Israelis for help. That's just indefensible.
https://www.timesofisrael.com/syrian-rebel-commander-urges-israel-to-support-uprising-strike-iran-backed-forces/
Disagree. There are lots of good people in the Middle East. But they're not the ones killing each other. They're the ones dying in the crossfire. Or the genocide.
Good way of showing your racism to the people of Lemmy.