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BRKG Intense fighting reported inside Damascus city limits
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  1. #1

    Intense fighting reported inside Damascus city limits

    Posted this in Dutch's WoW thread but thought it was an important development by itself...

    http://in.reuters.com/article/2012/0...86E08W20120715

    Intense fighting reported inside Damascus city limits
    Photo
    9:42pm IST

    By Erika Solomon

    BEIRUT (Reuters) - Opposition fighters battled Syrian government forces in poor districts of Damascus on Sunday in some of the most intensive daytime fighting yet inside the city limits of the capital.

    Activist Samir al-Shami, who spoke to Reuters by Skype from Damascus, said the fighting was underway in the al-Tadamon district in the capital's south, after a night of sustained battles in the nearby Hajar al-Aswad district.

    "There is the sound of heavy gunfire. And there is smoke rising from the area. There are already some wounded and residents are trying to flee the area," he said, showing live video images of smoke visible over the skyline.

    "There are also armoured vehicles heading towards the southern part of the neighbourhood," he said.

    He described it as the most intense fighting he had heard in the capital. Another Damascus resident who asked not to be identified also said the fighting was the worst so far.

    "This area has had a lot of fighting ... The area is kind of a slum. The people who live there are poor. There's a lot of people and a lot of grassy areas around it so it's easy for rebels to sneak in and out."

    An explosion hit a security forces bus in Damascus on Sunday and wounded several people, activists said. Residents said they heard a powerful blast, followed by the sirens of ambulances rushing toward Damascus's southern ring road near the neighbourhood of Midan.

    Fifteen months into an uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, intensive fighting has reached the outskirts of the capital in recent weeks, focused on poorer areas where anger against the authorities is highest.

    Clashes frequently take place at night, but intensive battles during the day appear to be a new sign of the seriousness of the conflict.

    The opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which compiles reports by anti-Assad activists, said Sunday's death toll was at least 80. Rockets were being used in the fighting in Damascus, it said. Its figures are impossible to verify as the government restricts access to the country by independent media.

    Western countries, Arab neighbours and Turkey have formed an alliance against Assad. But diplomacy has had little impact so far, with Assad's allies Russia and China blocking action by the U.N. Security Council and the West showing no appetite for the kind of intervention it undertook last year when NATO helped topple Libya's Muammar Gaddafi.

    Opposition reports of a massacre last week in the village of Tremseh brought a wave of new denunciations of Assad in the West. U.N. observers returned on Sunday to the village to gather more evidence at the site after finding blood, damaged houses and signs that artillery was used, but inconclusive evidence of the scale of the killing.

    The government says it killed several dozen enemy fighters in battle in the village of Tremseh last week but denies accusations that it carried out a massacre or that its forces used heavy weapons.

    Opposition footage of the incident on the Internet has shown bloody corpses of men, but not women or children, making it difficult to determine whether those killed were fighters.

    Syrian Foreign Ministry spokesman Jihad Makdissi criticised U.N. peace mediator Kofi Annan for jumping to conclusions by accepting opposition reports of the incident last week.

    "What happened was not a massacre ... what happened was a military operation," Makdissi told a news conference in Damascus. "Government forces did not use planes, or helicopters, or tanks or artillery."

    Annan had said on Friday he was "shocked and appalled" at the government for breaking a promise not to use heavy weapons in populated areas, and that it was confirmed that helicopters and artillery had fired in Tremseh.

    Sander van Hoorn, a Dutch journalist who reached Tremseh, said by Twitter that he had counted 30 graves in the town and had seen clear evidence of shelling, including of a school used as a shelter by refugees.

    He said the evidence on the ground clearly contradicted the government's assertion that no heavy weapons were used. But he also said had not yet seen signs of a massacre like one that took place in the city of Houla in May, when the United Nations says 34 women and 49 children were among 108 people killed.

    "Impossible now to say how many civilians got killed in #Tremseh but at first sight (!!) it does not appear to be another Houla," he tweeted.

    Annan is due to fly to Moscow on Monday for a two-day visit in which he will meet President Vladimir Putin.

