Saudi Arabia has given US$1 billion to Lebanon's army to fight Syrian militants

mehwish_ali

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)


سعودیہ نے آج تک حماس کو ایک پیسہ نہیں دیا، اسلحہ کے نام پر 1 گولی فراہم نہیں کی، لیکن مصر السیسی کو پیسہ فراہم کیا۔۔۔ لبنان آرمی کو 3 ارب ڈالر فراہم کیے تاکہ وہ اس پر اپنا اثرو رسوخ قائم کر کے اسے حزب اللہ کے خلاف استعمال کر سکے۔ بےشرم ہے یہ یہودی عریبیہ خادم امریریکین و اسرائلین۔

بنیادی طور پر دھوکہ دینے کے لیے کہا جا رہا ہے کہ لبنانی فوج کو یہ امداد شامی باغیوں سے لڑنے کے لیے دی جا رہی ہے، مگر اندر کی اصل بات سب کو علم ہے کہ یہ شامی باغی، جنکی عرسال میں اکثریت النصرہ کی ہے، انہیں بذاتِ خود یہودی عریبیہ اسلحہ و پیسہ فراہم کر رہا ہے۔


امید ہے کہ یہودی عریبیہ کی طرف سے امداد آتے ہی لبنانی بکاؤ فوج عرسال کو ان حیوانی جہادیوں سے خالی کروانے کی بجائے ان سے "مذاکرات" شروع کر دے گی تاکہ وہ وہیں اپنا کیمپ قائم رکھتے ہوئے شام پر حملے جاری رکھ سکیں۔
Saudi Arabia has given US$1 billion to Lebanon's army to fight Syrian militants in border clashes.

King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia has given one billion dollars to the Lebanese security forces engaged in battle with Muslim militants on the Syria-Lebanon border.

Saad Hariri, former Lebanon Prime Minister and leading Sunni political representative, said King Abdullah "has informed me of his generous decision to provide the Lebanese army and national security (force) with one billion dollars to strengthen its capabilities to preserve Lebanon's security".

Hariri confirmed the aid has been received.

Lebanon's army chief General Jean Kahwaji this week urged France to speed up the delivery of weapons from a US$3 billion deal financed by Saudi Arabia.

The request came as Lebanese army battles militants in the Arsal region of eastern Lebanon. The fighting erupted on Saturday after soldiers arrested a man accused of belonging to Al-Qaeda's Syrian affiliate, the Al-Nusra Front.

"France is fully committed to supporting the Lebanese army, a pillar of stability and unity in Lebanon', deputy foreign ministry spokesman Vincent Floreani said.

The UN Security Council this has also expressed their support for Lebanon's efforts as tensions heightened and Lebanon suffered military losses.

In April, the number of Syrian refugees who have fled to Lebanon passed one million.
 
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TONIC

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Correction please!! when Saudi Arabia is giving money to Lebanon's armed forces part of it ends up with Hazabulah because of their composition.

Whatever you have mentioned apart from that is fine.
 

eye-eye-PTI

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Saudi Arabia iss dour ka sab se beghairaaaat tareen mulk hai .. iss ne apni chowdhrahat qaim karnay k liye tamam islamic world ka baira gharq kia hai ... Kaash Makkah aor Madina wahan na hotaa.
 

khomeini

Councller (250+ posts)
Aane do...... Yeh paisa tu hamare hee paas aaey ga (Hizbullat ko mile ga) aur hum ji bher k sunnion ka qatl krein ge
 

adslpxp2

MPA (400+ posts)
Saudi Arabia has a habit of betting on the losing horse. They like the Egyptian dictator but thay don't like the Syrian dictator. Bunch of losers, this will come back and bite them in the @$$.
 

knower

Minister (2k+ posts)
yes indeeed.. agr madina aur mekka saudia main na hota to saudia ka syria aur iraq se bhi battar haal hotaa

@Knower : saudis r lucky madina and mekka is in thr country

yes they are lucky they have corrupt Ulemas as well.
 

KhanHaripur

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Hizbul shetan ko MASOOM sabit karnay ki nakaam koshech.

Alhamdulillah SACHI aur Munafiqat in kazzabon ki apni zubanoon say Allah SWT nikalwa rahey hain.
 
