
www.freelebanon.org
Saddam of Iraq vs Asad
of Syria
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Saddam Housain, Ex-dictator of Iraq
Officer
Saddam Hussein seized power in 1979 leading the Baath Arab Party of Iraq.
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Asad
Family, Dictators of Syria
Officer
Hafez Assad seized power in 1970 leading the Baath Arab Party of Syria.
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Baath
Totalitarian Regime in Iraq:
The
Baath party gradually took over political and economical life in Iraq and
became the only legal party in the country. Iraq is a republic by
constitution, but the Socialist totalitarian regime was governing the nation.
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Baath
Totalitarian Regime in Syria:
The
Baath party gradually took over political and economical life in Syria
and became the only legal party in the country. Syria is a republic by
constitution, but the Socialist totalitarian regime is governing the nation
|
Baath
Rule of Iraq:
The
opposition figures were persecuted, arrested, executed and even assassinated
abroad. Iraq
became a police-state ruled by fear and brutality.
The dictator of Iraq
was running fake elections were he was re-elected as president with
99.99% of the votes for consecutive terms until he was overthrown in April
2003.
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Baath
Rule of Syria:
The
opposition figures were persecuted, arrested, executed and even assassinated
abroad. Syria
became a police-state ruled by fear and brutality.
The dictator of Syria
was running fake elections were he was re-elected as president with
99.99% of the votes for consecutive terms until he died in 2000. His son Bashar
inherited his fathers position and policy in 2000 and started his own
99%-vote elections.
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Iraqi
Crimes against people of Iraq:
In
addition to regular persecution, mass military operations were carried
against Iraqis who oppose regime. In 1987 the baath regime killed thousands
of Kurds in Northern Iraq using chemical
weapons. In 1992 the regime massacred thousands of opposition Shaiis in
Southern Iraq and thousands of Kurds in Northern Iraq
destroying whole cities and villages.
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Syrian
Crimes against people of Syria:
In
addition to regular persecution, mass military operations were carried
against Syrians who oppose the regime. In 1980 the baath regime killed
thousands of Syrians in Tadmor prisons and in the city of Hama.
In 1982, the regime massacred more than thirty thousands of Syrians by
completely destroying the city of Hama in
full aerial and land attacks.
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Occupying
its small neighboring country of Kuwait:
Iraq
is, roughly, 20 times larger than Kuwait
600 Kuwaitis believed
to be killed in Iraqi prisons
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On
August 2, 1990, the Iraqi regime occupied its small neighboring country of Kuwait and
appointed a puppet pro-Iraqi government there.
Hundreds of Kuwaitis civilians were killed or captured and spent their lives
in Iraqi prisons until they died. The US
and the International community lead a military coalition that liberated Kuwait on
February 25, 1991.
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Occupying
its small neighboring country of Lebanon:
Syria
is, roughly, 20 times larger than Lebanon
18,000
Lebanese believed to be killed in Syrian prisons
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On
October 13, 1990, the Syrian regime completely occupied its small neighboring
country of Lebanon
and appointed a puppet pro-Syrian government there.
Thousands of Lebanese civilians were killed or captured and spent
their lives in Syrian prisons until they died. The US
and the International community were busy with the Iraqi situation, which
left Syria
occupying Lebanon
until this moment.
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Iraqi
Links to Terrorist Groups:
Uncertain
relations to some terrorist groups, encouraged terrorist activities against
the United States
and West-European countries since 1990.
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Syrian
Links to Terrorist Groups:
Syria founded and sponsored
several terrorist groups in self-occupied Lebanon
and in Syria.
Syrian sponsored groups carried several suicide
attacks against Americans, West-Europeans
and Lebanese