    Western countries have repeatedly hinted that they see Putin easing his support for Assad, but Moscow has shown no sign in public of wavering in its backing for its last major Arab ally, a customer for its arms and host to a Russian naval support base.

    Russia and China say they support a peace plan by Annan, which calls for a ceasefire and a negotiated transition to democracy but makes no explicit call for Assad to leave power. Assad's opponents say negotiations are impossible unless Assad is removed.

    Iran, Assad's closest ally in the region, repeated a long-standing offer to act as a mediator between the government and opposition, but was immediately rebuffed by opposition activists.

    The United States and its Western allies say Iran cannot play a constructive role in Syria, while Annan wants Iran at the table.

    The Syrian conflict has taken on an increasingly sectarian character, with Assad's mainly Sunni-Muslim opponents backed by Sunni Arab states, while Shi'ite Iran supports Assad, a member of the minority Alawite sect, which is an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam.

    (Additional reporting by Marwam Makdesi in Damascus and Yeganeh Torbati in Dubai; Writing by Peter Graff; Editing by Giles Elgood)

  2. #2
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    Has the fighting ever reached Damascus before? ( I haven't kept up with it that closely)
    The only "change" I CAN believe in: I Corinthians 15: 51-52!


    WAKE ME WHEN IT'S OVER....

  3. #3
    CM, I don't think so.

    Reports that the international airport is closed.

    Conflict now being labeled as a true civil war.

    Syrian Government Denies Attack on Village

    http://www.voanews.com/content/syria...e/1404965.html

    Margaret Besheer

    July 15, 2012
    CAIRO — The Syrian government denied Sunday that it used tanks and helicopters to attack the village of Tremseh in Hama province on Thursday. Activists reported mass killings in the village, but a government spokesman said only two civilians and 37 armed individuals were killed in what Damascus said was a defensive operation. The U.N. observers were at Tremseh on Sunday investigating events.

    U.N. military and civilian observers entered Tremseh for a second consecutive day on Sunday to try to verify reports of a military operation on the village. On Saturday, the U.N. supervision mission, known by its acronym UNSMIS, confirmed an attack had taken place using a variety of weapons, including artillery, mortars and small arms.

    At a news conference in Damascus Sunday, Foreign Ministry Spokesman Jihad Makdissi denied the army had used tanks, helicopters and heavy weapons to target the town.

    He said yes, there was a massacre. What happened, he said, was not an attack by the army on innocent civilians but a clash between regular forces and armed groups.

    UNSMIS spokeswoman Sausan Ghosheh said the monitors report only what they can see and verify.
    ​​
    “When we went into Tremseh what we saw was an attack that appeared to target specific groups and houses mainly of army defectors and activists. How it started, who started the whole thing is something that we cannot verify right now,” she said.

    On Friday, the head of the U.N. mission, Major General Robert Mood, said one of his teams positioned outside Tremseh confirmed helicopters in action and the presence of Syrian forces in government checkpoints near the village.

    The next day after a cease-fire was confirmed, a group of U.N. observers made an initial foray into the village, where they reported seeing pools of blood and blood spatters in rooms of several homes together with bullet cases. They also saw a burned school and damaged houses with signs of internal burning in five of them.

    The U.N. mission is still working to verify numbers of casualties.

    The verification mission to Tremseh is the first in nearly a month, since General Mood suspended the work of the 300 unarmed observers on June 16 due to escalating violence. But monitors do continue to carry out humanitarian work, assessing the impact of violence on civilians and visiting hospitals, schools and camps for displaced persons.

    Meanwhile, the deadline for a U.N. Security Council decision on the future of the monitoring mission draws near later this week.

    A spokesman for U.N.-Arab League mediator Kofi Annan said he would travel to Moscow on Monday for two days of talks with President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

    Moscow has repeatedly blocked strong action on Syria in the U.N. Security Council and recently put forward a draft resolution that would extend the U.N. monitoring mission for another three months, but ignores a Western call for sanctions should either side obstruct the mission or fail to stop fighting.

