Time will tell the consequences of pardoning, but this decision will prove to be hugely unfavourable. These hardened militants will simply get to their usual business and Assad will have to fight the same enemies again...Remember, once a terrorist, always a terrorist!
Syria: By Evacuating and Pardoning Terrorists, Is Bashar Al-Assad “Being Too Nice”?
Global Research, December 17, 2016
The Duran 16 December 2016
Contrary to Western fake news, Assad’s approach towards
terrorists is deeply humane, some would say overly humane. Here is what
we know and what must be answered.
Images of green bus convoys leaving
Aleppo have provoked mixed reactions across the world. The coaches are
filled with the surrendered terrorists who had occupied parts of East
Aleppo prior to its liberation by the Syrian Arab Army.
Far from the fake massacres reported in the Western mainstream media,
President Assad and his Russian partners are handling the situation in
an utterly humane fashion, perhaps too humane. Assad’s rationale is that
in order for Syria to once again be a peaceful and united country, as
it was prior to 2011 when Western provocations triggered the current
crisis, there needn’t be any Nuremberg style trials for the terrorists
who continue to plague the country.
Assad has offered amnesty to any Syrians participating in terrorist
activities in return for their pledge to lay down arms and permanently
return to civilian life or join the fight against terrorism. He is also
happy for the larger bulk of foreign fighters to peacefully leave the
country, with many suggesting that Turkey, knowing that her plans for regime change in Damascus have failed, will cooperate in this.
It is a safe assumption that many of the terrorists formerly
operating in Aleppo will flee to Turkey, where they will no longer be
Syria’s problem. Others may flee into ISIS controlled regions of
northern Iraq and others yet may seek safe passage further abroad, to
the terrorist paradise that is the failed state of Libya. But the danger
for Syrians are the terrorists who stay in Syria.
The buses from Aleppo are heading for Idlib. There is a high
probability that many terrorists from Aleppo will refuse to disarm and
simply join the battle that other terrorist groups are currently waging
in Idlib. This strikes one as a consequence of short-term thinking on
the part of the Syrian government.
In a recent interview, Assad has stated that because of the finite
resources of the Syrian Arab Army, one must understand occupied regions
of the country as a set of descending priorities.
According to the Syrian President, Aleppo was the priority for
obvious reasons. Its size, its location within Syria, its historical
importance and its importance as a large urban centre for the region,
all meant that Aleppo’s freedom was essential to secure first and
foremost.
Assad’s second priority are regions on the outskirts of Damascus
which continue to be occupied by terrorists. It is only after this that
regions around Idlib, Palmyra and ultimately Raqqa will be dealt with.
All of this is totally logical, except for the idea that terrorist
fighters should live to fight another day. The move is clearly one born
of humanitarian concerns, but the question which necessarily follows is,
why should anyone show mercy to terrorists who showed no mercy to their
victims, and, furthermore, why should they simply be transferred to
another region of Syria to do in Idlib or beyond, what they did to
Aleppo?
These are questions which Syria and her allies will ultimately have
to address, either in a diplomatic forum or perhaps directly on the
battle field as part of Assad’s long term solution to gradually
eliminate all terrorism from Syria. With Obama on his last legs and a
seemingly cooperate Donald Trump on his way to the White House, the idea
of meeting Obama’s America half-way in terms of sheltering
Al-Nura/Al-Qaeda is becoming a non-issue.
The matter as British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson of all people
said, is now in the hands of Syria, Russia and their allies. Terrorism
cannot be tolerated in any form. This must be the long term and lasting
message.
The original source of this article is The Duran
Copyright © Adam Garrie, The Duran, 2016
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