Syria: Christians Facing Existential Terrorist Threat

The al-Qaeda-linked terrorist organization Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), the “Organization for the Liberation of the Levant” — a coalition of Syrian and international Islamist groups — took control of Syria, after a 10-day offensive, on December 8, 2024.

Since then, hostility against Christians and other minorities in Syria has soared. Christians are increasingly the victims of intimidation, vandalism, violence and discrimination. They are hostages at the hands of Islamists.

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Secret Assad files show Stasi of Syria put children on trial

Analysis of intelligence documents reveals that family members spied on each other, teachers betrayed pupils — and ‘traitors’ were tortured and killed

Secret intelligence documents uncovered by The Sunday Times in Syria have revealed the terrifying extent of Bashar al-Assad’s Stasi-like surveillance state, where family members spied on each other and the slightest suspicion could result in ordinary people — including children — being swept into a network of prisons notorious for torture and executions, with victims buried in mass graves.

Thousands of files, written in neat biro or typed in formal Arabic, detail the way the regime has infiltrated protest and rebel groups since the revolution began in 2011. They reveal details about the vast network of informants that reported to the regime, and how the intelligence services forced the people they arrested to give up names of alleged collaborators — who would in turn be detained.

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Syria will never be unified – Western busybodies should be wary

The foreign busybodies in the State Department, Foreign Office and the French foreign ministry, who are already now pressing for the reconstruction of a unitary Syrian state, should reflect on the country’s history. Syria was never meant to function as a unitary state. Nor under Sunni Arab majority rule, as it is likely to now.

The distinct national identities of its Alawite, Arab Christian-Orthodox, Druze, Kurdish, Armenian, Ismaili and Arab Shia populations were all recognised under Ottoman rule. And when France obtained the territory in 1919, it strove to accommodate plural identities by creating two separate states: an Alawite one in north-west Syria and a Druze one in the south-east.

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Assad loyalists attack new Syrian regime in first major retaliation, killing 14 police officers

Protester also shot dead after video showing desecration of ousted leader’s minority group shrine goes viral

Fourteen members of the Syrian police have been killed in an “ambush” by forces loyal to the ousted regime of Bashar al-Assad.

The officers died in the Tartus countryside in the west of the country, the transitional administration said early on Thursday, in the first major retaliation against the new rulers.

Mohammed Abdel Rahman, Syria’s new interior minister, said on Telegram that 10 police officers were also wounded by what he called “remnants” of the Assad government in Tartus, vowing to crack down on “anyone who dares to undermine Syria’s security or endanger the lives of its citizens”.

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For Syria’s Christians, Christmas is a time to grapple with hope and fear

DAMASCUS — This Christmas morning in Syria’s capital, Christians dressed in their finest clothes, attended church and participated in the annual parade through the ancient part of the city. Yet beneath the holiday cheer lay a heavy sense of anxiety.

Over the past 13 years, many have fled the country, leaving those who remain feeling particularly vulnerable as an Islamist group assumes power. Before the war began in 2011, Syria was home to more than 1.5 million Christians. Today, Patriarch Ignatius Aphrem II of the Syriac Orthodox Church estimates that number has fallen to around 400,000.

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Burning of Christmas tree triggers Christian protests in Syria

Christians held protests across Syria after Islamists burned a Christmas tree, with demonstrators in Damascus vowing to defend themselves with arms if necessary.

Hundreds of protesters holding up crosses gathered in the Christian quarter of Bab Tuma in the capital, Damascus, after news of the fire in Suqaylabiyah, a Christian-majority town.

“Hold up your cross high,” they chanted. “We are your soldiers, Christ — the cross and the rifle are the two options.”

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A Fragile Christmas: Syrian Christians Approach a Crossroads of Hope and Fear

The church bells still ring in Syria’s ancient Christian enclaves, but their sound carries a bittersweet resonance. Two weeks after the surprise fall of the regime of the Syrian tyrant, Bashar Al-Assad — toppled by an offensive spearheaded by the Islamist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham — Syrian Christians stand at a crossroads of hope and dread.

Promises of equality and protection from the new authorities have been met with cautious optimism. Yet fears of persecution and the erasure of a millennia-old Christian presence linger. For a community that has weathered centuries of upheaval, this moment feels as fragile as the cracked stone of their oldest churches, a nation reborn, but under whose terms?

Christians were protected under the Assad regime. Consequently some regard them as complicit in regime crimes.

