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Syria: Iran vows it will not allow Assad to fall



Iran pledged that its "axis" with Syria will "never" be allowed to break when Tehran sought to bolster President Bashar al-Assad by sending a senior envoy to Damascus.

Mr Assad made his first appearance on state television for over a fortnight, promising to continue the struggle against his enemies "without respite".

Iran has been trying to guarantee the survival of Mr Assad, who serves as Tehran's only reliable ally in the Middle East, by supplying Syria'sregime with funds, weaponry and expert personnel to aid the campaign against rebels.

Saeed Jalili, the secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, came to Damascus as a visible symbol of that support.

"Iran will never allow the resistance axis – of which Syria is an essential pillar – to break," he said. The "axis of resistance" refers to the Middle East's anti-Western powers: Iran, Syria and the armed groups, Hizbollah and Hamas, although in reality the latter has already broken away by ending its presence in Damascus.

Iran and Syria both claim that foreign countries have caused the uprising against Mr Assad with the aim of destroying the "axis". During his visit, Mr Jalili echoed that message. "What is happening in Syria is not an internal issue but a conflict between the axis of resistance on one hand, and the regional and global enemies of this axis on the other," he said.



Syria's regime has suffered a series of reverses in recent weeks, with Riyad Hijab, the prime minister, defecting on Monday and denouncing Mr Assad's "murderous" government.

The rebel Free Syrian Army now controls much of the country: its fighters are struggling for possession of Aleppo, the commercial capital. The FSA claimed to be delaying the regime's advance on the city at the end of a day of intense fighting. Mr Assad's forces had been unable or unwilling to enter the key district of Salaheddin, despite reinforcements of thousands of troops and hundreds of tanks, according to rebel spokesmen. The insurgents were also encircling government troops in the northern half of Aleppo. They believe the army's inability to fully employ tanks in built-up areas has blunted its assault.

On Tuesday, however, Mr Assad reassured his Iranian guest of his determination to fight on. "The Syrian people and their government are determined to purge the country of terrorists and to fight the terrorists without respite," he said.

The Iranian envoy also demanded the release of 48 of his country's citizens, who were kidnapped by Syrian rebels while visiting a shrine near Damascus. Mr Jalili pledged to use "all means possible" to win their freedom. An official letter sent to the US administration by Iran's foreign ministry said that Washington, as the "manifest" sponsor of "terrorist groups" in Syria, was responsible for the captives' safety.

The rebels, for their part, claimed that members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps were among the hostages. They believe that Iran has sent soldiers from this unit to fight alongside Syrian forces. The pilgrimage was, the rebels say, merely a cover for infiltrating more Iranian combatants into the country. To support this allegation, the rebels produced military identity cards supposedly found on the hostages.

However, any Iranian who has performed compulsory military service will hold these documents: they do not prove current membership of the country's armed forces.

Syria's regime, dominated by members of the Alawite sect of Shia Islam, bases its alliance with Iran's Shia rulers on religious fraternity. In addition, Syria provides Iran with its only base for influence in the Arab world, as well as offering a route for supplying weapons to Hizbollah, the radical Shia group based in south Lebanon.

If Mr Assad were to be overthrown, Iran would risk losing this influence and its vital link to Hizbollah. Experts believe this would amount to a strategic setback. "For Iran, Syria is a very important partner in a region where allies are not easy to come by," said Gareth Stansfield, from the Middle East and North Africa programme at Chatham House. "If Assad goes, he will replaced by a government that is likely to be totally antipathetic to Iran's wider interests."

Sixteen civilians - mostly Alawites and Christians - meanwhile were killed by anti-regime gunmen in an attack on a housing compound near Homs, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The majority of Syria’s population is Sunni Muslim, while the ruling clan of President Bashar al-Assad belong to the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shia Islam.----

Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/syria/9459321/Syria-Iran-vows-it-will-not-allow-Assad-to-fall.html




Added: Aug-7-2012 Occurred On: Aug-7-2012
By: MB-UK
In:
Other Middle East
Tags: syria, assad, iran, fall, civil, war
Location: Syria (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 4084 | Comments: 47 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 1 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 1
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  • Good. Anyone in the west who supports the rebels, also supports the extermination of Christians in syria.

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (3)

    • @Ali187

      that's like saying "anyone in Iran who supports Ahmadinejad, supports the extermination of the Jews in Israel."

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (2)

    • @nkdmansam You're right. People from the west who support the west come in 2 groups, They are israel supporters that want to see christians in syria exterminated or they're just ignorant and think syrians want freedom when it's really sharia law they want.

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @Ali187

      why would anyone, besides radical islamists, want to see christians anywhere exterminated?

      How are you so certain that there will be an extermination?

      Each Syrian probably wants something different from his neighbor. Some will want Sharia, some will want democracy, some will miss the king. You generalize too broadly and make sweeping, unsubstantiated claims.

      We cannot act based on what may or may not be. What we know is that a king is losing power and using the army to crush the p More..

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @nkdmansam Syria has a king? I didn't know that? Westerners and zionists wouldn't want to see christians exterminated, but they sure as hell wouldn't care if it did happen if the extermination meant it would help they're interests. There is no such thing as democracy it's an illusion.

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @Ali187

      a "president" who rules for 29 years and is succeeded by his son for 13 years... in the west, we call it what it is.