    Activists say the violence in Syria over the past 16 months has killed some 16,000 people. The United Nations stopped trying to estimate the death toll months ago. With few independent journalists allowed into the country, it has been difficult to verify reports.

  4. #4
    Syria says heavy weapons not used in latest killings, death toll overstated

    Published July 15, 2012

    Associated Press





    BEIRUT – Syria on Sunday denied U.N. claims that government forces used heavy weapons during a military operation that left scores dead and brought immediate international condemnation, while the International Committee of the Red Cross said it now considers the conflict in the country a civil war.

    Syrian Foreign Ministry spokesman Jihad Makdissi said the violence Thursday was not a massacre — as activists and many foreign leaders have asserted — but a military operation targeting armed fighters who had taken control of the village of Tremseh.

    "What happened wasn't an attack on civilians," Makdissi told reporters in Damascus. He said 37 gunmen and two civilians were killed — a far lower death toll than the one put forward by anti-regime activists, some of whom estimate that more than 100 people were killed.

    "What has been said about the use of heavy weapons is baseless," Makdissi added.

    But the United Nations has already implicated Assad's forces in the assault. The head of the U.N. observer mission said Friday that monitors stationed near Tremseh saw the army using heavy weaponry and attack helicopters.

    Although there has been a string of horrific attacks in Syria over the course of the uprising, the violence appears to be escalating. On Sunday, the International Committee of the Red Cross said it now deems the conflict in Syria a civil war, meaning international humanitarian law applies throughout the country.

    The Geneva-based group's assessment is an important reference that helps parties in a conflict determine how much and what type of force they can or cannot use.

    ICRC spokesman Hicham Hassan said Sunday that humanitarian law now applies wherever hostilities are taking place in Syria, where fighting has spread beyond the hotspots of Idlib, Homs and Hama. International humanitarian law grants parties to a conflict the right to use appropriate force to achieve their aims. But attacks on civilians and abuse or killing of detainees can constitute war crimes.

    On Saturday, U.N. observers investigating the killings in Tremseh found pools of blood in homes and spent bullets, mortars and artillery shells, adding details to the emerging picture of what anti-regime activists have called one of the deadliest events of Syria's uprising. The observers were expected to return to the village Sunday.

    Dozens of people have already been buried in a mass grave, and activists are still struggling to determine the total number of people killed in what they say was a bombardment by government tanks and helicopters on Thursday.

    Some of the emerging details suggested that, rather than the outright shelling of civilians that the opposition has depicted, the violence in Tremseh may have been a lopsided fight between the army pursuing the opposition and activists and locals trying to defend the village. Nearly all of the dead are men, including dozens of armed rebels. The U.N. observers said the assault appeared to target specific homes of army defectors or opposition figures.

    Running tolls ranged from around 100 to 152, including dozens of bodies buried in neighboring villages or burned beyond recognition. The activists expected the number to rise since hundreds of residents remain unaccounted for, and locals believe bodies remained in nearby fields or were dumped into the Orontes River.

    Independent verification of the events is nearly impossible in Syria, one of the Middle East's strictest police states, which bars most media from working independently in the country. The observers are in the country as part of a faltering peace plan by U.N. special envoy Kofi Annan, who has been trying for months to negotiate a solution to Syria's crisis.

    The Tremseh violence was the latest in a string of bloody attacks in the now 16-month-old uprising against Assad, in which activists say more than 17,000 people have been killed.

    On Saturday, an 11-vehicle team of U.N. observers entered Tremseh, home to between 6,000-10,000 residents and one of a string of small farming villages along the Orontes River northwest of the city of Hama.

    Based on its investigation, the team said in a statement that "an attack" took place on July 12. It said the violence seemed to target the homes of army defectors and activists, some of which were burned or damaged and had pooled or splattered blood and bullet casings inside.

    Although much of the international community has turned on Assad, Damascus still has some key allies — including Russia and Iran. The Kremlin announced Sunday that Annan will meet President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday.

    Also Sunday, Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said Tehran is ready to invite Syrian opposition groups and government envoys for talks, the semiofficial ISNA news agency reported.

