Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

Seems like he’s going out & determined to kill as many people as he can. I hope FSA takes him out soon.

NBC report: Syrian leader prepares to use chemical weapons

U.S. officials told NBC News that as soon as Syrian President Bashar Assad gives the order, the country’s military will use chemical weapons against its own people.

Yesterday there seemed to be no firm evidence that the Syrians were mixing the “precursor” chemicals for the nerve gas sarin. The chemical weapon could be loaded into bombs that would be dropped from Syrian Air Force fighter-bombers. But on Wednesday, NBC News said, American officials came to believe the bombs had indeed been readied with the lethal agent. The sarin bombs were not yet loaded onto the fighter planes, however, and Assad has not issued the “go” order.

Secretary of State warned President Assad once again that he would be crossing “a red line” if he used nerve gas against the country’s rebels. But “there’s little the outside world can do to stop it,” one official told NBC News. Secretary Clinton, in NATO headquarters in Brussels, said the Assad government was “increasingly desperate” and on the verge of collapse. The 21-month civil war has cost 40,000 lives already.
“We believe their fall is inevitable,” Clinton said. “It is just a question of how many people have to die before that occurs.”
Next week Clinton is expected to officially recognize the main opposition movement, the National Coalition of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, aides told NBC News, and the secretary will meet with them in Morocco. Britain, France, Turkey and some Arab leaders have already recognized the opposition.
U.S. officials had long believed that the Syrian government was stockpiling the banned chemical weapons before it acknowledged possessing them this summer.

NBC News reported in July that U.S. intelligence agencies believed Syria had access to sarin, tabun, a chemical nerve agent, as well as traditional chemical weapons like mustard gas and hydrogen cyanide.

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

I wonder how long till NATO gets involved in this war? They are already indirectly supplying weapons to the rebels through the Qataris and Saudis.

Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

Yes just like saddam was about to with his non existant wmd.. Just before they attacked iraq.

History is sometimes so predictable...and people are so gullible!

The old saying ..'fool me once...blah blah blah ' applies here.

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

when are they gonna show us and the UN the pictures of mobile chemical labs? i just can't wait to see...it's a precursor to a move to take Asad out...i won't shed a tear on Asad's exit just like i didn't shed a tear on Saddam's exit!

Khas kam jahaN paak! :)

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

And while we continue to blame the west/US Syria continues to burn with no concrete action planned by the OIC.

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

Although we criticize the US many Sunni Muslim countries will be deeply pleased with Western intervention as the new rulers would no doubt be Sunnis. It is likely we will be just be disposing one oppressive regime for another. Why are the Saudis and the Qataris so against Assad is it only because they do not share his exact interpretation of Islam? I doubt it is because they wish democracy for Syria especially when you consider their own Human rights records.
Sectarianism has caused much suffering in the world particularly in the Islamic world. These people claim they are doing Gods work but is this what the Prophet Mohammed intended?

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

^ you have nailed it, it's sectarianism, the Arab states would like to see the back of asad where as iranis would like to see him there. Sectarianism (iran saudi conflict) have destroyed the whole Muslim world.

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

pakistan is also one of their battel grounds

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

^ yes it is, one of the first and worst battle grounds for influences.

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

but now iran is enjoying benefit of having shia rule in iraq....

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

Shias are in majority in Iraq so it's their right, similarly we can use this as a yardstick for others in the region. Having said that who ever rules the countries should try to bridge the gap which is increasing with the passage of time.

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

I was talking about this kind of decisions…though later they allowed the trucks…

Report: Iraq blocks Jordanian trucks heading to Turkey over Syria concerns

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

I wouldnt put it past this madman to kill his own people by chemical weapons, after all he has not hesitated killing even school children by rocketing schools. A pathetic and heartless brut, the quicker he is got rid of the better for the Syrians. He thinks Syria is his baap kee jagir. He will go the same way as other mad rulers like Saddam and Gadaffi.

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

I am trying to locate one article I was reading, which is mentioning the same thing that sectarianism is increasing in the whole muslim world from Libya to Pakistan, and due to this pan Islamism is also being affected. Could be some invisible hand fanning these tendencies, like our Rahman malik says.

