
Militants shoot in the air during the funeral of Abdel Basset Sarout in the border town of al-Dana, Idlib, Syria June 9, 2019.
Abdel Baset Sarout, 27, was wounded last week fighting Syrian government forces, and died on Saturday at a hospital in Turkey. Sarout was quickly eulogized in Western press, with an AP profile highlighting his skills as a junior soccer goalie and calling him the "singer of the revolution," while downplaying his ties to terrorists.
Sarout "became an icon of the rebellion against President Bashar Assad," wrote Sarah el Deeb for AP, rehashing the myth of how the Syrian conflict began as "peaceful protests." She paints a flattering portrait of Sarout as a hero of Homs, who "repeatedly denounced rebel infighting and called on Syrians to unite against government forces" and ended up leading a unit named after his hometown after losing his father and brothers in battle.















Comment: Here's another video from 2012 of Sarout singing that classic of the revolution, "Exterminate the Alawites":
And it turns out that the "rumor" that he pledged allegiance to ISIS actually came from... Sarout himself!
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