Syrian Rebel Commander Cuts Organs Out of Assad Soldier’s Body and Eats Them

WTH? These are the people back by rest of the world?

Syrian Rebel Commander Cuts Organs Out of Assad Soldier’s Body and Eats Them « Antiwar.com Blog

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Aryn Baker at TIME reports on a video out of Syria depicting the savagery of rebel commander Khalid al-Hamad:

The video starts out like so many of the dozens coming out of the war in Syria every day, with the camera hovering over the body of a dead Syrian soldier. But the next frame makes it clear why this video, smuggled out of the city of Homs and into Lebanon with a rebel fighter, and obtained by TIME in April, is particularly shocking. In the video a man who is believed to be a rebel commander named Khalid al-Hamad, who goes by the nom de guerre Abu Sakkar, bends over the government soldier, knife in hand. With his right hand he moves what appears to be the dead man’s heart onto a flat piece of wood or metal lying across the body. With his left hand he pulls what appears to be a lung across the open cavity in the man’s chest. According to two of Abu Sakkar’s fellow rebels, who said they were present at the scene, Abu Sakkar had cut the organs out of the man’s body. The man believed to be Abu Sakkar then works his knife through the flesh of the dead man’s torso before he stands to face the camera, holding an organ in each hand. “I swear we will eat from your hearts and livers, you dogs of Bashar,” he says, referring to supporters of Syrian President Bashar Assad. Off camera, a small crowd can be heard calling out “Allahu akbar” — God is great. Then the man raises one of the bloodied organs to his lips and starts to tear off a chunk with his teeth.

Obama has been helping his friends in Saudi Arabia and Qatar to provide weapons and other aid to Syrian rebels with little ability to control where they end up. Undoubtedly, people like al-Hamad have received such help.

Re: Syrian Rebel Commander Cuts Organs Out of Assad Soldier’s Body and Eats Them

Oh ! God what is the world coming to. The worst is that they are using religion to justify this nonsense.

Re: Syrian Rebel Commander Cuts Organs Out of Assad Soldier’s Body and Eats Them

Yes, clearly one man represents an entire set of diverse organizations.

Disrespecting another combatant soldier is war crime. I used to think..syrian rebels were really fighting to defend themselves...i still think some of them are sincere. However..syrian rebels are losing credibility. Actually both sides have lost ctedibilty of any kind.

Re: Syrian Rebel Commander Cuts Organs Out of Assad Soldier’s Body and Eats Them

In the beginning the Syrian rebels were a respectable bunch of people of fighting for their freedom, however these original bunch of people are either dead or side-lined.

The current bunch of syrian rebels are a mixed group of Al-Queda, Sunni extremists, bored saudi & arab teenagers looking for excitement and mad men.

Re: Syrian Rebel Commander Cuts Organs Out of Assad Soldier’s Body and Eats Them

there is nothing like a clean fight/war, never was. why the surprise?

Re: Syrian Rebel Commander Cuts Organs Out of Assad Soldier’s Body and Eats Them

Analysis: Syria’s savagery will thwart reconciliation | Reuters

Reuters) - Syrian soldiers slowly stab a man to death, puncturing his back dozens of times. A rebel commander bites an organ ripped out of an enemy combatant. A young boy hacks the head off a prisoner. A soldier mutilates the genitals of a corpse.

These are the images of Syrian conflict, the first war in which the prevalence of camera phones and Internet access has allowed hundreds of gruesome war crimes to be broadcast, spreading hatred and fear. They are defining the war that is spilling across Syria’s borders and making reconciliation an ever more distant prospect.

Brutality has been used as a tool since the revolt began two years ago, when videos emerged of government soldiers torturing pro-democracy protesters. In response to the crackdown, the opposition took up arms and now fighters from both sides are filming themselves committing atrocities.

Ghoulish footage of violence is not filmed surreptitiously, but with pride by the assailants who often speak to camera.

Rebel commander Abu Sakkar, known to journalists and revered by many rebels, was shown in a video on Sunday cutting organs out of a dead soldier, addressing the camera as he ripped the flesh: “I swear to God we will eat your hearts and your livers,” he warned President Bashar al-Assad’s forces as his men cheered.

Sakkar was a founding member of the Farouq Brigade, one of the main rebel units in Syria, but has since formed his own battalion as the opposition fragments. In the mosaic of hundreds of opposition groups, Sakkar’s men are seen as neither secular nor hardline Islamists, but as some of the hardiest fighters.

Another picture posted online shows a rebel holding the severed head of a man, supposedly an Assad loyalist, over a barbecue as if to cook it. The fighter smiles and poses confidently, gripping a tuft of hair.

ZERO SUM GAME

Reinoud Leenders, an associate professor in the war studies department of King’s College London, says that these brutal displays are used as a tool of war by both sides.

“It’s the ultimate expression of disrespect and dehumanizing your opponent,” he said.

In the face of an insurgency, he says, Assad’s forces have used mass killings and torture to root out rebel fighters hiding among civilians.

“The regime has difficulty in pinning down opposition members, so they scare civilians from the area to get the rebels exposed. It looks irrational and emotional but there are rational reasons,” he said.

Nadim Houry, a Syria and Lebanon researcher for Human Rights Watch, has documented abuses since the start of the revolt and says that he is seeing more and more brutal acts.

“Both parties are acting like they are facing an existential threat,” he said. The opposition and the government see the war as a zero sum game, both fighting for survival, he says.

This fear of defeat silences condemnation from supporters of both sides, he says. The main Syrian opposition group condemned the video of a rebel commander taking a bite from the dead soldier but many opposition supporters dismissed the brutality.