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

Finally found it…

Muslim conflicts | DAWN.COM

**FROM the desert of the Sahel to the islands of the Pacific, Muslim peoples and states are today afflicted by conflicts and violence of varying dimensions and intensity.

The malicious myth propagated by Islam’s adversaries is that Muslims are prone to violence due to their faith and culture.**

‘Islamic’ terrorism, militancy and extremism are the only ones to have acquired a religious sobriquet. With this simplistic explanation for every situation of conflict and violence involving Muslims, it has become much easier to brush aside the legitimate interests and rights of Muslim states, nations and communities across the world.

It is thus essential to analyse the nature and causes of the current crises and conflicts in the Islamic world and point to the steps required to resolve them.

A first observation is that most Muslim conflicts are local. Whether in Cairo, Damascus, Benghazi or Baghdad, these conflicts arise mainly from local political, social and economic causes. Often, if unresolved, these conflicts intensify and extend beyond their original boundaries. Broadly, such ‘local’ conflicts can be placed in four categories: socioeconomic, ethnic, sectarian and externally imposed. Frequently, these categories overlap.

The Arab Spring and the dramatic political changes it propelled have been the most visible manifestations of indigenous socioeconomic revolt in the Arab and Muslim world for decades. Even after emerging from colonial and foreign rule or tutelage, common people in the Islamic world remained quiescent under unequal rule by elites.

The genie of rising popular expectations and demands, unleashed by growing inequality, poverty and injustice and the Internet, will be difficult to put back in the authoritarian bottle. Yet, such popular revolts, as evidenced by the history of almost all ‘democratic’ nations, also crystallise these fault lines in societies — class, sect, ethnicity, political affinity — yielding a period of turbulent transition.

The “revolution (often) eats its children”. Its achievements can be reversed. Stability will only come to the countries of the Arab Spring through clear political direction and rapid economic growth.

Ethnic differences and diversity are another cause of the current conflicts within Muslim states. The Kurds, dispersed across Turkey, Iran, Iraq and Syria, have remained a source of dispute and violence especially since the demise of the Ottoman Empire. The competing loyalties among the Pakhtuns, Baloch, Azeris and similar ethnic communities within and across Islamic states create difficulties in the governance of these states and complicate interstate relationships. These ethnic issues require equitable and wise domestic and regional solutions to be promoted by governments of the concerned states.

**A third and disturbing cause of conflict in the Muslim world is growing sectarianism. The modern incidence of violence between the Sunni and Shia communities dates back to the success of the Islamic Revolution in Iran. Soon after, the anti-Soviet war in Afghanistan, supported by ( Zia-ruled) Pakistan, the US, Saudi Arabia and others, saw the rise of Sunni militancy.

The years after the end of the anti-Soviet war in Afghanistan witnessed the first round of Sunni-Shia violence in Pakistan, mostly financed and sponsored by outside powers. Pakistan remains afflicted by this menace of sectarian violence. But the sectarian divide has now emerged as a strategic issue, with implications that go well beyond the Muslim world.

Today, Shia ‘power’, wielded by Iran, Iraq, Alawite Syria and Hezbollah in Lebanon is ranged against Sunni states — Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt — in the battle for Syria. The latter are supported by the US and Europe. The outcome will determine the balance of power in West Asia. This sectarian contest obviously has further weakened the ability of Muslim states to promote pan-Islamic objectives.**

These pan-Islamic objectives would normally be to protect and promote Muslim communities and groups which face discrimination, oppression and violence from non-Muslim sources. The most celebrated Islamic cause is to restore the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people and secure Israeli withdrawal from the occupied Arab territories, including (East) Jerusalem. Due to internal fissures and weaknesses, the ability of the Arab and Islamic world to secure this ‘sacred’ goal in Palestine and Al Quds has progressively declined.

Inevitably, the political space has been increasingly occupied by extremists on both sides, neither of which wants the internationally prescribed two-state solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict. The recent Gaza skirmish may presage a wider conflict which may draw in not only the West Bank Palestinians but also neighbouring Arab states.

