Friday, 28 February 2014

{الفكر القومي العربي} Fwd: Daily Telegraph : Assad appears to be winning the war..

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Said Elnashaie <selnashaie@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Feb 28, 2014 at 6:01 PM
Subject: Fwd: Daily Telegraph : Assad appears to be winning the war..
To: SSSaid Elnashaie <ssselnashaie@gmail.com>


 A very interesting article showing that the real sponsors of terrorism are the western imperialist agents and their allies!!! The most important thing about this article is that it is coming from the side of the western imperialists!!! Arab Zionists like the rulers of Qatar and the so called Saudi Arabia seem to be among the top allies of USA Nazi imperialists and Zionist, colonial settler entity stealing Palestine.
It is more than clear now that the imperialists, Zionists attack on Syria supported by the Arab Zionists was not against Assad , but is against Syria and not for the bad things we do not like about Syrian regime of Assad but because of the good things imperialists, Zionists and Arab Zionists do not like about Syria; mainly that it is not part of the traitors Arab Zionist entities and refuses to sign some traitors agreement like Camp David treason treaty of the traitor Sadat and the traitor King of Jordan. Those who know these facts and still support the imperialist-Zionist war on Syria are traitors whatever their excuse is; and those who do not know and can not understand these facts are stupid ignorant which is not any better than traitors. This could have been a revolution against one of the corrupted undemocratic states like in Egypt and Tunisia; but it is not; it is an imperialist-Zionist dirty plot supported by traitors Arab Zionists and using paid filthy terrorists from all over the world under the false cover of religion. This has been discovered by the Syrian people and Army and they support their system against this dirty plot despite their reservations against the system. While their Zionists claiming to be Muslims that is part of our Egyptian Zionists claiming to be Muslims are cheap filthy tools in the hands of the imperialists-Zionist-Arab Zionists criminal plot against Syria in support of the Zionist entity.
The important thing that has been noticed in the last few months and this article is emphasizing it; is that this dirty imperialist plot has been defeated and the Syrian regime supported by the honest Hezbollah are achieving victories every day and will win at the end which is not far away. This is an introduction to the victory of the Arab people in all countries against the imperialists, Zionists and all their regional and local allies on top of them Arab Zionist rulers and Zionists claiming to be Muslims specially the main traitors in Egypt and Gaza serving the Zionists
Prof.Dr.Said Elnashaie

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: R.K. <rkhanafer4@yahoo.fr>
Date: Fri, Feb 28, 2014 at 2:53 PM
Subject: Daily Telegraph : Assad appears to be winning the war..
To:


We can get rid of Assad or fight al-Qaeda, but we can't do both

To get a proper picture of the Syrian conflict, the West needs to listen to its enemies

 Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad appears to be winning the war that has torn his country apart Photo: AFP/Getty Images
9:24PM GMT 26 Feb 2014
For the past three years, when seeking enlightenment about the Syrian crisis, I have often talked to Alastair Crooke, a former MI6 officer. Mr Crooke, who left government service a decade ago after a long career, now runs a think tank called Conflicts Forum, which maintains contact with organisations such as Hizbollah and governments such as Iran, when official contact has been broken off.
I have learnt to respect and trust Mr Crooke, who has the invaluable habit of being right. When the British and American governments both claimed that President Assad of Syria would fall within weeks, he told me this was wishful thinking. When Western governments hailed the Syrian rebels as a democratic movement of national liberation, he said: hang on a moment. At the heart of the rebellion, he pointed out, was a group of armed gangs funded by Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states, dedicated to the establishment of a militant Sunni caliphate across the Middle East. He uttered this warning right at the start of the Syrian conflict, and at last the penny is (ever so painfully) beginning to drop in Whitehall and Washington.
So when Conflicts Forum invited me to a seminar in Beirut, I accepted with alacrity. It was over the weekend in an otherwise deserted seaside hotel. Lebanon, so prosperous and thriving when I was here four years ago, now conveys an air of desolate menace, as the country struggles to accommodate more than a million Syrian refugees. Parts of the country, including the second city of Tripoli, are increasingly dominated by jihadists.
At the seminar, there was a different world view to the one normally presented in the British media, and a more exotic cast of characters. Mr Crooke had assembled an adviser to President Putin, several Iranian diplomats, as well as representatives from Hizbollah, Hamas and Islamic Jihad – all three organisations labelled as terrorists by Western governments.
To many Telegraph readers, this might sound like a rogues' gallery. But what they had to say was very interesting. Everyone there took for granted that President Assad has won the war, though they admitted that there may be some time to go before it ends. In the north, they said, the rebels have turned on each other. A crucial battle is now being fought at Qalamoun, in the west. The Syrian army and rebel forces are engaged in a ferocious battle for this strategic ridge, which controls the all-important supply line between Lebanon and rebel territory. We were told that the Battle of Qalamoun was all over bar the shouting, and that it will fall to Assad's forces quite soon.
The second message was that by far the greatest threat to stability in the Middle East is not Iran, as so often claimed, but Saudi Arabia. This may seem surprising: the Saudis remain among Britain's closest allies, and only last week Prince Charles paid a happy visit to the kingdom. Yet they have been far and away the most important and deadly sponsor of global terrorism – a fact very well understood by all intelligence agencies, even if the British and American governments cannot bring themselves to admit it, let alone to come to terms with the consequences.
Several participants drew attention to the haunting parallel between Pakistan during the Afghan war against the Soviet Union, and Saudi Arabia today. Back then, the Pakistan intelligence services, urged on by the CIA, channelled money and arms to rebel forces. But they catastrophically failed to foresee that these very groups would create mayhem back home when the war ended.
This is the danger that faces Saudi Arabia today. The kingdom has been providing – indirectly – a vast amount of cash and resources to extremist groups advocating the takfiri mutation of Islam, an orientation that brands other Muslims as targets for killing. These takfiris deny the legitimacy of any state or secular power – including King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia. A comparable problem is starting to emerge in Britain, where M15 is fretting about what British jihadists fighting in Syria might do on their return. This concern has created a potential conflict with the more gung-ho SIS, which has effectively been egging on these very same jihadists.
It was the third message from the seminar, however, that continues to haunt me. The international sponsors of Assad's Syria – Iran and Russia – see eye to eye: they have been consistent in their support, whatever the consequences. But some of the rebels' backers – Saudi Arabia, the United States, Britain and Israel – are in bitter conflict with one another, and share no coherence of vision or common purpose.
The British Government has consistently rejected the analysis I have recorded above, and I would not expect many people to agree. But I was impressed by the power of the views I have heard over the past few days, especially when contrasted with the contradictions, emotionalism and wishful thinking from so many Western experts and policy-makers. At the very least, these voices are worth listening to. Yet British officials are forbidden from even speaking to Hizbollah. No wonder thinking in Whitehall has been so stale and misguided – even though the United Nations, South Africa and several European countries were all represented at the seminar at senior level, and all paying attention.
Yet there have been interesting indications over the course of the past few days, although not widely reported, that Western leaders are starting to change course. The first concerns the mysterious disappearance of Bandar bin Sultan. Two years ago, prompted by the United States, King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia gave Prince Bandar the task of destroying President Assad. Since then, the prince has poured the Saudi kingdom's unlimited resources into his mission, backing a wide range of rebel groups, from the so-called moderates to the takfiris who now cause increasing anxiety within the House of Saud. Prince Bandar seems to retain his official title of National Security Adviser and Intelligence Director. But he was missing from a secret meeting of intelligence chiefs recently held in Washington to discuss Syria. He is out of action.
Meanwhile, Robert Ford, the American diplomat who has been the chief US organiser for the Syrian rebels – herding them in and out of negotiations during the failed Geneva talks two weeks ago – has also got the chop. These changes of personnel come amid reports that the Obama administration has confronted the Saudis with a file full of evidence of their involvement in terrorism in Iraq, Lebanon and Yemen. This report can be found in Al-Akhbar English, a Lebanese newspaper seen as close to Hizbollah. The newspaper hints at the possibility that Saudi could yet be formally classified by the UN security council as a state sponsor of global terrorism. That sounds fanciful, but President Obama's visit to Riyadh next month now looks pregnant with significance.
As the Beirut meeting closed, I asked Mr Crooke, who wears a tweed jacket and might at first appearance be a country solicitor or land agent, whether President Assad would survive. He said there was no doubt. The United States and Britain are, nevertheless, still pressing for his removal. But the signs are mounting that the Western powers are beginning to understand that they have a choice. They can get rid of Assad, or they can fight al-Qaeda. But they can't do both. That option was never really there.



--
Prof. Dr. Said Salah Eldin Elnashaie
Cellular phone: Egypt-011110-9947

       Adjunct Professor of Chemical /Biological Engineering, University of British Columbia(UBC), Vancouver, Canada

     Adjunct Professor of Chemical Engineering, New Mexico Tech. University, Albuquerque, USA

 Ex-Quentin Berg Chair Professor of Sustainable Development ( SD), Penn State Univ., USA,

     Ex-Professor of Chemical Engineering, Auburn University, Alabama, USA

     Ex-Professor of Chemical Engineering, Cairo University, Egypt

     Ex-Professor of Chemical Engineering, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

     Ex-Dean of Engineering and IT, Sinai University, Egypt

     Ex-Professor of Chemical Engineering, Universiti Putra Malaysia(UPM),  Malaysia

 ا.د.سعيد صلاح النشائى

أستاذ زائر الهندسة الكيميائية والكيميائية الحيوية, جامعة كولومبيا البريطانية,فانكوفر, كندا

أستاذ زائر الهندسة كيميائية, جامعة مكسيكو الجديدة التكنولوجية, ألباكيركى , الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية

أستاذ كرسي التنمية المستدامة, جامعة ولاية بنسلفانيا, الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية. سابقاً

     أستاذ الهندسة كيميائية , جامعة أوبرن , ألاباما, الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية. سابقاً

     أستاذ الهندسة كيميائية , جامعة القاهرة ,مصر. سابقاً

     أستاذ الهندسة كيميائية , جامعة الملك سعود ,الرياض, المملكة العربية السعودية. سابقاً

     أستاذ الهندسة كيميائية , جامعة أمير ماليزيا ,كوالا لامبور, ماليزيا. سابقاً

عميد كليتي الهندسة وتكنولوجيا المعلومات, جامعة سيناء,العريش ,مصر. سابقاً



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