      "wouldn't care if it did happen" - so the extermination went from inevitable to hypothetical

      Democracy may be an illusion, but in practice it is the least terrible of all political illusions.

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (1)

  • And here you have it ,the endgame .this is what the CIA and mi6 have been hoping for .this gives them legitimate reason to fight Iran on Syrian soil .you will see in my option Turkish special forces along with us and uk stepping up support and my guess air support will be next .the end goal is to stop iran getting nukes at all costs .

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (2)

    • @markymark69

      Sounds about right

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @markymark69

      wrong pal. No one will support the rebels to that extent that they'd beat Assad's regime (See Iran Contra Affair). They, the US and Co. want this conflict to drag on for as long as possible. Preferable until after the US elections if not even beyond that.
      If they wanted Assad to go, they'd remove him quicker than you think. But they are not aiming for a quick end to all of this.

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @Rasengan No not wrong n u will see .they did not want a quick end because there is no support for ground troops .you don't need to go back to Iran contra just take a look at Lybia and you will see the future plan ..

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (1)

    • Comment of user 'markymark69' has been deleted by author!
    • @markymark69 I agree, this hole Arab spring looks like a CIA proxy war to remove Iran's allies before turning the screws on Iran.

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (3)

  • You can be sure that there are Iranians killing Syrians at this very moment to keep Assad in power. Great neighbour.

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (2)

  • A war over religion, what year is this? 1200?

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (2)

    • @orangepeel

      The Zionists would like for you to believe that.

      It has NOTHING to do with religion.

      It has to do with inserting a puppet government inside Syria to bring down one of the only countries that don't OWE the central banks shit.

      Syria is VERY independent.

      Their GDP is higher than their consumption rate, therefore Syria does not have DEBT.

      They grow all the food inside their country, self sustained and has enough to give to neighboring countries.

      You won't see McDonalds More..

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (-1)

    • @mphatik In a way Hitler caused this, by persecuting the jews during ww2 they all fled to America.

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @mphatik

      LOL. It's so cute that you believe all that.

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (3)

    • @Joe 788

      It's fact, do you want sources to prove what I've just said about Syria?

      Posted Aug-8-2012 By 

      (-1)

    • @orangepeel

      Nope, it happened during WW1. The Jews back stabbed the Germans, by getting America into the war. Problem is, the very small percentage of Jews in Germany at the time, owned damn near 30% of the wealth. They were thriving in Germany, why back stab them?

      When the first trainloads of US troops came from America, the Zionist Jews won Palestine.

      This was told to me by COUNTLESS men who are already dead, they were ex-Whermacht soldiers, or lived in Germany during the 2nd world More..

      Posted Aug-8-2012 By 

      (-1)

  • Yeah because propping up leaders in other countries works out soo well

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (1)

    • @Blklight

      Ask the USA, they're propping up Karzai.

      What's the difference? Hypocrite.

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (-1)

    • @mphatik

      Did I say I agree with that? Why are you calling me a hypocrite maybe I was talking about my own government as well? Usually I agree with you but you're being an idiot right now

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @Blklight

      Perhaps I read that incorrectly, I apologize if so.

      Just know that governments "prop" up others, not because they genuinely care, but because it helps their personal agendas and gains.

      Posted Aug-8-2012 By 

      (0)

  • And so it begins?

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (1)

  • Just move Syria inside Iran. Bombing both will be cheaper.

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (1)

  • You know anybody's days are numbers as soon as they start talking about "fighting to the last...", "never laying down their swords...", etc.

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (1)

  • Iran is playing with matches nowadays. They started to threaten Turkey louder and louder I wonder what kind of people they are? They threaten Turks and then ask for help for their kidnapped 48 so called citizens we all know they are Iranian secret service members. Who would go to a country that literally in war with its own people as a tourist...

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (1)

  • At the start of a new century and humanity is far more uncivilised than when cave men walked the earth. Is their no one? in the middle east who can see the bigger picture and help a push for peace. One thing always remain's and that is the stench of unjustified violence. The problem is that everyone of these mentioned countries and many more non mentioned are full of war mongers, shame on them..

    Posted Dec-27-2012 By 

    (0)

  • keep it up Assad, dont worry about the US....the same people who want us to help the rebels will cry about the war afterwards...

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Comment of user 'just_crsn47' has been deleted by author!
  • oh yeah send a "security envoy" that'll show em, all talk no action those iranians..

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (0)

    • @golem

      Why should Iran act? They are the ones being prodded and poked with sanctions, and other bullshit.

      The West and the Zionists would love for Iran to make a move. They did the same thing to the Palestinians, they prodded and poked until Palestine had the Intifadas (uprisings), immediately after, BLAMMO, a reason to put up the "security wall" or the Apartheid state. We gotta protect ourselves. Well then stop fucking with your neighbor bitch. It's all in their plan.

      Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

      (-2)

  • this is getting good...we dont need to do a thing but take full advantage of Syria and Iran lining up against Rebel Insurgents and Al Qaeda, let them kill off as many of themselves as possible using Russian weapons for as long as possible.

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Syria is now a proxy war between Shia Iran and Sunni Wahhabi Saudi Arabia. And yes this war is good for Israel because thier enemies are divided and killing each other.

    Posted Aug-7-2012 By 

    (0)