**Two decades ago, the cause of Kashmir used to enjoy equal billing with Palestine on the Islamic agenda. Today, not even Pakistan mentions the ‘K’ word in its speeches at the UN. Yet, Kashmir will continue to see violence because of the refusal of its people to accept Indian rule and inevitably force itself on the Islamic and Pakistani agendas.

There are several other situations of Muslims being oppressed in non-Muslim states, most recently the Rohingyas in Myanmar. The Islamic countries have yet to develop effective diplomatic mechanisms to offer aid and protection to such oppressed Muslim minorities in non-Muslim states.
**
The creation of Bin Laden’s Al Qaeda was the violent response of Arab and Muslim extremists to the perceived injustices against Muslim people, especially by the West. Al Qaeda proclaimed a global and anti-Western campaign and perpetrated the 9/11 atrocity. It also was provided the ‘opportunity’ to fight Western armies close to home — in Iraq and Afghanistan.

**But most of Al Qaeda’s violence has been directed against fellow Muslims, especially in Pakistan, but also in Yemen, Saudi Arabia and now in Mali. Worse yet, Al Qaeda’s actions and pronouncements have been utilised by adversaries to portray every Muslim militancy as terrorism. Thus, all Kashmiri militant groups have been depicted as terrorists, although most of them did not have affiliations with Al Qaeda.

However, it is clear that such ‘labelling’ is expedient for the West (also known as the “international community”). Mullah Omar and most Taliban leaders and groups were placed on the US and Security Council ‘terrorism list’. Once it was clear that negotiations would be needed with them, a concerted effort was made to take ‘cooperative’ Taliban off the list. Since the Haqqani ‘network’ is seen to be non-cooperative, it has been recently placed on the terrorism list. Pakistan was asked in the past to kill or capture the Afghan Taliban leadership; now it is being asked to release them to expedite negotiations.**

Some general conclusions can be drawn from this analysis. First, economic and social development is essential to resolve most Muslim conflicts and must be the first priority. Second, a much greater effort is required to explain and project the real nature and causes of various ‘local’ conflicts. These should not be allowed to be tarred with the Al Qaeda brush.

Third, Muslim states need to overcome the sectarian and ethnic divisions which will further weaken them, individually and collectively. Fourth, external (non-Muslim) intervention or involvement in a Muslim conflict is unlikely to prove positive in the long term. Solutions would be best promoted by the concerned Muslim parties themselves. Finally, the Islamic Conference (OIC) must be awakened from its slumber to serve its prescribed role as the vehicle for Islamic cooperation.

The writer is a former Pakistan ambassador to the UN.

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

^ Good piece :k:

Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

They accused his father of the same but it turned out to be false.

But let me tell you why the US are so concerned; they obv want to get there first.. And bomb the crap out of the syrians. Chemical weapons were used on civilians in iraq, by the US and they will likely use them again in syria.

Do not believe their falsity. They live on deception.

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

[QUOTE]
Two decades ago, the cause of Kashmir used to enjoy equal billing with Palestine on the Islamic agenda. Today, not even Pakistan mentions the ‘K’ word in its speeches at the UN.
[/QUOTE]

Why has the Kashmir issue been sidelined, how is it that it is now not so important to the Islamic community particularly Pakistan?

[QUOTE]
Today, Shia ‘power’, wielded by Iran, Iraq, Alawite Syria and Hezbollah in Lebanon is ranged against Sunni states — Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt — in the battle for Syria. The latter are supported by the US and Europe.
[/QUOTE]

IMO it is the Shia powers which are doing the most to support the Palestinians and the majority Sunni states are in bed with their colonial masters, yet the majority Muslim community still see the Shias as the enemy.

[QUOTE]

IMO it is the Shia powers which are doing the most to support the Palestinians and the majority Sunni states are in bed with their colonial masters, yet the majority Muslim community still see the Shias as the enemy.
[/QUOTE]

Exactly. And that is the crux of the problem of the muslim 'ummah',

Re: Assad prepares to use chemical weapons?

its the natural progression of anti islamic thought which one of the sects is based on. so yeah there is an invisible hand