    Any proposal from Iran is likely to be rebuffed by rebel groups, which have rejected negotiations with Assad's government and have criticized Tehran for standing by its allies in Damascus. But the offer suggested Iran is seeking a more active role in mediation efforts following a visit last week to Tehran Annan, who is seeking to keep alive his flagging peace efforts.

    Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2012/07...#ixzz20i9tMbjI

  5. #5
    From a person who has been blogging about the conflict for The Guardian...

    ---------------

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/midd...?newsfeed=true

    4.01pm: The south of the Syrian capital, Damascus, has today seen some of its heaviest daytime fighting yet, Reuters reports.

    Activist Samir al-Shami, who spoke to Reuters by Skype from Damascus, said the fighting was under way in the poor al-Tadamon district, after a night of sustained battles in the nearby Hajar al-Aswad district.
    "There is the sound of heavy gunfire. And there is smoke rising from the area. There are already some wounded and residents are trying to flee the area," he said, showing live video images of smoke visible over the skyline.
    "There are also armoured vehicles heading towards the southern part of the neighbourhood."

  6. #6




    Youtube video posted today where you can hear the intensity of the shelling.

    Mike

  7. Note: Obama and NATO are supporting Al Queda and the Muslime Brotherhood in order to put the Brotherhood in charge. That will make give them Libya, Egypt, Syria, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia, the perfect basis for the Caliphate. The goal is a United Islam! United against America and the West. Remember Eurabia? NATO's involvement is to guarantee muslims educational and employment benefits in return for muslim oil and gas. Of course, the side benefit is the conquering of Europe by Islam by 2050 through demographics. Likewise, America's borders are allowed to be wide open in order for Reconquista to occur. Reconquista is based on "the right of return" which is the argument the Palestinians use to hide their plans for the destruction of Israel. This explains the Latino/Mexican-Arab alignment (alliance is the better word when talking of Chavez), and why so many muslims are moving to Mexico where it is the country's fastest growing religion, just like here.

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by American Rage View Post
    Note: Obama and NATO are supporting Al Queda and the Muslime Brotherhood in order to put the Brotherhood in charge. That will make give them Libya, Egypt, Syria, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia, the perfect basis for the Caliphate. The goal is a United Islam! United against America and the West. Remember Eurabia? NATO's involvement is to guarantee muslims educational and employment benefits in return for muslim oil and gas. Of course, the side benefit is the conquering of Europe by Islam by 2050 through demographics. Likewise, America's borders are allowed to be wide open in order for Reconquista to occur. Reconquista is based on "the right of return" which is the argument the Palestinians use to hide their plans for the destruction of Israel. This explains the Latino/Mexican-Arab alignment (alliance is the better word when talking of Chavez), and why so many muslims are moving to Mexico where it is the country's fastest growing religion, just like here.
    AR, totally agree. Obama, the great "peacemaker" and nobel prize winner, has done NOTHING to stop war and instead helped to spread war throughout the region.

    He's worked to spread dissent in Europe and Asia and here in our own hemisphere.

    The man speaks from both sides of his mouth.

    I think these are hints that help form an understanding of where this is all leading.

    Mike

  9. #9

    3 Violence rages in Damascus

    Syrian troops and rebels have clashed inside Damascus for a second day in some of the worst violence in the tightly controlled capital since the country's crisis began 16 months ago.

    The fighting on Monday briefly closed the highway linking the capital with Damascus International Airport to the city's south and plumes of black smoke drifted over the city's skyline.

    "Mortar shelling resumed in the early morning," the Local Coordination Committees (LCC), a grass roots network of activists, said. Reuters news agency said the crackle of small arms fire echoed through the streets of the city.

    Troops backed by armoured vehicles were said to have advanced through the city centre, driving out rebels who
    had secured a foothold within striking distance of major state installations.


    In-depth coverage of escalating violence across Syria
    The military offensive on Monday reportedly continued to batter several neighbourhoods in the capital, including Midan, Tadamon, Kfar Souseh, Nahr Aisha and Sidi Qadad.

