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domingo, 16 de noviembre de 2025

Jewish communities must confront their complicity in Israel's genocide

Antony Loewenstein

13 November 2025 

After more than two years of war, Jewish support for Israeli atrocities in Gaza requires accountability, moral clarity and an urgent reckoning across Israel and the Diaspora

https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/jewish-communities-must-confront-their-complicity-israels-genocide

here's a desperate need for a moral reckoning among the global Jewish population after more than two years of Israeli-inflicted horrors in Gaza.

From the mass starvation of Palestinians to AI- and cloud-enabled killing, Jewish complicity, both in Israel and across the Diaspora, has been a profound moral failure.

I write this as a Jew who has spent decades opposing Israel's suffocating hold on the Jewish Diaspora, and as a man whose family was murdered by the Nazis in the Holocaust.

Since 7 October 2023, we have witnessed a genocide on our watch, as Jews and as citizens.

Now is the time for accountability - including international war crimes trials - not only for those who actively participated in it, but for Jews who wholly embraced the carnage from London to Sydney out of racism, fear, revenge or sheer bloodlust.

Never forget that those who committed the genocide in Rwanda in 1994 weren't only the ones carrying out the physical violence; they also included those who promulgated hate speech on the radio.

With an Israeli Jewish population that overwhelmingly views all Palestinians in Gaza as suspect, if not outright hostile, the need for this moment is clear.

It's hard to describe what the post-7 October 2023 environment has been like in many Jewish communities.

It has ranged from outright hostility towards any publicly expressed criticism of the Netanyahu regime to, perish the thought, any Jew disagreeing with the stated policies of an Israeli government that repeatedly announced its desire to eradicate all Palestinians.

And then there are the ethical contortions around the proper way a modern, humane Jew should feel about Israeli soldiers proudly celebrating killing, destruction and rape in Gaza, the West Bank and beyond.

What, exactly, is the moral quandary in condemning genocidal behaviour and intent?

Still, far too many Jews dismiss or ignore these abominations as outliers - black sheep in the Israeli military or governmental establishment.

It's a convenient myth, but deluded thinking about the real nature of the Zionist state from its inception to today.

Palestinians have always been viewed as a threat to a Jewish majority in Israel. Ethnically removing or killing them has never been far from the minds of many Israelis and their supporters in the West.

Moral collapse

"It's us or them." This has been the essence of Zionist thought from the earliest political Zionist writings in the 1890s to the present day.

More than 120 years after the birth of political Zionism, it's impossible to separate theory from reality.

Zionism has led us to a point in history where Israel can justify a mass killing campaign in Gaza in the name of "self-defence", and much of the western political and media establishment will defend, arm and endorse it.

Jehad Abusalim, from Deir el-Balah in Gaza and now Executive Director of the US-based Institute for Palestine Studies, writes that:

Gaza's rebellion has been a rejection of a draconian and tyrannical vision for what life in the 21st century might look like... Gaza showed that the poorest, most isolated, and besieged people on earth could still live - and die - for a cause. It showed entire generations that subjugation can be refused, even when the cost is unimaginable, beyond what most people can fathom. But Gaza did more than inspire. It exposed the enemy. It revealed corrupt politicians, inept political parties and systems, and the fragility of the so-called international order.

Thankfully, a growing number of American and western Jews have rejected Israel's genocidal campaign, opposing Netanyahu's scorched-earth policy and correctly characterising it as a catalogue of war crimes.

Zionist reality

Despite these positive trends, especially among younger Jews in the Diaspora who refuse to accept Israeli supremacy as integral to Judaism, much of the Jewish establishment has remained steadfast in its backing of Israeli actions.

Jewish scholar Shaul Magid explains that this is because the spirit of assassinated far-right Rabbi Meir Kahane inhabits the thinking of many in the western Zionist establishment and underpins its proud partnership with an extremist Israeli government.

A visceral hatred of Arabs, Islam and Palestinianism is ubiquitous in these circles.

It helps explain why many in this community either said nothing after 7 October or backed Israeli actions with full-throated support.

The election of Zohran Mamdani as mayor of New York has exposed this mindset in all its ugliness.

While it's a democratic right to oppose Mamdani on policy grounds, the mainstream Jewish establishment - including rabbis - focused solely on his criticism of Israeli actions and unapologetic anti-Zionism, accusing him of antisemitism and of posing an existential threat to Jews.

