A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, April 30, 2017
Iran considering deploying ground forces to counter US intervention in Syria: reports
Iran has grown increasingly concerned that southern Syria could see a cross-border American incursion from Jordan
US
forces, accompanied by Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG)
fighters, drive their armoured vehicles near the northern Syrian village
of Darbasiyah (AFP)
Alex MacDonald-Saturday 29 April 2017
Iran’s foreign ministry condemned Israel’s incursions into Syria on
Saturday as reports suggested Iran was mulling deploying ground forces
to counter a potential US-led intervention in the country.
Israeli jets struck an area near the International airport in Damascus
on Thursday, reportedly an arms depot operated by the Lebanese Hezbollah
militia.
"There was no doubt that the inroads were aimed at weakening Syria's
legitimate government and in line with reinforcing Takfiri terrorists
who have moved closer to the annihilation and defeat in the
battlegrounds day by day," Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Bahram
Qassemi said, according to the Fars news agency.
He said the raids were a violation of Syria’s sovereignty.
"Thus, the raids flouted international laws and regulations,” he said.
The comments follow reports by
the Tabnak news agency, which is affiliated to a former commander of
the powerful Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), indicating that
Iran has growing concerns about increasing US military activities on
Jordan’s northern border.
The article said that Israel’s strikes on Syria could be the beginning
of a major offensive against the country by a coalition including
Israel, the US and Arab states.
“There are increased activities in southern Syria that indicate
preparations for an attack through Jordan and Israel and [with the help
of] armed groups,” it read.
Another article in the same news agency said that Russian and Iranian
military officials had informed Syrian President Bashar al-Assad that
they stood ready to send ground forces to intervene in the country in
case of such a situation.
Journalist and Syrian opposition Asaad Hanna tweeted earlier
this month that US forces had been positioned and were standing by on
the southern Syrian border with Jordan special forces. Another report in
the Al-Hayat outlet also indicated a joint force was preparing to enter southern Syria from Jordan, albeit ostensibly with the aim of combating the Islamic State.
In an interview with the Washington Post, King Abdullah of Jordan said
that he was concerned by the presence of IRGC forces across the border
in southern Syria.
“We were very explicit with the Russians, as were the Israelis, that
nonstate actors from outside coming towards our border are not going to
be tolerated,” he told the interviewer.
“I think we came to an understanding with the Russians.”
Autonomy in south Syria?
Iran rallied to the defence of its ally in Syria following the crackdown on anti-government demonstrators in 2011.
The IRGC has lost more than a thousand fighters in Syria, fighting
against opposition forces backed by the US, Qatar, Turkey and Saudi
Arabia.
According to reports from
locals in Damascus, Iran’s influence in the pro-government areas has
extended to the point that they effectively dominate both the political
and military scene in the country, alongside Assad's other staunch ally,
Russia.
“This is my homeland. But I am a second[-class] citizen here,” said a businessman talking to the Guardian newspaer.
“Syrians are second now. Iranians are first. And the Russians are gods.”
According to Abdel Bari Atwan, writing in the newspaper Rai
al-Youm, Damascus was angered by a plan put forward by a group of 22
Syrian opposition activists in Istanbul which called for the
establishment of an autonomous region in southern Syria. The government
sees the so-called Houran Pact, which would see the Syrian governorates
of Deraa, Suweida and Quneitra come under local decentralised control,
as the first step in the federalisation of Syria, a principle which even
Assad's ally Russia has expressed an openness to.
Primarily, though, the Assad government sees Jordan behind the scheme,
along with the US, as a means of securing the frontiers for both the
Kingdom and Israel.
Reports have also indicated that US troops have begun amassing on Syria's northern border.
On Friday, a commander of the pro-Kurdish People’s Protection Units
(YPG) said that US forces would begin monitoring the situation on
Syria's northern border with Turkey following cross border fire between
the YPG and Turkish forces.
EXCLUSIVE: US troops deployed at #Rojava-#Turkey border to prevent further clashes between both sides. #TwitterKurds #Syria pic.twitter.com/46s0ZBiATH— Kurdistan24 English (@K24English) 29 April 2017
EXCLUSIVE: US troops deployed at #Rojava-#Turkey border to prevent further clashes between both sides. #TwitterKurds #Syria
Pentagon spokesman Captain Jeff Davis also said on Friday that US troops were deployed along the border.
“We continue to urge all the parties involved to focus on the common
enemy which is ISIS,” he told reporters, referring to the Islamic State
group.
The surge in US troops along the northern and southern borders of Syria
has worried Damascus and Tehran primarily because of a recent dramatic
turn around in the Trump administration's policy on the country, which
saw airstrikes launched against Shayrat airbase following a chemical
weapon attack against rebels in Idlib.
"During the US presidential campaign, Iranian leaders – including
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei – uncharacteristically made complimentary
remarks about then-candidate Donald Trump," wrote Ahmad Majidyar,
director of the IranObserved Project at the Middle East Institute.
"Iranian military leaders, in particular, hoped that Trump’s positive
view of Russian President Vladimir Putin and opposition to military
intervention abroad would benefit Iran’s agenda in Syria and the broader
Middle East.
"But that cautious optimism has changed into growing concern in Tehran
since Trump took office in January and adopted an aggressive policy
toward Iran, by imposing new sanctions against Iran’s ballistic missile
program, reestablishing close ties with Washington’s traditional Sunni
allies in the Middle East, and broadening the scope of US military
engagement in Syria and Iraq."