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DEMOCRACY
Civil war fear in Syria threatens region
by Staff Writers
Cairo (UPI) Jun 8, 2011

As the threat of civil war in Syria grows amid a worsening insurrection against the Damascus regime, there are ominous signs the bloodletting could spread to Iraq, Lebanon and Israel.

Iran, Syria's key ally, cannot afford to have the regime of President Bashar Assad fall and is seeking to exploit the political upheaval gripping the Arab world to take the heat off Damascus.

Assad's regime, backed by Syria's military and the vast, all-pervasive intelligence apparatus, has contained nationwide protests demanding its downfall through brutal repression and kept them out the capital and Aleppo, Syria's second city.

But despite the regime's overwhelming firepower it hasn't been able to break the opposition, and as fatalities mount -- at least 1,300, according to human rights groups -- the wider the protests become.

On the other side, the uprising hasn't been able to bring down the Baathist regime dominated by the Muslim Alawite minority.

But recent reports indicate that mutinous troops are turning on the regime and inflicting serious casualties for the first time since the insurrection began March 15.

The regime claimed 120 troops and security men were killed Tuesday by "armed gangs" in the northwestern, predominantly Sunni, town of Jisr al-Shughour.

This is likely to trigger harsher repression by the regime as its clan-based core dwindles. There are fears that civil war may erupt if the army splinters.

There is also a growing sense in the region that the regime's days are numbered. Turkey, one of Syria closest allies, has warned Assad that time is running out and urged him to step down.

The region's political upheaval has already toppled President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali of Tunisia.

President Ali Abdullah Saleh of Yemen was flown to Saudi Arabia for treatment after he was seriously wounded Friday in what appears to have been an assassination attempt. He may not return.

In Libya, Moammar Gadhafi is fighting for his life in a civil war triggered by an uprising against him, and is increasingly expected to be fall.

Now the Assad dynasty, which has ruled Syria for four decades with a rod of iron, is facing its gravest threat.

"This chill moment," as the regime threatens retribution for the reported bloodbath at Jisr al-Shughour, "is reminiscent of the day in July 1995 Serbian forces brushed aside U.N. peacekeepers and seized the besieged Bosnian town of Srebrenica," commentator Simon Tisdall observed in British's Guardian daily.

"Europe held its breath, fearing the worst. What transpired was even more awful than most could have imagined.

"Assad should know by now that violence added to violence is not the answer. Amazingly, he does not. Or perhaps he is no longer in control … The risk of civil war now looms large over Syria," Tisdall wrote.

There is a danger, too, that Damascus will seek revenge against Western opponents in Lebanon, through its proxy Hezbollah, and by unleashing Palestinians against Israel, as it has done twice in recent weeks.

It could stir up trouble too in neighboring Iraq, as it has in the past. Iraq, always volatile, is even more vulnerable than usual because of the U.S. military withdrawal scheduled to be completed by December.

However, it's Iran, seeking to take advantage of the Arab Spring to torment and destabilize its Arab rivals such as Saudi Arabia, that may be the greater threat.

Tehran has accused Riyadh of being behind the attack on Saleh in his capital Sanaa that left him and his chief aides seriously wounded.

Whether that's true -- and Riyadh wants Saleh to step down before Yemen, on its doorstep, erupts in civil war as well -- it will resonate in the Arab world and deepen fears that times are going to get tougher.

The Iranians could stir up trouble with Yemen's rebellious al-Houthi tribesmen in the north, as Saudi Arabia says they've done in the past.

Tehran's announcement it has deployed two submarines in the Red Sea on Yemen's west coast has stirred alarm.

"Iran's goal is to project its military and political influence across a weak, restless Arab world, and to protect its repressive brother-in-arms, Syria, from Western interference, military or otherwise," Tisdall commented.




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Kremlin gathering leaves Russian greens unsatisfied
Moscow (AFP) June 8, 2011 - Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Wednesday met environmental NGOs to praise their "tough" stance, but many activists were not invited and said the gathering was unrepresentative.

"Many people -- especially those in authority -- do not like you because you adopt a very tough and demanding position," Medvedev, on a lawn chair, told NGO members in a Kremlin garden meeting.

The Kremlin had invited 25 representatives of environmental NGOs to meet the Russian leader, who told his guests "a lot depends" on them.

A list of activists who met the president was posted on the Kremlin's website.

It included representatives of state-funded groups such as Mestnye, an offshoot of pro-Kremlin youth movement Nashim, but lacked the names of several top environmental activists.

"The Kremlin called me last week and invited me to the meeting, but in the end I did not receive the invitation," said Andrei Rudomakha of Environmental Watch on North Caucasus.

"I told them I wanted to address environmental impact of the Sochi Olympics and destruction of the Utrish nature reserve," reportedly a location for an unofficial presidential residence, he said.

Yevgenia Chirikova, the leader of a group opposing a controversial road through the Khimki forest in the Moscow region, was not invited, nor was Dmitry Lisitsyn of Sakhalin Environment Watch who recently received the Goldman Environmental Prize for his work to protect the fragile ecosystem of the Pacific island of Sakhalin.

"If I was compiling the list of invited activists, I would compile a very different list," said Sergei Tsyplenkov, who heads Greenpeace's Russian office.

"I am cautiously hopeful that this meeting was not just carried out just pro-forma ... but the question remains whether there is real concern about the environment or if this is just publicity," he told AFP after attending the meeting.





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Quiet UN chief found his voice with Arab Spring
United Nations (AFP) June 6, 2011
Ban Ki-moon, the eighth secretary general of the United Nations, is a workaholic who cast aside quiet diplomacy to take a tough line with the Arab world dictators fending off protests. Ban, who had his own clash with riot squads as a student in his native South Korea, has crossed swords in recent months with Moamer Kadhafi of Libya, Bashar al-Assad of Syria and Ali Abdullah Saleh of Yemen. ... read more


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