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Cavalier Zee

@cavalierzee / cavalierzee.tumblr.com

Male, Sunni Muslim, Egyptian-American. This blogs posts will cover the following categories: 1. Science, Healthcare. 2. Technology 3. Poetry, Quotes, Proverbs, Wisdom, Literature. 4. History 5. Islam 6. Culture and Geography 7. Politics, Diplomacy, Strategy 8. Warfare 9. Music 10. Comedy 11. Sports
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~ To Our Countries - لبلادي ~ Video contains English subtitles. The singer has a really nice voice. لبلادي عمل من إعداد وإنتاج وتنفيذ مجموعة شباب يقيمون في السويد وهم من سوريا و العراق و لبنان و فلسطين. على أمل السلام To Our Countries is a project produced by a group of youths who live in Sweden and are originally from Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and Palestine.

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~ Clear As Mud ~ Are you confused by what's going on in the Middle East?  Let me explain: We support the Iraqi government in the fight against the Islamic State. We don't like IS, but IS is supported by Saudi Arabia, whom we do like. We don't like President Assad in Syria. We support the fight against him, but not IS, which is also fighting against him.  We don't like Iran, but Iran supports the Iraqi government against IS.  So, some of our friends support our enemies and some of our enemies are fighting against our other enemies, whom we want to lose, but we don't want our enemies who are fighting our enemies to win.  If the people we want to defeat are defeated, they might be replaced by people we like even less.  And all this was started by us invading a country to drive out terrorists who weren't actually there until we went to drive them out.  Do you understand now? By Aubrey Bailey, Fleet, Hants. Transcribed by: CZ

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~ What If London Was Syria? ~

London-based Save The Children just released this powerful PSA to raise awareness about the millions of children affected by the crisis in Syria. The PSA follows a young girl one second a day for one year, and imagines what the crisis in Syria would look like if it were to happen in the UK. Find out more at http://bit.ly/3yearson

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~ Hezbollah Executes Wounded Syrian Rebels ~

The video shows armed men in fatigues, at least one wearing the yellow arm band sported by the Lebanese Shiite movement, dragging several bloodied men out of a van and shooting them dead.
The men speak in the Lebanese dialect of Arabic, and at the end of the video one man calls them over, saying: "One moment, one moment. We are doing our duty, not avenging ourselves."
The others call out: "For the sake of God, for the sake of God."
Hezbollah declined to comment on it.
Al-Arabiya television said it may have been filmed during the battle for Qusayr, a strategic Syrian town near the Lebanese border that Syrian troops recaptured from rebels with the help of Hezbollah earlier this year.

Hassan Nasrallah and his Hezbollah have lambasted Syria's "Sunni takfiri fighter's" for the atrocities they committed against pow's, wounded soldiers and civilians, and that they supposedly held the moral high ground in that area, but this video proves that they are no better.

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~ ياكاتب التاريخ اسمعني وقل لي ما الخبر ~

  ياكاتب التاريخ اسمعني وقل لي ما الخبر  هل راح عهد النصر أم ولّى الظفر؟ خالد ينادي ، أين سيف ابي بكر؟ وابن الزبير اراه يبكي من قهر عذرًا رسول الله إذ ليس فينا عُمْر ياكاتب التاريخ مهلًا لا تغلق الصفحات أحفاد خالد قد اتوا ومحمد ما مات  يا كاتب التاريخ مهلًا لاتغلق الصفحات  احفاد حمزة قد اتوا ورسولنا ما مات رسولنا ما مات اني أراهم قادمين ويحملون مصحاف الجيب الصغيرة .. يقرأون .. يرتلون.. يرددون .. الله اكبر ومحمد ما مات أنى أراهم قادمين.. يسبحون .. يمجدون.. يرفعوا أكفهم لله بعد الصلوات.. يهللون.. يمجدون .. يكبرون  الله اكبر و محمد ما مات إننا أبناء سعد إنما دماؤنا وفيه وإذا دعا داعي الجهاد فإنما أرواحنا هدية إننا أبناء حمزة إنما دماؤنا وفيه وإذا دعا داعي الجهاد فإنا أرواحنا هدية وليشهد التاريخ دوما أن غزة حرة أبيّة

وليشهد التاريخ دوما أن سوريا حرة أبيّة

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~ Al-Bayda: Anatomy Of A War Crime ~

Courtesy Of: Channel 4 News

At least 169 people, including women and children, were killed in a massacre in the Syrian town of al-Bayda earlier this year. Warning: this exclusive video contains extremely distressing footage.