    The LCC added that government troops and fighters of the Free Syrian Army also clashed in the western Damascus district of Kfar Souseh.

    "I did not sleep all night," a resident of nearby Jaramana told the AFP news agency. "It was a real war zone."

    The town of Qatana, 20km away from the capital, was also shelled on Monday. Elsewhere, government troops shelled the besieged Homs districts of Khaldiyeh, Jourat al-Shiah and Qarabees.

    To the north, government forces raided the central city of Hama, scene of fierce clashes and a series of loud blasts, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported on Monday.

    West using 'blackmail'

    Meanwhile, Russia has said it would block moves at the UN Security Council to extend a UN monitoring mission in Syria if Western powers did not stop resorting to "blackmail" by threatening sanctions against Damascus.

    Sergei Lavrov, Russian foreign minister, staked out a tough position on Monday before talks in Moscow with UN envoy Kofi Annan, dismissing international pressure on Russia and China to stop propping up Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

    His comments are likely to dim Western diplomats' hopes that Moscow is trying to find a face-saving way to drop its support for Assad and accept that he should have no role in a transition.

    "To our great regret, we are seeing elements of blackmail," Lavrov told a news conference before Annan started a two-day
    visit that will include talks on Tuesday with President Vladimir Putin. "This is a counter-productive and a dangerous approach."

    Rami Khouri, director of the Esam Fares Institute at the American University of Beirut, told Al Jazeera that the Russian position is less about supporting Assad and more about "saving face".

    "The Russians are a big world power. Lives, money, alliances, respect, stature - all of these are negotiable to them, as they are to the Americans," said Khouri.

    "The Russians are caught in a bind because they've taken a stand on Syria which is not really about saving the Assad regime, but rather saving face for the Russians, and generating international respect for the Russian government."

    Meanwhile, Morocco has asked Syria's ambassador to Rabat to leave the country, prompting Damascus to ask Rabat's envoy to leave.

    'Civil war'

    As the attacks on residential areas in Damascus continued, the International Committee of the Red Cross has said it now considers the Syrian conflict a civil war.

    The Geneva-based group's assessment could have implications for prosecutions for war crimes and means that international humanitarian law applies throughout the country, though it will have little effect on the ground. Also known as the rules of war, humanitarian law grants all parties in a conflict the right to use appropriate force to achieve their aims.

    Previously, the Red Cross committee had restricted its assessment of the scope of the conflict to the hotspots of Idlib, Homs and Hama. But Hassan said the organisation concluded that the violence was widening.



    Josh Lockman, an international law professor at the University of Southern California, said the assessment does not make any significant difference on the ground, but is "of tremendous significance for the long term".

    "With this application of international humanitarian law to the conflict, key government officials could be held responsible for both massacres against civilians and also for the treatment of captured combatants, in this case rebel fighters, to the degree they're abused, harmed or killed," he told Al Jazeera.

    Although the armed uprising in Syria began more than a year ago, the committee had hesitated to call it a civil war - though others, including United Nations officials, have done so.

    That is because the rules of war override and to some extent suspend the laws that apply in peacetime, including the universal right to life, right to free speech and right to peaceful assembly.

    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middle...652142621.html

  10. #10

    3 Latest Syria developments

    19:09 Monday’s death toll in Syria increased to 44 people killed by regime forces, Al-Jazeera quoted activists as saying.


    19:08 The Syrian army blocked the Damascus-Zabadani road, Al-Jazeera quoted activists as saying.


    18:48 Senior Syrian security officer Rustom Ghazaleh on Monday denied reports that he had defected from the regime, Chinese Xinhua news agency reported.



    To read more: http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticl...#ixzz20oUe1nGp

  11. #11
    Thanks Daniel!

  12. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by Caregiver View Post
    Thanks Daniel!
    you are welcome

  13. #13
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    So when's the Revolution? God or Money? Choose.