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Humi

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
Saudia arms its terrorists and Iran arms its terrorists...they both kill eachother and make us hate eachother even more..
 

Pakistani1947

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Bashar al-Assad implicated in Syria war crimes, says UN

UN inquiry finds 'massive evidence' that president is responsible for crimes against humanity as conflict's death toll hits 126,000




Link to video: Syria: UN implicates Bashar al-Assad in war crimesA UN inquiry has found "massive evidence" that the Syrian president,Bashar al-Assad, is implicated in war crimes as the latest reported death toll in the country's civil war reached 126,000.
Navi Pillay, the UN's human rights chief, said a commission of inquiry into human rights violations in Syria "has produced massive evidence … [of] very serious crimes, war crimes, crimes against humanity" and that "the evidence indicates responsibility at the highest level of government, including the head of state."
The report is the first time the UN body has accused Assaddirectly and it is unclear how it will affect January's Geneva II peace conference to try to end the country's bloody conflict, now in its 33rd month.

Damascus swiftly dismissed Pillay's remarks. "She has been talking nonsense for a long time and we don't listen to her," Faisal Miqdad, the deputy foreign minister, told AP.

In May. Pillay said the conflict in Syria had "become an intolerable affront to the human conscience".
The UN commissioner's statement, reported from Geneva, coincided with the publication of a new death toll of 125,835 for the last 33 months. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), based in the UK, said the dead included 44,381 civilians, including 6,627 children and 4,454 women. The SOHR said at least 27,746 opposition fighters had been killed, among them just over 19,000 civilians who took up arms to fight the Assad regime. The opposition toll also included 2,221 army defectors and 6,261 non-Syrians who joined the rebels.
The figures cover the period from 18 March 2011 – when the Syrian uprising began with protests in the southern city of Deraa – to 1 December 2013.
The UN commission has repeatedly accused the Syrian government, which is supported by Russia and Iran, of crimes against humanity and war crimes. It has said the rebels, who are backed by both western and Arab countries, are also guilty of committing war crimes.
But the four-member panel, headed by the Brazilian Paulo Srgio Pinheiro and including the former UN war crimes prosecutor, Carla Del Ponte, has never before directly named or accused Assad, who is both Syria's head of state and commander-in-chief of the armed forces.
Pillay said the names of perpetrators "remain sealed until I am requested to furnish them to credible investigation … It could be a national investigation or international investigation."

Pillay reiterated her call for the case to be handed over to theinternational criminal court (ICC) in The Hague to ensure accountability. But an ICC referral requires the backing of the "big five" permanent members of the UN security council, where Russia and China have blocked any action against the Syrian government and are unlikely to change tack.

The current position of the US, UK and France also means that the war crimes accusations are unlikely to gain traction. Last August's agreement between the US and Russia over securing the disarmament of Syria's chemical weapons has made it a priority for the Geneva II peace conference to be held on schedule on 22 January. Assad, who has promised to send representatives, is unlikely to co-operate if he is facing war crimes charges.
Pillay warned that ongoing efforts to destroy Syria's chemical weapons should not distract from killings with conventional weapons, which have accounted for the vast majority of deaths in the Syrian war. "The scale of viciousness of the abuses being perpetrated by elements on both sides almost defies belief," she said.

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Pakistani1947

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Saddam Hussein or Bashar al-Assad: Who's the bigger tyrant?

[h=3]'Nonsense' to suggest that while Saddam was brutal, he wasnt as bad as Assad, analyst says[/h]By Mark Gollom, CBC News Posted: Jul 08, 2014 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: Jul 08, 2014 11:57 AM ET


saddam.jpg
Foreign affairs expert Robert Kaplan writes that the total number of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's victims, depending upon how you count, may reach upwards of a million. (Nikola Solic/Associated Press)



Former war crimes prosecutor David Crane says the fullest extent of the brutality of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has yet to be uncovered.
We were just given a tip-of-the-iceberg look of the horror, saidCrane, one of the authors of a report into the atrocities committed by the Assad regime.
The report, based on thousands of images of mutilated corpses provided by a former Syrian police photographer, found evidence of 11,000 people tortured and killed in three detention facilities in and aroundDamascus. And with 50 other such facilities unexplored, the total numbers of human casualties could be astronomical and horrific, he said.
Stephen Rapp, head of the U.S. State Department's Office of Global Criminal Justice, recently said that those "images of individuals that have been strangled, and mutilated, gouged, burned, starved" is "solid evidence of the kind of machinery of cruel death that we havent seen frankly since the Nazis."