Warning: the video below contains extremely distressing footage from the beginning

At seven in the morning of 2 May this year, Syrian government forces entered the village of al-Bayda, an opposition enclave nestled in the hills by the Mediterranean coast in the western governorate of Tartus, writes James Brabazon.

Al-Bayda was a sleepy place. Not much happened there, and until this spring was unremarkable except for one defining fact: it was a predominantly Sunni village, entirely surrounded by pro-regime Alawite and Christian territory.

The Syrian government didn't consider al-Bayda to be a threat. In May 2011 they rounded up all the men in the village square and beat many of them up to remind them President Assad was in charge - and then more or less left it alone.

There was no permanent Syrian army force there, no big checkpoint and no fighting. Regime forces came and went as they pleased. No-one attacked them.

SHOOTOUT

  The only function that al-Bayda played for the opposition was to help smuggle out individual deserting government soldiers who'd run away from their bases on the coast and were trying to reach rebel-held territory.

So when the Syrian army arrived in May - to arrest a group of three Syrian army deserters who were being hidden in the outskirts village by supporters of the opposition to President Assad - no-one could have guessed what would happen.

First, there was a shootout. The deserters and a group of around a dozen opposition fighters who went to their assistance - local men with light weapons - opened fire on the army. Residents said that later they saw the bodies of at least a dozen dead Syrian Army soldiers, their corpses trapped in the burned-out remains of their ambushed vehicle.

Taking no chances, the regime forces called in reinforcements. By 1pm the firefight was over. The deserters were either killed, or fled along with the opposition fighters up into the caves far outside the village.

MASSACRE

  Now government fighters massed around al-Bayda: regular Syrian Arab army units; uniformed national defence force paramilitaries (the so-called shabiha); and Syrian army special forces operators.

From the outskirts where the skirmish had taken place, the army and paramilitaries moved in. From three axes, in coordinated deployments, they swept through al-Bayda, moving from house to house.

The world should pay attention about what is happening in al-Bayda. Why is everyone asleep? Why don't they do something?'Sara'

At 1.30pm the killing began. Men and women were separated in the houses. The "men" - which included teenage boys - were either executed immediately, or marched to the village square to be killed en masse. Most were shot. Some were hacked to death with long knives or cleavers. At least one young boy, Luqman al-Hiris, was beheaded - in front of his mother.

In the house of Mustafa Biyasi, 30 women and children were herded into one room and then executed - shot at point blank. Saffa Biyasi cuddled her baby boy, Hamza Biyasi. They lay dead next to each other, serene despite their injuries. Afnan Biyasi and another small child spooned each other on the bed they were shot on, perhaps holding each other for comfort in the last moments before the bullets ripped through their tiny bodies.

By 5pm the massacre was over. The Syrian army had killed at least 169 civilians in four hours. The verified final death toll is likely to reach beyond 250.

BURNED

  Bodies were stacked up in the local cellphone shop and burned, making them hard to identify. Um Mohammed, an eye witness to the massacre, was able to identify the charred remains of her son only by the chipped fingernail he'd broken earlier.

The next day government forces returned and burned al-Bayda. The sleepy village which once had a population of around 5,000 people was empty. Refugees fled to rebel-held areas of Syria and then on to Turkey and Lebanon.