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From Syria with hate

About two weeks ago, seemingly out of the blue, an army of Sunni Islamists and fellow travellers spilled out of Syria’s Idlib region. Their offensive met with little resistance – the ‘official’ Syrian Army (whose soldiers are majority Sunni, too) simply disintegrated. The regime of Bashar Al-Assad fell like a house of cards, with a speed nobody (including yours truly) foresaw.

If anything, this shows how poor our understanding of the Middle East is: even people from the region, who are carefully following events, struggle to predict them; let alone the hapless West.

When has a Jihadi takeover ever been a blessing?

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Did the U.S. Government Orchestrate Regime Change In Syria? Thomas Massie Thinks So.

Following the events that led to the Syrian government falling, Republican Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) accused the Biden government of facilitating the regime change in Syria that led to rebels storming the capital of Damascus and overthrowing dictator Bashar Assad’s regime.


It wasn’t Tapioca Joe … No WORDS! Former Kamala Insider Leaks Jill Biden’s PLAN for the Country As Joe Leaves the WH and YIKES

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US scraps $10m bounty for arrest of Syria’s new leader Sharaa

The US has scrapped a $10m (£7.9m) reward for the arrest of Syria’s de facto leader Ahmed al-Sharaa, following meetings between senior diplomats and representatives from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS).

Assistant Secretary of State Barbara Leaf said the discussion with Sharaa was “very productive”, and he came across as “pragmatic”.

The US delegation arrived in the capital, Damascus, after HTS overthrew the Bashar al-Assad regime less than a fortnight ago. Washington still designates it as a terrorist group.

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‘Danger of ISIS resurgence has doubled’ – Syria’s Kurds warn of group’s comeback

As the new Syria struggles to take shape, old threats are re-emerging.

The chaos since the overthrow of Bashar al-Assad is “paving the way” for the so-called Islamic State (IS) to make a comeback, according to a leading Kurdish commander who helped defeat the jihadist group in Syria in 2019. He says the comeback has already begun.

“Activity by Daesh [IS] has increased significantly, and the danger of a resurgence had doubled’, according to General Mazloum Abdi, commander of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a mainly Kurdish militia alliance backed by the US. “They now have more capabilities and more opportunities.”

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Revenge attacks in post-Assad Syria fuel fear and mistrust

AL-HAKEEM, Syria — The woman was clutching her infant, still in the dressing gown and pajamas she had been wearing a day earlier when fighters overran this village in Syria’s Latakia province, the heartland of Bashar al-Assad’s Alawite minority sect.

Her scorched home still radiated heat from the fires they had set. She hadn’t seen her husband since he fled into the citrus groves.

“We are dying from fear,” she said, standing outside the house, speaking on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. “It’s as though our hearts are in our hands.”

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US ‘prepared Syrian rebel group to help topple Bashar al-Assad’

Fighters funded and trained by the US and UK tell The Telegraph they had advance warning the regime would be overthrown

The United States prepared a rebel force to join the offensive that overthrew the regime of Bashar al-Assad, fighters have claimed.

British and American-trained fighters in the Revolutionary Commando Army (RCA), a group aligned against Islamic State, were told “this is your moment” in a briefing by US Special Forces before Assad was ousted.

In the first indication that Washington had prior knowledge of the offensive, the RCA revealed it had been told to scale-up its forces and “be ready” for an attack that could lead to the end of the Assad regime.

What could possibly go wrong?

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The implosion of Assad’s army, told by those who dropped their weapons and ran

Radio silence from their generals, mysterious voices giving instructions on their walkie-talkies, terrifying rumours spreading through the ranks — and then headlong flight.

Soldiers and officers who served Bashar al-Assad’s regime have provided the first detailed glimpse into how Syria’s armed forces, despite years of training and reorganisation by Russia, collapsed in just 12 days.

Angry and fearful for their future, and accusing their superiors of betraying them, they told of a complete breakdown in the chain of command, a collapse in morale and then chaos as rebel forces advanced at lightning pace towards Damascus.

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U.S. officials worry about ISIS jailbreak in Syria: ‘Ticking time bomb’

Lightly armed Kurdish forces are guarding more than 9,000 Islamic State terrorists in Syria.

American officials are scrambling to head off a new nightmare scenario in Syria: a major terrorist jailbreak.

Thousands of Islamic State group fighters and their families remain in makeshift prisons, watched over by U.S.-backed Kurdish forces with limited weapons. The prisons were supposed to be temporary, but their home countries don’t want the fighters back.

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