As Syria rebuilds, some residents fear the Israeli military presence near their homes. ‘We want to stay in Syria and not live under Israeli occupation, but the question is what Syria we are talking about’

 

ed note–as always, a tidal wave of important info that every Gentile with a vested interest in his/her own future survival needs to understand about all of this.

 

Firsto, we at this humble little informational endeavor would ask the readers to take a good look at the pic of the alligator featured above.

 

Now, there can be no doubt as to what that image signifies–the alligator is eyeballing whoever/whatever is in front of him and sizing him/her up as his next meal.

 

And how do we know this, ladies and Gentile-men? 

 

Because, quite simply, and without the need of going to extraordinary lengths in explaining it, it is in the nature of the beast for it to do so.

 

The alligator BY ITS NATURE, is a pitiless, remorseless hunter/killer, and unlike other predators such as dogs, cats, etc, that people keep as pets in their home, the alligator by contrast cannot be domesticated and turned into something harmless, friendly or even protective of any foolish human beings who engage in the suicidal business of trying to turn it into a pet. For millions of years, the alligator’s nature as a hunter/killer has remained static and unchanged, and although it may have undergone minor changes in the millions of years of its evolutionary development, it is basically the same creature today that it was long before Homo Sapiens started waking upright on 2 legs.

 

And likewise with the followers of Torah Judah-ism, the ‘children of Israel’ as they love to refer to themselves. If the history of their 3,000 years long stay here on God’s green earth has established anything, it is that they are the same creatures today that they were when they crash landed here from whatever corner of the universe it was that they called home before being driven out by that planet’s ‘anti-Semites’. Like the alligator, they are a ravenous, pitiless, remorseless ‘species’ with no regard for ‘inferior’ beings such as Gentiles, and have made it clear per their ‘scriptures’ that they intend to steal every millimeter of land that exists in the Middle East and after they have secured that objective, that they intend to use this as a base of operations for ruling the rest of the planet. 

 

Now, as to the people featured in the news story below…

 

Not wanting to deal with your angst in an insensitive manner, but nevertheless–

 

OF FREAKING COURSE THE JEWS ARE NOT LEAVING SYRIA…THEY HAVE MADE IT CLEAR FOR THE LAST 3,000 YEARS THAT THEY CONSIDER SYRIA TO BE PART OF GREATER ISRAEL AND HAVE MADE IT CLEAR THAT THEY INTEND TO STEAL IT ALL FOR THEMSELVES…

 

Sorry to have to engage in this as loudly as we are, ladies and Gentile-men, but the issue of the Jews leaving Syria anytime soon really is as simple as someone looking at the pic of that alligator, up close and personal, and then thinking to him/herself–  

 

‘I wonder what he’s thinking right now’? 

 

 

Haaretz

 

Residents in southern Syria have been dealing with the presence of Israeli troops since the fall of the Bashar al Assad regime. They have generally considered this a temporary situation, and for the time being, residents around Quneitra and other parts of southern Syria see no signs that the Israeli military plans to occupy or seize the area.

 

Still, until their country’s government stabilizes, they remain in a state of uncertainty.

 

‘We don’t know where Syria is headed – whether it’s into chaos and another civil war, or toward a stable reality, whether there will be power struggles among different ethnic groups and power centers or a stable central government,’ a resident of the Syrian side of the Golan Heights told Haaretz. ‘We don’t have answers to these questions.’

 

He added that the prevailing sentiment in Quneitra and its environs is that the Israeli presence is unlikely to last long. It depends, he said, on how much strength a new government in Damascus can muster and on international support that might allow it to demand an Israeli withdrawal from the area.

 

Meanwhile, residents are forced to contend with a new reality that one Quneitra resident says is unlike anything he has experienced before. He says this situation bears no resemblance to 1967 or 1973 when there was a war and one side lost while the other won, yet Syria still existed as a sovereign state with institutions and a military.

 

Now, he said, there is no country, the new leadership must be rebuilt and the residents fear resisting the Israeli military. ‘Fight against the Israeli occupation? With what means? And if so, for whom?’ he said. ‘Who rules Syria? Who would back such resistance? We want to stay in Syria and not live under Israeli occupation, but the question is what Syria we are talking about. We still don’t have an answer.’

 

Last week, Al Araby aired correspondent Ibrahim al-Tarisi broadcasting from Al-Baath in the Quneitra District. He spoke rapidly and seem frightened. ‘I’m standing here and as you see behind me, a few hundred meters away, there is an Israeli tank, and more tanks have been in the city for several days,’ he reported.