It used to be called al-Bayda – the white village. Now they call it al-Sawda - the black village.'Sara'

If the government's strategy has been to cleanse al-Bayda of its Sunni Muslim residents then they were successful: with the exception of a few elderly people too old to leave, only the Christian quarter remains inhabited.

Thirteen members of Fattou family, who did try to return were wiped out in their home by Syrian security forces on 21 July.

'THE BLACK VILLAGE'

  While the investigation into the regime's alleged use of nerve gas continues, the 2 May massacre in al-Bayda remains the single, most extensive verified act of the killing of civilians carried out by government forces since the war began.

But what perhaps is as shocking as the eyewitness accounts of murder by uniformed government troops is that the massacre at al-Bayda was almost entirely unreported in the mainstream media: a few short news pieces, a lot of web traffic and a report and brief overview at the time in the western press is really all the attention that al-Bayda received.

"Sara" - a 12-year-old girl who survived the massacre and who was interviewed for this programme, found the body of her tortured and murdered father. When asked if there was anything she'd like to say to the people abroad who might see this film she replied:

"The world should pay attention about what is happening in al-Bayda. Why is everyone asleep? Why don't they do something?

"We had one nursing baby who died in his mother's lap. What has he done? Did he overthrow the president? People should stand up to them, to our enemies.

"You cannot just keep quiet. This is not right. They have slaughtered all of us. They have emptied al-Bayda. There is no-one there any more. It used to be called al-Bayda – the white village. Now they call it al-Sawda – the black village."

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~ Birds Of A Feather, Flock Together ~ Egypt's Dictator and Usurper: Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi, Is Supplying Syria's Dictator : Bashar Al-Assad With Weapons Egyptian blood wasn't enough to quench Sisi's thirst, so he turns his attention to Syrian blood 1. One of the causes that made Sisi overthrow President Morsi, was Morsi's readiness  to permit Egyptian's to go to Syria and aid the resistance, and that's unacceptable. But it's totally acceptable for Sisi to aid Bashar. 2. The usurpers accused Turkey of sending a ship filled with weapons to the Muslim Brotherhood, and that's unacceptable. But it's totally acceptable for Egypt to send weapons to Bashar 3. The usurpers were furious when Erdogan refused to recognize their illegitimate government and accused Turkey (Mauritius, South Africa, Ecuador and others) of meddling in Egypt's internal affairs, and that's unacceptable. But it's quite acceptable for the usurpers to meddle in Syria's internal affairs.

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~ Bashar Al-Assad's Thugs Bury Activist Alive ~

WARNING: Video contains graphic material. Viewer discretion is advised. Must be 18 years old and above, to view this. This video was published on April 25th, 2012, but this is the first time I'm seeing it. Although it's a bit old, there is no doubt that Bashar Al-Assad's crimes against humanity have gotten much worse (CZ) --- BLOOD-BOILING!!  ENOUGH APATHY. WHERE IS THE ACTION!! FRIENDS OF MINE IF YOU ARE READING THIS PLEASE SEE WHAT IS HAPPENING TO MY PEOPLE, MY COUNTRY. PLEASE BREAK YOUR SILENCE, HAVE NO FEAR, NO DOUBT. THE PEOPLE OF SYRIA NEED YOU! PLEASE HELP US!! A shocking & distressing video of assad thugs burying a man alive & telling him to say 'there is no God but bashar' The Syrian regime has surpassed all the red lines & yet they continue to commit unspeakable crimes with no serious action or condemnation from the international world! Please share! |Translated By Syrian-Ography|

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~ Syrian Air Force Bombing Civilians ~

WARNING: Video contains graphic images. Viewer discretion is advised (Aleppo, April 11, 2013) -- The Syrian Air Force has repeatedly carried out indiscriminate, and in some cases deliberate, air strikes against civilians, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. These attacks are serious violations of international humanitarian law (the laws of war), and people who commit such violations with criminal intent are responsible for war crimes. The 75-page report, "Death from the Skies: Deliberate and Indiscriminate Air Strikes on Civilians," is based on visits to 50 sites of government air strikes in opposition-controlled areas in Aleppo, Idlib, and Latakia governorates, and more than 140 interviews with witnesses and victims. The air strikes Human Rights Watch documented killed at least 152 civilians. According to a network of local Syrian activists, air strikes have killed more than 4,300 civilians across Syria since July 2012. Courtesy Of: Human Rights Watch