since 1980s killing hundreds. The Syrian regime has founded and
sponsored terrorists that mastered hostage-taking and hijacking against
American and West-European nationals and civil airplanes. Eleven terrorist
groups listed in the US State Department use the Syrian capital as a
headquarter.
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Iraq
Crimes against humanity:
· Using WMD against Iraqi
people
· Massacring civilian Iraqis
and civilian Kuwaitis in Iraq
and occupied Kuwait
· Detaining, torturing and
killing thousands of prisoners in Iraq
and Kuwait
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Syria
Crimes against humanity:
· Using WMD against Syrian and
Lebanese prisoners
· Massacring civilian Syrians
and civilian Lebanese in Syria
and occupied Lebanon
· Detaining, torturing and
killing thousands of prisoners in Syria
and Lebanon
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Iraqi Relations with the Syrian Baath Party:
Using
the same fascist means in an extreme competition to rule over the Arab
countries while claming the highest level of hater to the US and the
West.
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Syrian
Relations with the Iraqi Baath Party:
Using
the same fascist means in an extreme competition to rule over the Arab
countries while claming the highest level of hater to the US and the
West.
Starting mid 90s, the Syrian regime started smuggling Iraqi oil in
violation of the United Nations' resolutions. This enabled Saddam
Huseins regime to survive longer and helped selling its oil for weapons
that were used later against the US and the allied troops. During
the war of liberating Iraq,
the Syrian totalitarian regime feared being the next tyranny to fall and
supported Saddams troops by sending arms and paying mercenaries to fight
against the US
and the allied troops. The Syrian Foreign Minister announced that it is
Syrian national interest for the Allied troops to be defeated
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Iraq
Misleading media
Mohammed
Saeed al-Sahhaf, the information minister of Saddams regime gave a
descriptive example of the ways in which totalitarian regimes deceive the
international community. His rhetoric speeches during the war claming false
victory and claiming the support of Iraqis for Suddam were ridiculed by the
actual events. Later, the world saw the real face of Saddams Regime
deceiving but nicely- phrased lies.
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Syria
Misleading media
The
Syrian totalitarian regime keeps deceiving the world with rhetoric speeches
about their kindness and proclaimed popularity. Nowadays, some governments in
the free world still listen to the Sahhafs of Asads regime, such as
Foreign Minister Farouk Sharaa and the director of the foreign media
department Buthina Shabaan. The Syrians are awaiting the fall of their dictatorship
to show the world how much it was deceived by some nicely-phrased lies.
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Statues
of Saddam:
After
the collapse of Saddams regime, the Iraqi people celebrated the
dictators overthrown by destroying his numerous statues that were placed
in every corner, and were guarded by the secrete service security.
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Statues
of Asad:
Awaiting
the collapse of Asads regime, the Syrians dare not but pay respect to
his numerous statues that are placed in every corner, and guarded by the
secrete service security. The statues of the Syrian dictator in Syria outnumbers those of Saddams in Iraq.
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Syrian Occupation of Lebanon
Preview
Syria and Lebanon had
normal and pleasant relations, once upon a time. The two nations shared many
cultural and social aspects. But, after the Second World War, they stepped into
two different directions.
While Lebanon moved toward
democracy and free-market trade, adapting the West European model, Syria gradually allied itself with the Soviet Union and adapted its totalitarian political
system and its communist economical system. By the end of the sixties, the
cliff between the two countries was growing wider; Lebanon made its way toward
democracy and prosperity claming for itself titles such as the only
democracy among Arab countries and Switzerland of the Middle
East, while Syria was subject to consecutive coups with a torn-economy and
week political system that hardly survived a short-lived union with the Arab
Republic of Egypt.