  14. #14

    3 Kataeb warns against Syria’s increasing violations against Lebanon

    The Kataeb Party on Monday warned against “the determination of the Syrian regime… to [intensify] its violations of Lebanese sovereignty by shelling [to additional Lebanese areas].”

    The statement issued following the party’s weekly meeting also said that the state budget approved by the cabinet was issued long after the constitutional deadline, and that it was just an operational budget that did not include controversial clauses.

    It also called on Prime Minister Najib Mikati and Finance Minister Mohammad Safadi to deal transparently with the state’s resources and spending.

    The statement commended the premier’s step to transfer Lebanon’s share of funding for the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, but expressed its reservation over the manner of the funding.

    Last week, Mikati said that the cabinet approved the 2012 state budget draft law, while the clause for funding the STL was not included in the budget.

    The premier also said that Lebanon’s share of the STL funding was paid in the same manner as last year.

    In 2011, Mikati reportedly ordered the transfer of funds to the STL from the Higher Relief Commission and not from the Justice Ministry after March 8 parties, which dominate Mikati’s government, opposed the continued funding of the tribunal.





    To read more: http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticl...#ixzz20oVWKEZX

  15. #15
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    strange stuff......who you think it is...REALLY? methinks US/UK specop warriors, or maybe 3rd country arab spec ops....somebody thats getting PAID.....those have got to be some nasty hellish battles, lots of payback, lots of collateral damage, just hell on earth.

    war....can you imagine getting hooked on war adrenaline?

    these are strange days indeed.

  16. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by danielboon View Post
    Rami Khouri, director of the Esam Fares Institute at the American University of Beirut, told Al Jazeera that the Russian position is less about supporting Assad and more about "saving face".

    "The Russians are a big world power. Lives, money, alliances, respect, stature - all of these are negotiable to them, as they are to the Americans," said Khouri.

    "The Russians are caught in a bind because they've taken a stand on Syria which is not really about saving the Assad regime, but rather saving face for the Russians, and generating international respect for the Russian government."
    And about keeping control of its only base on the Mediterranean, at Tartus....
    The only "change" I CAN believe in: I Corinthians 15: 51-52!


    WAKE ME WHEN IT'S OVER....

  17. #17
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    holy crap....


    1Pe 4:7 But the end of all things is at hand: be ye therefore of sound mind, and be sober unto prayer

    Mat 7:21 Not everyone who says to Me, Lord! Lord! shall enter the kingdom of Heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in Heaven.

  18. #18
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    Brown Moses ‏@Brown_Moses
    First Video Evidence Of The Free Syrian Army Using Tanks To Attack The Syrian Army: http://brown-moses.blogspot.com/2012...ee-syrian.html #syria

    The only "change" I CAN believe in: I Corinthians 15: 51-52!


    WAKE ME WHEN IT'S OVER....

  19. #19
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    The SYRIA tweet grid:

    http://tweetgrid.com/search?q=%23syria

    ------------

    They didn't attach a video to this though:

    alnajjar6: #Breaking: New video highlighting sensitive military info about secret underground tunnels, weapon warehouses in #Damascus,etc. #FSA #Syria
    Monday, July 16, 2012 3:50:33 PM

    Noorzay: RT @BigAlBrand: Excessive shooting. #Homs #Syria
    Monday, July 16, 2012 3:50:27 PM

    LindaJuniper: The authorities killed the snipers that were stationed at the minarets in ElBasheer & ElMajed mosques in #ElMidan #Damascus #Syria
    Monday, July 16, 2012 3:50:26 PM

    Noorzay: RT @Maysaloon: Dare I believe that this Ramadan will be the first for #Syria without the Assad's in a generation? Dare we all?
    Monday, July 16, 2012 3:50:17 PM

    Brown_Moses: First Video Evidence Of The Free Syrian Army Using Tanks To Attack The Syrian Army: http://t.co/dhrPad1h #syria
    Monday, July 16, 2012 3:50:12 PM

    Video at link above ^^^^^^^^^^

    ahlelsham: RT @SyrianForChange: #Syria #Damascus #Midan is being shelled and sprayed with heavy machine guns.
    Monday, July 16, 2012 3:55:18 PM

    epaulnet: I will find my way to #Syria #news. You will have to wait a bit. #Mideast
    Monday, July 16, 2012 3:55:17 PM
    So when's the Revolution? God or Money? Choose.