It was an absurd and dangerous accusation, and yet, as Jewish journalist Peter Beinart observed, there's nothing these so-called Jewish leaders won't do to demand complete obedience to Israeli state policy, even when Israel is credibly accused of genocide, the pinnacle of all crimes.

"What else are these Jewish leaders willing to sacrifice for the idolatry of unconditional support for the state of Israel?" Beinart asked.

"Well, complicity in a mass campaign of anti-Muslim bigotry," unleashed by Mamdani's main opponent, Andrew Cuomo, and his far-right media allies.

These are the "Jewish values" that many Jewish leaders espouse, and yet it's a Jewish abomination to cast your lot with genocidaires.

Kahane's legacy

Not to be outdone, a few hours after Mamdani's win, Israel's Minister of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism, Amichai Chikli, a man with a long record of palling around with the global far right, tweeted that "the city that was once a symbol of global freedom has handed over its keys to a Hamas supporter, one whose stance is not far removed from the jihadist fanatics who murdered three thousand of its own people 25 years ago".

As a "solution", Chikli invited New Yorkers to move to Israel.

These are the Jewish values of Kahane: supremacy and hate.

While they're not shared by many Jews who despise how our religion has been hijacked by Zionist idolatry, they still represent a sizeable number of Jewish leaders who claim to speak for us all.

This is why a moral reckoning is needed in the Jewish faith: separating Zionism from Judaism and disassociating from an Israeli government, and most Israeli Jews, whose vision is an ethnically pure Jewish nation.

Gaza has been the trigger, but these issues have been with us for decades.

It can't happen soon enough.

sábado, 15 de noviembre de 2025

Abandoning strategic neutrality, Kazakhstan joins the Abraham Accords

The Kazakh president’s desperate bid for US favor has seen him exalt Trump as a messianic leader and sign onto Tel Aviv’s colonial pacts, risking hard-won regional balance and domestic legitimacy.

Hazal Yalin

NOV 14, 2025

https://thecradle.co/articles/abandoning-strategic-neutrality-kazakhstan-joins-the-abraham-accords

Kazakhstan's President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev recently returned from Washington after a fawning, if politically risky, diplomatic performance. Seated alongside US officials and Central Asian leaders, Tokayev delivered excessive praise of US President Donald Trump, going far beyond statesmanship: 

“You are the great leader, statesman, sent by Heaven to bring common sense and traditions that we all share and value back ... Millions of people in so many countries are so grateful to you. You are a great statesman, sent to restore common sense and tradition to American politics and diplomacy.”

These declarations, directed at US President Donald Trump, were conspicuously underreported in Kazakhstan’s official media. And for good reason. Tokayev's obsequiousness may have won smiles in Washington, but it left many at home and in allied capitals disconcerted.

What truly punctuated the visit, however, was Kazakhstan's decision to formally endorse the Abraham Accords – a largely symbolic gesture for a country that has never had any problems with Israel since diplomatic relations were established in 1992. Kazakhstan meets 15–20 percent of Israel's oil needs. There was a defense cooperation agreement signed between the two countries in 2001, and a joint chamber of industry and commerce was established in 2004. During the visit, Trump also facilitated a telephone call between Tokayev and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. 

The Kazakh Foreign Ministry, seemingly aware of the diplomatic oddity, claimed “This important decision was made solely in the interests of Kazakhstan and is fully consistent with the nature of the republic’s balanced, constructive, and peaceful foreign policy,” and reiterated support for the two-state solution under UN resolutions. 

Yet, the move has less to do with peace and more to do with optics: adding another Muslim-majority country to a US–Israeli public relations campaign as Trump intensifies his push to expand normalization under his second term.

Wagons and wag-the-dog politics

Tokayev’s US visit, which he framed as an economic outreach mission, has been framed as a “new era” in US–Kazakhstan relations. In fact, the process began during his visit in late September, and after a series of meetings, the US committed to selling Kazakhstan $4 billion worth of railway wagons. US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick hailed the “landmark deal” as a victory for American industry, adding that it “advances US manufacturing jobs and accelerates growth, opportunity, and connectivity in America and Central Asia.”

But what does it support in Kazakhstan? 