Dictatorship in Syria
In
November of 1970, Hafez Assad of Syria
led a coup and proclaimed the Arabian Baath Party of Syria as the ruling party of the
nation, banning all other parties. Assad took advantage of the state of war
between Israel and the Arab
countries to achieve his dream of annexing the small, well
prospered-and-advanced, country of Lebanon
at the same time enforcing a socialist dictatorship in Syria based on
persecuting his opponents and brutally massacring tens of thousands of Syrians
to maintain his power.

The Syrian
Military's Occupation of Lebanon
The
Syrian Invasion Begins
The Syrian regime gained the opportunity of the disorder in Lebanon and started interfering by forming
Saheka guerillas, a Syrian-Palestinian guerrilla that operates in Lebanon. In
1970, Jordan expelled the
Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) from its territories sending many
civilian refugees and armed guerillas into Lebanon. The dictator of Syria, Hafez Asad, clearly declared his
intentions of annexing Lebanon
on August 8, 1973 by announcing that Lebanon
and Syria
are one country and one people but have two governments. While arms and
funding were flowing to Lebanon
and many political parties were turning into armed forces, the Syrian regimes
worked on weakening the Lebanese government and hence the Lebanese army by
supporting various militias to grow disorder and spark sectarian conflicts. In
1973, Saheka, a Syria-Palestinian militia attacked the village
of Der Ashash in North
Lebanon, killing three priests and displacing its residents.
Several similar attacks followed that incident creating a mounting temper in Lebanon. On
April 13, 1975, Palestinian gunmen killed four Christian Lebanese in front of a
church east of Beirut,
while Christian militiamen ambushed a busload of Palestinians later of the same
day. A brutal fight broke up the war in Lebanon then. November 2, 1975, an
entire Battalion of Syrian Special Forces entered Lebanon
through Bekaa Valley. In January of the following
year, Syrian Vice President announced to Kuwaiti newspaper Lebanon is a part of Syria,
and Lebanon will be returned
to Syriathis
should be clear to everyone. One week later, a battalion from the
Palestine Liberation army, under Syrian command, entered the Bekaa and started
confrontations with the Lebanese army, while more Syrian and Palestinian forces
entered Northern Lebanon attacking Lebanese
police and security forces. By end of January 1976, the Syrian-Palestinian
forces had committed a great massacre in Damour village killing hundreds of its
residents and displacing the rest and leaving nothing but rubble. In May of
1976, the Syrian army invaded the Lebanese northern region of Akkar, and
advanced into the Bekaa valley east of Lebanon. A month later, the Syrian
dictator, Hafez Assad, delivered his infamous speech in the Syrian capital
stating that he sent the Syrian army to Lebanon without permission from any
authorities. By the end of 1976, the Syrian troops in Lebanon were
estimated to be around 25,000 thousand (ie: one soldier for every 100 Lebanese
citizen).
The
Syrian Regime Enforces its Positions in Lebanon
The League of Arab Countries sent peacekeeping troops to Lebanon. In the
following year, the Syrian troops harassed the Arab forces forcing them to
leave Lebanon
in order for them to operate loose on the Lebanese territories. By 1977, The
Syrian forces in Lebanon
exceeded 30,000 troops. Palestinian and other pro-Syrian militias were bringing
to an end Syrian control by occupying their own positions in Lebanon. The
Syrians forces turned over them and disintegrated them, then turned to the
Christian and rightist forces and destroyed the areas they control while worked
on paralyzing the Lebanese army. The Syrian troops in Lebanon
launched a war to silence the Lebanese voices that were criticizing its martial
interference. Syrian forces attacked Lebanese magazines and newspapers,
assassinated Lebanese national and religious figures such as the Druze leader
Kamal Jumblat. The Syrian forces kept occupying cities in northern Lebanon, central Lebanon
and in Beirut
with several attempts to occupy the Lebanese army headquarters.
The Palestinian militiamen continued launching attacks against Northern Israel
from the areas they controlled in South Lebanon.
The Israeli response was more severe and often impacted Lebanese civilians. The
attacks developed into an Israeli invasion of Southern
Lebanon in March 1978. The United Nations Interim Forces were
deployed in South Lebanon to reduce the
tension, and the Israeli forces pulled back.
The Syrian army continued to gradually occupy more regions in Lebanon including parts of the capital Beirut. They continued
their policy in disintegrating and swallowing Lebanon; Several Christian Priests
and Muslim clerks were assassinated, not to mention journalists and western
diplomats and ambassadors in the period between 1978 and 1982. The Palestinians
in South Lebanon were encouraged by the Syrians to create the disruption in Lebanon which
was necessary for the Syrians to enact their plans.
(1982-1988)
Syrian Forces Destroying Lebanon
Capturing More of its Land
In June 1982, the Israeli forces invaded Lebanon
reaching into Beirut.
A multinational force made up of US and West European troops were deployed in Beirut after an
international mediation took place. The agreement called for PLO, Syrian and
Israeli forces to pull of Beirut.
Thousands of PLO militiamen were deported from Lebanon
while the Syrian and Israeli army were withdrawing from Beirut.
In September 1982, the Lebanese president-elect Bashir Gemayel was assassinated
which disrupted the agreement. In the following year, Syrian-sponsored groups
launched suicide-bombing attacks against the peacekeeping US and French
military barracks killing 300 of them. The multinational troops were forced to
leave Lebanon while the
Syrian troops advanced in Beirut
and launched several attempts to occupy the Lebanese Ministry of Defense and
presidential palace. On September 9, 1983, the Lebanese government notified the