  20. #20
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    joy_sanmig: Defector: 'The battle for #Damascus is coming' #Syria... http://t.co/xDSGZ3Ho
    Monday, July 16, 2012 4:56:27 PM
    [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]


    joy_sanmig: Defector: 'The battle for #Damascus is coming' #Syria... http://t.co/xDSGZ3Ho
    Monday, July 16, 2012 4:56:27 PM
    [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]


    q8_511: RT @SAAADMAJED: أول مسجد في القطب الشمالي http://t.co/zSz49Haz #Q8 #KSA #Qatar #Damascus #SYRIA #Bahrain #Egypt #Islam #islam #Jordan
    Monday, July 16, 2012 4:55:57 PM
    [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]


    GotFreedomSY: RT @SyrianForChange: #Syria #Damascus #Midan is being shelled and sprayed with heavy machine guns.
    Monday, July 16, 2012 4:55:44 PM
    [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]


    SyriaRising: RT @SyrianSunnyBoy: #Midan district in #Damascus calling for help from #UN observers. Any swimming pool in Midan? #Syria
    Monday, July 16, 2012 4:55:42 PM
    [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]


    SyrianForChange: #Syria #Damascus Sahaba battalion targeted two armored vehicles and a checkpoint in #Qadam near the Town Center mall.
    Monday, July 16, 2012 4:55:34 PM
    [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]


    masahascha: RT @thebaghdaddy: 84 martyrs in #Syria as of now. 9 of them in #Damascus. (via @AlArabiya_Brk )
    Monday, July 16, 2012 4:55:25 PM
    [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]


    MidaniSpeaks: RT @SyrianForChange: #Syria #Damascus #Midan is being shelled and sprayed with heavy machine guns.
    Monday, July 16, 2012 4:55:25 PM
    [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]

    1Pe 4:7 But the end of all things is at hand: be ye therefore of sound mind, and be sober unto prayer

    Mat 7:21 Not everyone who says to Me, Lord! Lord! shall enter the kingdom of Heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in Heaven.

  21. #21
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    RajaChemayel: G.W.Bush said : a new-Middle East. Hillary Clinton says : an Arab Spring ... I say : simply an ochestrated-chaos. #Syria
    Monday, July 16, 2012 4:00:11 PM

    SyriaDayofRage: (07-16-12) #Idlib #Syria | Al-Tahreer Battalion protect the people from regime forces http://t.co/OZtzSDru
    Monday, July 16, 2012 4:00:11 PM

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uFI6F...ature=youtu.be



    AslanMediaLive: #Syria is refusing to grant visas to Western aid workers http://t.co/VCCkTEHb #UN #March15 #News #Assad #Annan
    Monday, July 16, 2012 4:00:09 PM

    DamasProtests: فيديو: شام دمشق المهاجرين قطع طريق السكة بالقرب من قصر المرابط 15 7 2012 http://t.co/UJ0MsYPA #Damascus #Syria
    Monday, July 16, 2012 4:00:08 PM

    Short vid of another street being blocked w/fire at night ^^^^^^

    iSimplyRebel_: RT @NabilaRamdani: I argue in the Evening Standard today that no one should exclude the possibility of an internal coup in #Syria #Tremseh http://t.co/FoqBrc9L
    Monday, July 16, 2012 3:59:47 PM

    joy_sanmig: West supplied #Syria w/ security equipment amid crackdown. http://t.co/LUNLR0V0
    Monday, July 16, 2012 3:59:41 PM

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/0...n_1675730.html

    nmichaelross: RT @carlesdijous The balance of power in #Syria has shifted. http://t.co/nGovnlF8 Not so fast. Russia has not decided yet.
    Monday, July 16, 2012 3:59:35 PM

    http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion...d-7946758.html
    So when's the Revolution? God or Money? Choose.

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