'Whose house is that?'
"... "To be fair, one can't put all the blame of what's happening in Syria on the Syrian regime. No government in the world, were it authoritarian or democratic, accepts its sovereignty to be disputed. The fact is that the two parties bear equal responsibility for every drop of blood that fall on the Syrian ground.
28 years of fighting the Israeli occupation in South Lebanon, Hezbollah' first priority was the residents safety. It never tried to hold any town because it knew the catastrophic consequences of such an act. Instead, its focus was on making the occupation's life a hell by attacking the checkpoints and military barracks of the Israelis and their agents of the South Lebanon Army using the guerrilla warfare. Throughout this period, we never heard of the fall of a single civilian as a result of the resistance activities. But the Syrian "revolutionaries", in their savage fighting to topple the Syrian regime, don't care about the fate of the innocent civilians. By, deliberately, transferring the battle to the populated centers, the rebels are, partly, responsible for the destruction of cities and the killing and the displacement of the people they pretend to protect. They are, clearly and unethically, willing to drag the Syrian regime to commit atrocities in order to obtain the long- awaited western military intervention ..."
'Whose house is that?'
1 comment:
these are classic IDF techniques used in Gaza, where one wall is shared as the wall with another household's home. This has also been taught to the US troops.
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