UN and the European governments that the Syrian and the Palestinian forces are
fighting to bring down the legal government of Lebanon.
In 1985 Israel withdrew most
of its forces from Lebanon
keeping a strip along its borders controlled by Israeli troops and proxy
guerillas. On December 27, 1985, the Syrian regime tried to impose an agreement
on the Lebanese parties to maintains its control over Lebanon. The
plan was turned down in bloody fight.
Syria continued its policy
of spreading its homogony on Lebanon
using extreme violence against the Lebanese people. On the other hand, it used
hostagetaking against American and West-European countries while sponsoring
communist and radical groups.
(1988-1990)
The final Confrontations
In 1998, Syrian troops and their allies worked on preventing the election of a
new Lebanese president in order to completely paralyze the Lebanese
authorities. The Lebanese president then, used his constitutional prerogative
and appointed the Lebanese Army Commander as a Prime Minister of interim
government before ending his term. The Syrians opposed the Lebanese Government
and shelled the Lebanese civilian areas with heavy bombs and artillery.
Meanwhile, the Lebanese Primer managed to gain popularity by enforcing the role
of the Lebanese army over the militia, activating the governmental departments
and working for political and economical reforms. The Lebanese Government
launched a war of liberation against the Syrian army demanding the scheduling
of a Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon.
The Syrian occupation troops pressured Lebanese politicians in the areas it
occupied to oppose the Lebanese government; they had even assassinated the
highest Sunni Muslim clerk, mufti of Lebanon because of his rejection of
the Syrian fight against Lebanese.
Syrian
Complete Occupation of Lebanon
In August of 1990 Iraq
invaded its neighboring country of Kuwait,
and attracted the international communitys attention to the occupation of
the small oil-rich-country and the threats to the world-largest oil reserve of Saudi Arabia.
The Syrian regime gained the opportunity and promised not to side with Iraq in return of controlling Lebanon. On
October 13, 1990, the Syrian troops launched aerial and ground attacks and
occupied the Lebanese presidential palace and the ministry of defense defeating
the reminder of the Lebanese army. The Syrian regime appointed their own proxy
government and president in occupied Lebanon and started a large-scale
persecution operation against Lebanese people: arresting, abducting, torturing
and killing whoever opposes its occupation.
The Syrian-appointed government in occupied Lebanon
exiled the Lebanese Primer to France
and 'legitimized' the Syrian occupation of Lebanon. Syria
took drastic measures to enforce its military and political presence in Lebanon. It
occupied more than 90% of Lebanon,
including the capital, the airport, the harbors and all major cities. Syria disarmed
most of Lebanese militia except for those affiliated with it such as Hizballah,
Amal and radical Palestinian militias. The Lebanese army was restrained from
performing any major activities and was directed to internal security
functions. The Syrian puppet regime of Lebanon
amended the Lebanese constitution, and drew several agreements with the Syrian
regime giving Syria
advantages of using the Lebanese natural resources and abusing the free-market
benefits in Lebanon.
The Lebanese community, especially universities, youth, engineers, physicians,
lawyers and teachers started a peaceful revolution to implement the UN Security
Council Resolution 520 that calls for Syria
to completely withdrawal from Lebanon.
In the
year 2000, Israel retreated
from South Lebanon per the UN resolution 425,
and in respect to the Lebanese international borders. Serving Syrian interests,
Hizbollah guerillas refused to disarm and enroll in the civilian social and
political life after the Israeli withdrawal, which deprived it from most of its
Lebanese popularity (Details). It occupied the Southern territories that were
evacuated by the Israelis, while the Syrian regime prevented the Lebanese army
from deploying in these territories.
Post Israeli withdrawal, more national, regional and international voices
pressured the Syrian regime to remove its troops from Lebanon. The
Syrian Baath regime tried to bring a conflict with the United Nation and Israel over Shebaa Farmland in order
to keep tension between Lebanon
and Israel
and divert the calls for Syrian withdrawal (Details).
Syrian
Military, Security and Intelligence Control of Lebanon
Syria stationed its
commanding supervision at the Lebanese Ministry of Defense east of Beirut. Syrian Colonel
Ghazi Kanaan, the Syrian Security and intelligence Chief in Lebanon, became
the direct ruler of the occupied country. The presence of Syrian soldiers and
intelligence members (mukhabarat) in Beirut,
at Syrian checkpoints and several official departments became daily occurrences
for the Lebanese. By the year 2003, approximately 30,000 Syrian troops and
25,000 intelligence members were deployed in Lebanon (that is 1Syrian soldier
for every 50 Lebanese). The Lebanese military personnel were forced to attend
Syrian academies for their officer training in lieu of the US and
West-European academies pre-Syrian occupation. The Syrian occupation forces
depended on terrorizing the Lebanese people by searching out, arresting and
abducting people for no particular reason; and subjecting them to torture and
death. Some were transferred, in contrast with all international laws, to
Syrian prisons such as Mazze, Palmyra and Tadmor
in addition to the Syrian detention facilities in occupied Lebanon; in Tripoli,
Beirut, Shtura
and Anjar. Neither were public charges made against the accused, nor were
trials held against the detainees. Meanwhile, the Syrian mukhabarat continued monitoring
telephone conversations of Lebanese citizens, and recording visits to religious
figures such as the Maronite Christians Patriarch, Nasrallah Sfier.