 

‘The residents say that the Israeli army entered government buildings and carried out searches there.’ He said that the IDF had taken the village Al-Hamidiyah and that the main roads to Al-Baath were blocked.

 

‘A situation has been created in which the villages must find alternative routes to reach the city to receive services, such as patients who need medical attention,’ he said, adding that the army was also in the villages Khan Arnaba and Jubata Al-Khashab.

 

Tarisi’s report reflects part of the reality in southern Syria. On the one hand, residents are still trying to absorb the joyous news about the fall of the Assad regime, but on the other hand they must deal with the unexpected Israeli invasion.

 

‘We didn’t have time to celebrate like in other parts of the country,’ Rasmiya, 43, from Al-Baath, told Haaretz. ‘Within a few hours, we realized that the Israeli army had arrived. We thought that it would be for a week or two. It’s almost a month later, and there is no withdrawal. On the contrary, anyone who leaves home and approaches the city entrance can clearly see the Israeli tanks.’

 

Rasmiya added that the Israeli presence instills fear and instability among the residents. ‘We don’t know what’s really happening, even though we have the right to know what the army intends to do,’ she said, criticizing the new Syrian leadership.

 

‘Why have none of the new leaders said anything about the Israeli invasion? True, there are few people here, but they must take a stand and act against this invasion.’

 

Fuad, 52, from Al-Baath, also spoke about the concern from the continued Israeli presence. ‘People here saw what happened in Gaza and fear that it will happen to our villages and land,’ he said. ‘As far as we are concerned, the Israeli army is the enemy. Imagine an enemy hundreds of meters from your home. What are people supposed to do and how will they respond? They only leave home for urgent matters. The fear is paralyzing us.’ He recounted how, two weeks ago, the IDF demanded officials to leave the city council building and they did so without resistance.

 

Al-Baath Mayor Yahya Rahal told Al Jazeera, ‘Our joy turned into fear and shock when the occupation army entered the border villages.’ He said that the army summoned him for questioning.

 

‘They asked if there was anyone from Hezbollah or Israel in the area. I told them that we had no one from those organizations since the start of the events, and then they asked if there were rifles and heavy weapons. I said that we had nothing, and they let me go home.’

 

Political groups in the capital, Damascus and southern Syria worriedly assess that Israel will try to exploit the situation to take over new parts of their country. ‘Regrettably, Israel is taking full advantage of the situation, under the well-known claim of ‘security needs’, and so long as there is no strong central government in Syria, its forces will stay,’ said a lawyer and expert on international law, who, until recently, was a member of the country’s opposition.

 

‘But any withdrawal will be subject to negotiations and that will return Israel not to the 1967 lines, but to the area into which it advanced now even deeper into Syria – and it will define even that as a withdrawal.’

 

Despite the concern about Israel’s intentions, at this point it’s secondary to the residents’ worries about the new government and its consequences. Siham, 38, from the Druze village of Khadar, says that there are two reason for the concern: one is that the army’s presence in the area will become permanent, ‘As happened in villages in the occupied Golan Heights’; and the second, ‘We’ll be alone against the army. No one will defend us from the state’s side, and there’s no one to stop the Israeli invasion.’

 

She says that local residents mainly earn their living from agriculture, and the IDF’s presence on the villages’ outskirts raise concerns about losing their livelihoods.

 

Siham describes a protest in the village of Suwayda in December. ‘There was a report in the morning that Israeli tanks had entered the village’s farmland and the residents decided of their own accord to respond,’ she said.

 

‘They organized a protest to prevent the Israeli forces from progressing to the village and there was live fire at the protesters.’

 

The IDF said at the time that the protesters had approached the soldiers, who called on them to move back and responded with fire. The army insisted that they ‘are not intervening in internal Syrian affairs.’

 

Siham says that the incident was the first confrontation between civilians and the army. ‘Village elders asked the young men to stay calm and not to take action alone and avoid confrontations with the soldiers so it would not escalate and hurt more people.’

 

Syrian Golan residents told Haaretz that they think the Israeli invasion into southern Syria should be stopped. ‘The army doesn’t need to advance further, because it has already entered our country and no one knows where this situation will lead to,’ says a local resident. ‘We’re staying on our land and we’ll never accept the Israeli occupation.’

 

The IDF said that its forces were operating ‘in the buffer zone and controlling points in order to act against threats to Israel in the region and to ensure a rapid and effective response ability against a possible infiltration by gunmen in the buffer zone and other scenarios. The IDF is working to ensure the security of Israel’s people, particularly in the northern regions.’

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