© Minene Hindevi / Anadolu via Getty ImagesArmed groups opposing Syrian President Bashar al-Assad seized control of much of Aleppo's city center in Syria on November 30, 2024.
For the past few days, foreign-backed terrorists in Syria's northwest have been attacking Syrian army positions in the Aleppo and Idlib countryside, and shelling civilian districts of Aleppo.
While regional media have been giving updates on these attacks and counterattacks by Syria and Russia, what is less clear is what is happening in Aleppo itself. Terrorist-aligned media claim Tahrir al-Sham (al-Qaeda re-branded) and allied terrorists have taken numerous western districts and even the city center.
But their proof - short videos showing terrorists in various areas they claim to control - was countered by videos of Syrians walking in key districts, saying things are calm. More on this later.
The following is what is known in summary about the attacks.
On Wednesday, November 27, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and Turkish-backed National Army factions launched attacks in the Idlib and Aleppo countryside, in what they dubbed "Operation Deterrence of Aggression."
According to Al-Mayadeen, as related by Syrian journalist
Wassim Issa, convoys of militants, equipment and ammunition entered from the Bab al-Salam crossing with Türkiye and headed to the fighting fronts in the western Aleppo and southern Idlib countryside.
Al Mayadeen reported Tahrir al-Sham used new weapons and equipment, including Ukrainian drones, "reportedly acquired from Kiev's intelligence services."Attempts to resuscitate the Syrian 'revolution'Unsurprisingly, there are calls on social media for President Assad to be removed; the same calls heard during the Western-orchestrated media psyop which saw ignorant people around the world supporting a very bloody
"revolution" in 2011.
It
was never a revolution, and it was never (for Syrians) about Assad (who is
overwhelmingly supported). What kind of revolution destroys its own culture, heritage and civilians, and partners with the US and Israel, among others?
On one of my four trips to Aleppo in 2016 alone, in November, before Aleppo was liberated from terrorist forces, the head of forensic medicine at a local hospital, Dr. Zaher Hajo,
told me that since the occupation of Aleppo in 2012, 10,750 civilians had been killed by terrorists, 40% of whom were women and children.
On that same visit, I met three prominent Sunni leaders who, according to the priest who introduced us, were considered 'infidels' by al-Nusra and company because they didn't follow their distorted terrorist ideology. One of them, Dr. Kukeh said: "Those who are killing the Sunnis are the same who claim that they are defending the Sunnis. The shells that hit us daily are sent by them."
Dr. Kukeh, who said he named his oldest son after Hezbollah leader, Hassan Nasrallah, "because I love that man," explained that in 2012 he was living in eastern Aleppo when terrorists began to occupy districts there. He was targeted for assassination because he did not agree with the terrorists' ideology.
The Aleppo university dorms which were targeted recently were likewise routinely
targeted in 2016. At the time, they had for four years been housing well over 10,000 internally displaced Syrians from areas of Aleppo and its countryside, including from areas occupied by the terrorists.
In subsequent visits in 2017 and years after,
I saw the remnants of the terrorists' occupation of eastern regions of Aleppo (underground prisons with
solitary confinement cells), took testimonies of Syrian civilians on life under terrorist rule, and later, saw the city begin to rebuild and flourish, with businesses reopening, ancient markets
being restored, life bustling
around the famous citadel (during the reign of the terrorists, walking near it meant almost certainly being sniped dead) and
atop the citadel.
The city that Western and Gulf corporate media claimed "fell" when it was liberated from al-Qaeda, ISIS and their co-terrorists came back to life under the rule of the Syrian government.
Current chaos: Aleppo occupied?Throughout the fighting, there have been conflicting reports of terrorists taking parts of Aleppo.
As I wrote at the beginning, photos and videos which appeared to show a terrorist presence in western Aleppo neighborhoods and even the city center aren't proof of terrorists having taken districts.It isn't difficult for sleeper cell terrorists to pop up, take these photos and videos, and leave. Time will show which of their claims are true and
which are part of psychological warfare to demoralize Syrians and turn them against their army and even against Russia.Recall the General Command of the Army's warning regarding misinformation.
Making definitive declarations about the condition of Aleppo and surrounding region, without proof, is irresponsible and unhelpful. In a clickbait age where everyone wants to be the first to post "BREAKING" followed by some unverified soundbite, discerning the truth is complicated.
If the unthinkable happens and parts of Aleppo are re-occupied by terrorists no different from and even including ISIS, they will ultimately be defeated by Syria, Russia, and their allies, just as they were before.
Eva Bartlett is a Canadian independent journalist. She has spent years on the ground covering conflict zones in the Middle East, especially in Syria and Palestine (where she lived for nearly four years). The writer is a recipient of the 2017 International Journalism Award for International Reporting, granted by the Mexican Journalists' Press Club (founded in 1951), was the first
recipient of the Serena Shim Award for Uncompromised Integrity in Journalism, and was short-listed in 2017 for the Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism.See her extended bio on her blog
In Gaza. She tweets from
@EvaKBartlett.
Reader Comments
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The "ideology" of hegemony globally is flawed evidently per the perspective of those of us just trying to get along day-by-day....so why do those espousing and acting upon this proven flawed ideology still hold the reigns of power?
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I think they are rapidly losing their grips on reality - and thank goodness for old farts like the ones in the link you provided who still seem to have blood-flow going to their brain cells - and still able to discern versus just being puppets to an ideology - evidently proven WRONG.
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Regards,
BK
Who ?
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I think the answer is known....and I think some rats are starting to claw upon each other in corners of their own making - and I literally hear the spirits of the dead babies and children from Gaza over the last year - they are casting a spell generationally upon the rats and creating complete frenzy for them such that they will commence tearing each others eyes out.....till only one rat is left - and then it will die from the energy of the spirits been harmed so by these rats....
It is more than evident who the harm pushers are....
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BK, 12224 1141
Alistair Crooke is (indirectly) on my daily watchlist. Which means, I don't miss a podcast with him.
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So fair to wonder - who encourage "Turkey" - to make such a choice.....cause now instead of potentially being everybody's best pal - controlling some critical waterway passage - now, seems you end up being everybody's enemy - just another one "not to be trusted" and subsumed......
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Oh well - something had to trigger something I reckon - and why not let it come from the Turks.
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I know where I place my bet on upcoming activity - but for now - I'm holding with the hand I have.
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I "check".
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BK
Here is a Brave search AI on Operation Cyclone which shows that the CIA creates/funds "terrorist" groups to destablize governments, in this case Russia in Afghanistan. [Link]
"- Funding : The CIA provided approximately $2 billion in funding to the mujahideen through Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency.
- Arms and Equipment : The CIA supplied weapons, including Stinger anti-aircraft missiles, to the mujahideen, which significantly impacted the Soviet Union’s ability to maintain air superiority.
- Training : The CIA and Pakistani military trained the mujahideen in guerrilla warfare, sabotage, and other tactics
- Islamic Militant Groups : The program disproportionately supported Islamic militant groups, such as Gulbuddin Hekmatyar’s Hezb-i-Islami and Ahmad Shah Massoud’s Panjshir forces, which had strong ties to Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.
- Impact : Operation Cyclone contributed to the Soviet Union’s military stalemate and eventual withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989. However, the program also inadvertently created a power vacuum and fueled the rise of extremist groups, including al-Qaeda and the Taliban."