On some opposition Facebook pages people celebrated the act. Others berated the media for highlighting one particular event, saying they should focus on indiscriminate killing of men, women and children by Assad’s war planes and militia.

The Syrian government has never acknowledged brutality in army ranks, instead referring to people killed by soldiers as “terrorists” and areas captured by its forces as “cleansed”.

Syria’s war started as a popular uprising against the Assad dynasty, which has ruled for over four decades using secret police, intimidation and brute force.

But majority Sunni Muslims lead the revolt, while Assad gets his core support from his Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi’ite Islam, leading to sectarian fighting and hatred.

International powers have taken sides, with the West and Gulf countries supporting the opposition, while Iran and Russia back Assad. While war crimes are condemned in words, there has been no real deterrent for the perpetrators, which Houry said has allowed atrocities to continue.

“What is particularly troubling is the silence of the international powers,” Houry said. He referred to a recent army and loyalist militia attack in the coastal town of Banias in which at least 62 people, including babies, were killed.

“We have been seeing (these massacres) for over a year. What is shocking is the level of indifference. People shrug their shoulders and look away,” said Houry.

Since Syria never signed up to the treaty establishing the International Criminal Court, the court could only investigate allegations of brutality there with a referral from the United Nations Security Council - something permanent members Russia and China have so far blocked.

RECONCILIATION

The United States and Russia have proposed a peace conference to try to end the war, but savagery from both sides means that the unlikely event of a peace agreement might not stop atrocities and fighting between increasingly disparate militias.

“The ideas of reconciliation are now unrealistic. The conflict is as much about the conflict itself than pro- or anti-regime,” Leenders said. “I see a total mismatch between the US and Russian narrative and what is going on in Syria.”

In its sectarian nature and big power inertia, the Syrian conflict has drawn comparisons with Bosnia, which was torn apart by Serbs, Croats and Muslims in a 1992-95 war that gave the world the term ‘ethnic cleansing’ and was marked by some of the worst atrocities in Europe since World War Two.

Almost 17 years since that war ended, the wounds are still raw. Bodies are still being dug up and a cycle of blame and denial weighs on efforts to reconcile communities. Bitterness runs deep and spills into politics, stifling development.

Details of the worst atrocities are coming to light even now. Each side clings to its own narrative of the war.

In March, an ethnic Montenegrin man was jailed for 45 years for killing 31 people and raping at least 13, including a pregnant woman in front of her young child.

The judge in the case said the defendant, Veselin Vlahovic, nicknamed Batko, sometimes forced his victims to kiss his hand as he beat them, and once ordered a man to have sex with the corpse of a woman whose throat had been cut.

In Srebrenica, 8,000 Muslim men and boys were gunned down in five summer days in 1995, their bodies bulldozed into pits, buried and reburied in a bid to conceal the crime. Many Serbs still dispute the figures, despite mountains of testimony at the United Nations war crimes tribunal in The Hague.

The strength of feeling on all sides has made political compromise in the name of peace difficult, at times impossible, and acts as a brake on development.

In Lebanon, which lies next to Syria and fought its own 15-year civil war which ended in 1990, fault lines between religions remain strong and armed militias still come to blows as a weak government looks on helplessly.

Many Lebanese fighters accused of war crimes are now politicians as people support powerful members of their sect to safeguard against the influence of their foes.

“We don’t have real reconciliation in Lebanon right now. Reconciliation requires justice,” said rights researcher Houry, who lives in Beirut. “There is a tear at the fabric of Syria, similar to what we saw in Lebanon.”

(Additional reporting by Mariam Karouny in Beirut, Matt Robinson in Belgrade and Thomas Escritt in The Hague; Editing by Giles Elgood)

Re: Syrian Rebel Commander Cuts Organs Out of Assad Soldier’s Body and Eats Them

One guy commits an abuse and you want to slander and say "these people" which is ordinary syrians who fighting against the brutal Assad regime?

where is your outrage to the rape of young girls and even grandmothers by Assads fanatical thugs?

80,000 thousands people killed by the tanks of Assad and this clown reporter wants to claim america will give weapons to "rebels" for your information the majority of the rebel weapons have been captured from Assads weapons storage facilities. So america can stick its fake tears and fake concern and its US made weapons where the sun doesn't shine!

Re: Syrian Rebel Commander Cuts Organs Out of Assad Soldier’s Body and Eats Them

^^^ Instead of being an armchair general why don't you pick up a gun and go fight Assad's forces? The point I was making is that there are no good guys in this conflict, and between extremists Whabbis and secular Assad regime baathist's seems appealing.

Re: Syrian Rebel Commander Cuts Organs Out of Assad Soldier’s Body and Eats Them

And what about the Syrian National Coalition, which is neither Wahabi or secular Baathists? The SNC is based in and supported by Hanafi Turkey and is led by the Christian, George Sabra, who succeeded the former imam of the Damascus Umayyad Grand Mosque as SNC leader.

Re: Syrian Rebel Commander Cuts Organs Out of Assad Soldier’s Body and Eats Them

These are mostly exile people who operate outside of the Syria w/o much sway on what is happening on the ground. People on ground are mostly backed by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and other gulf kingdoms, and many jihadis fighting in Syria are actually foreigners. And if we go by history, we know what Saudi petrodollars and their hate ideology has done to Pakistan and Afghanistan. What makes you think that outcome would be different for Syria?

[QUOTE]

One guy commits an abuse and you want to slander and say "these people" which is ordinary syrians who fighting against the brutal Assad regime?

where is your outrage to the rape of young girls and even grandmothers by Assads fanatical thugs?

!
[/QUOTE]

..except.. This isnt a one off..and these arent 'ordinary syrians' as you claim, but 'alqaeda' wing al nusra.

The ordinary are in refugee camps or hiding terrified in their homes.