Syrian Massacres
Against Civilian Lebanese
Syria's brutal
conquering of Lebanon
and the continuous persecution of the people caused more than one hundred
thousand casualties, led to the destruction of entire cities and imposed the
displacement of hundreds of thousands. Some of the documented Syrian crimes
against the Lebanese people are presented on the following page.
Click here
to watch part of the cruelty of the Syrian Regime and terrorist atrocities
this regime is accountable for in Lebanon.
Please be advised, the presented images
may be disturbing to sensitive individuals

Syrian Torture and Use
of WMD Against Lebanese Detainees in Syrian Prisons

Syrian Political
Dominance over the Lebanese Political Life

Syrian
Organized Ethnic Cleansing Against Lebanese

Syrian
Destruction for the Lebanese Economy

Syrian Control
of the Lebanese Media

Syrian
Destruction for the Lebanese Social and Cultural System

Closure
To
conclude, the Lebanese do not hold the Syrian people, rather Syrian regime
responsible and accountable for all the crimes that regime has been committing
against the Lebanese community and the human race in general. The Syrian people, as well as every individual and
institute in the free world, are responsible for refraining from acting to
cease the crime against the Lebanese nation.

Sources:
AlAhram Newspaer, Egypt, Sep. 26, 1975.
Conflict and Violence in Lebanon:
Confrontation in the Middle East, Walid
Khalidi, 1984
From Israel to Damascus, Robert Hatem,
1999.
Lebanon
Country Report on Human Rights for 1998, US Department of State, February 1999.
New York Times, May 9, 1997.
DOLID, Semaine DAction Et De Soutien Des Libanais Detentus Dans Les
Prisons Syriennes, Paris, January 26, 1998, February 1, 1998 and February 20
1998.
Syrian Intervention in Lebanon:
The 1975-76 Civil War, Naomi J. Weinberger, NY, 1986
The Syrian Involvement in Lebanon
Since 1975, Reuven Avi-Ran, 1991