But Crane, who was chief prosecutor at the Sierra Leone war crimes tribunal, also stressed that evaluating the brutality of tyrants, especially through death toll numbers, places the focus in the wrong place. And its why he takes some umbrage with a recent column by foreign affairs author and expert Robert Kaplan comparing Assad to Iraq's former dictator, Saddam Hussein.
[h=2]Some tyrants far worse[/h]Even among tyrants, there are distinctions, wrote Kaplan, a chief analyst for the geopolitical intelligence firm Stratfor. Some tyrants are worse than others. It is important that we recognize such distinctions.
Kaplan said it's "nonsense" for anyone to suggest that while Saddam was brutal, he wasnt as bad as Assad.
He notes that while 160,000 have been killed during the three-year conflict in Syria, in the Al-Anfal campaign, Saddam killed an estimated 100,000 civilians alone. Kaplan adds that Saddam likely killed tens of thousands following the first Gulf War, and that he initiated the Iran-Iraq war which killed hundreds of thousands.
The total number of his victims, depending upon how you count, may reach upwards of a million. Saddam was beyond brutal," Kaplan wrote. "The word brutal has a generic and insipid ring to it: one that simply does not capture what Iraq was like under his rule. Saddam was in a category all his own, somewhere north of the al-Assads and south of Stalin. That's who Saddam Hussein was.
But Crane said that Kaplan's argument is somewhat misleading.
I think you need to note what he says but also to really make the point that in reality its not about numbers, it's about human beings," Crane said.
mideast-syria-candidates-glance.jpg
'We were just given a tip-of-the-iceberg look of the horror,' said former war crimes prosecutor David Crane, one of the authors of a report into the atrocities committed by the Bashar al-Assad regime in Syria. (Vahid Salemi/Associated Press)

The fact that one [of the dictators] may have had different methodologies or had literally, by numbers, killed more than the other is frankly, in my opinion, not significant and actually can be misleading as to the intent," Crane said. "And that is the widespread and systematic destruction of their own citizens."
International law and war crimes expert Cherif Bassiouni said it's difficult to compare tyrannical regimes and that it's not just a question of total people killed but also the impact those killings have on a country.
Every conflict is sui generis, every conflict has its own characteristics, has its own impact. And to try and quantify numbers in a given conflict and try to compare it to another is just totally impossible," he said.
But Henri Barkey, professor of international relations at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Penn., agreed with Kaplan, noting a distinction can be made between Saddam and Assad.
"The interesting thing in terms of comparison is that Saddam's system of brutality was one he instituted from the moment he came to power that was incessant, that was continuous. He ratcheted up when necessary but it was constant," Barkey said.
[h=2]'Derived pleasure from killing'[/h]"Assad, as much as he's a hoodlum, he's a two-bit dictator, did not engage in the kind of massive continuous stuff that Saddam has done. Saddam would kill just for the fun and pleasure of killing. He derived pleasure from the killing."
Assad's current behaviour, while horrible, is one of someone who is fighting for their life, Barkey said. But in the case of Saddam, the whole system from the beginning was based on continuous violence against everybody real and imagined enemies he said.
Barkey said one must also look at the two regimes during peace time and at war. During periods of conflict, both Saddam and Assad were equally brutal, using weapons of mass destruction, and engaging in indiscriminate bombing and shelling. But in non-conflict time, Saddam was far worse than Assad, he said.
Barkey also dismissed Rapp's comparison of Assad's regime to the Nazis, saying when the Kurds liberated the police stations and prisons in the north,"they found exactly the same thing meticulous documentation on anybody who was killed, executed."
"[Rapp] should know better. The moment you bring this comparison. First of all, you're cheapening the massive horrors of World War Two. We need to protect that in many respects.
"But factually he's not right. Saddam and the Khmer Rouge were worse. Even Rwanda, where 800,000 people killed in a matter of weeks, wasn't there a machinery there too?"

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