The country, rich in Soviet-era infrastructure and with deep rail integration with both Russia and China, has little rational economic incentive to import wagons from halfway across the world. Tokayev’s move appears less about transport and more about political transit – signaling willingness to carry US strategic ambitions across Eurasia. 

Indeed, Lutnick declared that these wagons would be deployed along a new Europe–Asia corridor, but with “American technology at its core” – a veiled attempt to carve out a US-aligned alternative to Russia’s east–west energy corridors and China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). 

Selling sovereignty by the carriage

These overtures are not without precedent, as history offers its cautionary parallels. In October 1938, as the first president of the Republic of Turkiye, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, lay on his deathbed, the Soviet ambassador in Ankara warned Moscow that Turkish “government and business circles” were turning rapidly toward fascist Germany. In other words, the interests of the “business circles” determined the direction of the government's decisions. A similar situation is happening in Kazakhstan.

During the rule of President Tokayev’s predecessor, Nursultan Nazarbayev, Kazakhstan's oligarchic “business circles” deepened ties with British monopolies – most aggressively Shell – and opened the door for MI6 influence. The Astana International Financial Centre’s (AIFC) court was explicitly placed outside Kazakhstan’s own legal system, obligated instead to follow the standards of England and Wales. 

The extent of this entanglement became clearer on 1 June, when advanced drones targeted several Russian air bases in an attack whose origins remain murky. While no official link was drawn to Kazakhstan, reports indicated the drones had entered Russian territory via Kazakh routes. If verified, this would mark a dramatic escalation, suggesting that US–NATO operations may already be testing new Eurasian conduits.

Moscow's muted dismay

Despite the apparent provocations, Russia has responded with a notable lack of public ire. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov dismissed Tokayev's Trump praise with wry sarcasm: “What's so strange? It's just that so many of those who get into the White House start talking exactly like that.”

Yet, Moscow's restraint is strategic. Tokayev's visit to Russia on 12–13 November, days after his Washington tour, led to the signing of a joint declaration upgrading Kazakhstan–Russia ties to a “comprehensive strategic partnership and alliance.”

The inclusion of the term “alliance” is rare in Russian diplomatic language and reflects Moscow's desire to keep Astana within its orbit, even as Tokayev flirts with the US. Russian President Vladimir Putin reiterated this during Tokayev’s visit, describing the two countries as “reliable allies.”

No message, no mediator

Some analysts speculated that Tokayev had carried a message from Trump to Putin, especially after the Kazakh president told the New York Times (NYT) that Putin had shown “maximum flexibility” by proposing to freeze the front line in Ukraine. But Russian officials dismissed the claim outright.

Putin's aide, Yury Ushakov, stated flatly that Tokayev delivered no such message. More importantly, Moscow has repeatedly rejected any suggestion of freezing the front line, rendering Tokayev’s remarks diplomatically irrelevant at best, or a clumsy attempt at self-aggrandizement at worst.

In this light, the Washington visit looks less like diplomacy and more like a poorly staged performance to recast Tokayev as a regional statesman – at the expense of Kazakhstan's balanced foreign policy.

Dancing with wolves

The broader regional trend is no less troubling. Uzbekistan’s President Shavkat Mirziyoyev, who also participated in the White House tour, pledged to invest $100 billion in the US over the next decade – a staggering promise from a country still reliant on Russian and Chinese capital.

Moscow’s reaction was swift. Putin held a phone call with Mirziyoyev on 11 November, followed by Tokayev’s in-person visit. The Kremlin statement following the latter meeting emphasized “strategic partnership and alliance relations in a number of directions.”

Russian expert on West and Central Asia Aleksandr Knyazev quipped on Telegram: "The US promise of $100 billion in investment in the Kazakh economy is about as much of a sham as Uzbekistan's $100 billion-investment promise for the US economy.”

Clearly, Russia is signaling that the western courtship of Central Asia will not go unanswered.

But the consequences may ripple far beyond diplomacy. Should Kazakhstan and its neighbors drift further westward, Russia may begin imposing punitive restrictions, particularly on labor migration. Migrant workers from Central Asia are already under growing scrutiny due to security fears over Islamist networks. Any additional deterioration in ties could result in mass expulsions or new legal hurdles, disrupting both remittance flows and domestic stability across the region.