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~ Sowing The Seeds Of Destruction ~

Daniel Pipes puts forward his case for playing both sides against each other:

Evil forces pose less danger to us when they make war on each other. This (1) keeps them focused locally and (2) prevents either one from emerging victorious (and thereby posing a yet-greater danger). Western powers should guide enemies to stalemate by helping whichever side is losing, so as to prolong the conflict.

This policy has precedent. Through most of World War II, Nazi Germany was on the offensive against Soviet Russia, and keeping German troops tied down on the Eastern Front was critical to an Allied victory. Franklin D. Roosevelt therefore helped Joseph Stalin by provisioning his forces and coordinating the war effort with him. This morally repugnant but strategically necessary policy succeeded. And Stalin was a far worse monster than is Assad.

The Iraq–Iran War of 1980–88 created a similar situation. After mid 1982, when Ayatollah Khomeini’s forces went on the offense against those of Saddam Hussein, Western governments began supporting Iraq. Yes, the Iraqi regime had started the hostilities and was more brutal, but the Iranian one was ideologically more dangerous and on the offensive.

The best-case scenario is when the hostilities hobble both sides and prevent either one from merging victorious. In the apocryphal words of Henry Kissinger, “It’s a pity they both can’t lose.” 

In this spirit, I argued for U.S. help to the losing party, whichever that might be, as in this May 1987 analysis: “In 1980, when Iraq threatened Iran, our interests lay at least partly with Iran. But Iraq has been on the defensive since the summer of 1982, and Washington now belongs firmly on its side. . . . Looking to the future, should Iraq once again take the offensive, an unlikely but not impossible change, the United States should switch again and consider giving assistance to Iran.”

Applying this same logic to Syria today finds notable parallels. Assad fills the role of Saddam Hussein — the brutal Baathist dictator who began the violence. The rebel forces resemble Iran — the initial victim getting stronger over time and posing an increasing Islamist danger. In both cases continued fighting endangers the neighborhood and both sides engage in war crimes and pose a danger to Western interests.

Yes, Assad’s survival benefits Tehran, the region’s most dangerous regime. But a rebel victory would hugely boost the increasingly rogue Turkish government while empowering jihadis and replacing the Assad government with triumphant, inflamed Islamists. 

Continued fighting does less damage to Western interests than letting the Islamists take power.

There are worse prospects than Sunni and Shiite Islamists mixing it up and Hamas jihadis killing Hezbollah jihadis, and vice-versa. Better that neither side wins.

On the happy day when Assad and Tehran have fought the rebels and Ankara to mutual exhaustion, Western support then can go to non-Baathist and non-Islamist elements in Syria, helping them offer a moderate alternative to today’s wretched choices and lead to a better future.

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~ Egypt's Lost Rival ~

Courtesy Of "National Geographic's Expedition Week"

The ancient city of Qatna once challenged Egypt’s dominance but was wiped off the face of the earth as it grew too powerful. In 2009, archaeologists revealed their ground breaking discoveries of this lost city.

Egypt’s Lost Rival is the story of Qatna, a city that challenged Egypt’s dominance in the ancient Middle East. Located between the warrior kingdom of the Hittites and the powerful empire of Egypt, this ancient city was wiped off the face of the earth as it grew too powerful - its role in the rise of the Egyptian empire forever lost in desert sands. Like the proverbial “Lost City of Atlantis”, Qatna and its many treasures lay hidden from humanity. Hidden, until now. In ten years of archaeological digs in the Syrian Desert, the lost city of Qatna has been rediscovered and a team of international scientists has excavated its long held secrets. Culminating with a return to Qatna in 2009, Egypt’s Lost Rival chronicles ground breaking archaeological discoveries hidden from the world for millennia.