Treading a dangerous line

Kazakhstan’s energy exports remain deeply reliant on Russian infrastructure and Caspian Sea transit routes governed by consensus among littoral states. Its broader economic web is tightly interwoven with both Russia and China. So what strategic logic, if any, underpins a pivot that risks undermining this stability? Why dismantle equilibrium to chase precarious overtures from a declining empire?

Not only do Kazakhstan’s energy exports transit through Russian-controlled routes, but its infrastructure was built by and remains connected to post-Soviet networks. Even its modest defense capabilities are reliant on coordination within the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).

Therefore, Tokayev may score temporary applause in Washington, but he risks long-term alienation from the very powers that have guaranteed his country’s stability.

And if Kazakhstan becomes a corridor for foreign operations against Russia, the consequences could be catastrophic.

The era of strategic balancing may be over in Central Asia. And Tokayev, for all his skyward prayers, may find that divine favor is no substitute for geopolitical sense.

viernes, 14 de noviembre de 2025

Israel Seeks 20-Year Military Aid Deal With the US

Under the current 10-year deal, Israel gets at least $3.8 billion per year, and Israeli officials are looking to increase that number

by Dave DeCamp | November 13, 2025 

https://news.antiwar.com/2025/11/13/israel-seeks-20-year-military-aid-deal-with-the-us/

Israel is seeking a 20-year military aid deal with the US and is looking to increase the annual amount of military assistance it receives from Washington, Axios reported on Thursday.

A 20-year deal would double the usual term for US-Israel military aid agreements. The current Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), negotiated under the Obama administration, was the third 10-year military aid deal between the two countries.

The current MOU, under which the US provides Israel with $3.8 billion in military aid each year, expires in 2028, and the Axios report said that Israeli officials hope to have a replacement deal in place over the next year. Since October 7, 2023, the US has provided significantly more military aid to Israel to support the genocidal campaign in Gaza and other Israeli military operations in the region.

According to Brown University’s Costs of War Project, in the two years following the October 7 attack, the US government spent at least $21.7 billion on military aid to Israel and another $9.65 billion to $12.07 billion on wars in Yemen, Iran, and other military operations in the region in support of Israel.

According to Axios, initial discussions between US and Israeli officials on a new MOU began in recent weeks. Israeli officials are worried that it may be more complicated to negotiate due to growing criticism of Israel within the US, including among President Trump’s MAGA base, and for that reason, they have proposed so-called “America First” provisions for the deal.

One proposal the Israelis made was to use some of the funds for joint US-Israeli research rather than for direct military aid. “This is out-of-the-box thinking. We want to change the way we handled past agreements and put more emphasis on US-Israel cooperation. The Americans like this idea,” an Israeli official told Axios.

The idea is to make the argument that the deal would benefit the US military as well as Israel. But any agreement that involves the US footing the bill for more aid to Israel will face significant criticism as skepticism of the US-Israel relationship continues to grow among Americans.

“There is no such thing as ‘America first’ tweaks to such a deal,” Jon Hoffman, a research fellow for foreign policy at the Cato Institute, wrote on X in response to the news. “The Israelis want a 20yr MOU and will likely ask for an increase to current $3.8b they receive annually. This is the epitome of America LAST. Israel is a strategic liability—walk away.”

miércoles, 12 de noviembre de 2025

Constructing chaos: Tel Aviv’s hand in Syria’s sectarian slaughter

The massacre of at least 1,500 Alawites on Syria’s coast was the calculated result of an Israeli operation designed to incite rebellion, fracture the state, and redraw its borders along sectarian lines.

The Cradle's Syria Correspondent

OCT 29, 2025

https://thecradle.co/articles/constructing-chaos-tel-avivs-hand-in-syrias-sectarian-slaughter

On 7 March, Syrian security forces and affiliated armed factions perpetrated the massacre of more than 1,500 Alawite civilians, including many elderly, women, and children, in 58 separate locations on the Syrian coast.

Though the killings were executed by sectarian forces loyal to Syrian president Ahmad al-Sharaa (Abu Mohammad al-Julani), a former Al-Qaeda commander, the path to the massacre was paved by a covert Israeli strategy aimed at inciting an Alawite uprising. 

Israel's plan hinged on pushing Alawites into the “trap” of launching an armed rebellion, with false promises of external support, only to give Sharaa’s forces the pretext to carry out the mass slaughter of Alawite civilians in “response.”