The ancient city of Qatna once challenged Egypt’s dominance but was wiped off the face of the earth as it grew too powerful. In 2009, archaeologists revealed their ground breaking discoveries of this lost city.

Above info via: NatGeoTV

Qatna (Arabic قطنا, modern Tell el-Mishrife, Arabic المشرفة) is an archaeological site in the Wadi il-Aswad, a tributary of the Orontes, 18 km northeast of Homs, Syria. It consists in a tell occupying 1 km², which makes it one of the largest Bronze Age towns in western Syria. The tell is located at the edge of the limestone-plateau of the Syrian desert towards the fertile Homs-Bassin.

The first finds at Qatna date to the mid- to late 3rd millennium BC, although this early period is not well represented.

The find of a 12th Dynasty Egyptian sphinx belonging to Princess Ita, daughter of Amenemhat II (1875–1840 BC) shows early Egyptian influence, although it is not clear at what time the sphinx got to Qatna (the sphinx was found within the debris of the Late Bronze Age palace).

The first king of Qatna (Qatanum) known by name from the Mari archives is Ishi-Adad ("Haddad" or "Adad is my help"), an Amurru or "Amorite". He was a confederate of Shamshi-Adad of upper Mesopotamia. He was succeeded by his son Amut-pî-el who had been governor of Nazala as crown prince. This was in the time of Hammurabi of Babylon (1792–1750 BC). Beltum, the sister of Amut-pî-el was married to Jasmah-Addu of Mari. Contracts between Mari and Qatna define her as the principal wife of Jasmah-Addu. Her mother might have been Lammassi-Ashur from Assur or Ekallatum. Zimrilim of Mari was married to another princess from Qatna, Dam-hurasim. After the destruction of Mari by Hammurapi, the written sources become sparse. Aleppo (Yamkhad) now became Qatna's most powerful neighbour, during the reign of Jarim–Lim III. Qatna was temporarily dominated by Aleppo.

With the development of the Mitanni empire in upper Mesopotamia, Qatna was incorporated but was located in disputed territory between the Mitanni and Egypt. The inscriptions of the so-called Nin-Egal temple (part of the Royal palace, room C) show that Mittanni were resident in Qatna. The campaigns of Pharaohs Amenhotep I (1515–1494 BC) and Thutmose I (1494–1482 BC) in Syria might have reached Qatna, but there is no conclusive evidence. On the 7th Pylon of the temple of Amun in Karnak, Thutmose III (1479–1425 BC) mentions that he stayed in the land of Qatna in the 33rd year of his reign.[citation needed] Amenhotep II (1427–1401 BC) was attacked by the host of Qatna[citation needed]while crossing the Orontes, but of course he remained victorious and acquired booty, among which the equipment of a Mitanni charioteer is mentioned. Qatna is mentioned[citation needed] in Egyptian topographic lists till the time of Ramesses III (1180 BC). Cuneiform tablets discovered under the Royal palace in Qatna mention a previously unknown king Idanda who ruled ca. 1400 BC.

During the Syrian campaign of the Hittite king Suppiluliuma I (1380–1340 BC), Prince Akizzi of Qatna asked for the help of Akhenaten/Amenhotep IV[citation needed], but as he was only concerned with his monotheistic reform symbolized by his own throne name Akhnaton and his new capital Amarna (abandoned after his death as all reforms were reversed), the town was among several Syrian city-states captured and plundered by the Hittites, the inhabitants deported to Hatti. During this same Amarna letters period, Prince Akizzi wrote 5 letters to Akhenaten. Texts from Emar describe how Qatna was attacked by Aramaic tribes in the late Bronze Age, so the town must still have been in existence.

The tell was settled in Neo-Babylonian times as well (a hilani has been excavated), but the town remained insignificant as nearby Emesa had taken over its position on the trade routes.

Above info via: Wikipedia

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