Israel’s goal was consistent with its long-standing aim, articulated in the infamous Yinon Plan: to dismantle Syria and reshape it into “weak, decentralized ethnic regions,” following former Syrian president Bashar al-Assad’s fall.

Netanyahu goes to Washington

After 14 years of sustained support from the US, Israel, and regional allies, the extremist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) – formerly the Al-Qaeda affiliate, the Nusra Front – seized control of Damascus in December 2024. Its leader, Julani, rebranded as Ahmad al-Sharaa, swiftly assumed the presidency.

On the very day of this power shift, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took credit for Assad’s fall and began a mass bombing campaign to destroy what was left of the country’s military capabilities.

However, toppling Syria’s government and destroying its army was not the end of Israel’s plan for Syria.

On 9 January, Netanyahu’s cabinet met to discuss organizing an international conference to “divide Syria into cantons,” Israeli news outlet i24 News reported.

“Any proposal deemed Israeli will be viewed unfavorably in Syria, which necessitates an international conference to advance the matter,” the outlet noted.

In other words, to be successful, Israel’s project to divide Syria needed to originate, or seem to originate, from Syrians themselves. 

Less than a month later, on 2 February, Netanyahu visited Washington to present a “white paper” regarding Syria to US officials.

After Netanyahu’s visit, Reuters reported that “Israel is lobbying the United States to keep Syria weak and decentralized, including by letting Russia keep its military bases there to counter Turkey's influence.”

The Times of Israel later commented that Israel was lobbying the “US to buck Sharaa’s fledgling government in favor of establishing a decentralized series of autonomous ethnic regions, with the southern one bordering Israel being demilitarized.”

Reports later leaked into political circles about a meeting two days later, on 4 February, between US officials and a representative of the most influential Druze religious leader in Syria, Sheikh Hikmat al-Hijri, in Washington, DC.

Al-Jumhuriya reported that according to Syrian and American sources with direct knowledge of the meetings, discussions revolved around “a plan for an armed rebellion against the government of Ahmad al-Sharaa.” 

The rebellion would reportedly include Hijri’s Druze forces from Suwayda, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) from northeast Syria, and Alawite groups from the Syrian coast, but with “Israeli support.”

When asked about the meeting, Hijri’s representative confirmed to Al-Jumhuriya that it had taken place but stated that the proposal for a rebellion had not come from the Druze.

“The proposal originated from a state, not from any Syrian faction,” Hijri's representative clarified, in a likely reference to Israel.

Inventing the insurgency: Meqdad Fatiha

Just two days later, on 6 February, an Alawite resistance group, the “Coastal Shield Brigade,” was allegedly formed. 

A video announcing the group’s establishment claimed its fighters would respond to sectarian massacres carried out by HTS-led security forces against Alawites since December, including in the village of Fahel, where 15 former officers in the Syrian army were killed, and the village of Arzeh, where 15 people were killed as well, including a child and an elderly woman.

In both villages, former officers in Assad’s army had given up their weapons and completed a reconciliation process with the new authorities in Damascus, but were nevertheless murdered in their homes by militants linked to Syria’s new extremist-led security forces.

The Coastal Shield Brigades was allegedly led by Meqdad Fatiha, a former member of the 25th Special Forces and the Republican Guard of the Assad government.

Activists on social media circulated the video, which allegedly showed Fatiha declaring the establishment of the brigade from a base in the Latakia Mountains.

However, there was no evidence that the group was real. Fatiha's face was covered by a black balaclava in the video, making it impossible to verify whether he was really the person speaking. This was odd, given that his appearance was already known from his Facebook profile.

The theatrics pointed to an intelligence fabrication – likely Israeli – designed to present the illusion of an organic Alawite insurgency. 

A meeting in Najaf?

Just five days later, the narrative of an organized Alawite insurgency was reinforced by reports in Turkiye Gazetesi, an Islamist-leaning pro-government newspaper in Turkiye.

The report claimed that Iranian generals and former commanders in the Syrian army under Assad had met in the Shia holy city of Najaf in Iraq to plan a major uprising against Sharaa in Syria.

The scheme reportedly involved Druze factions, the Kurdish-led SDF, Alawite insurgents on the coast, Lebanese Hezbollah, and, improbably, ISIS. 

Large amounts of weapons were allegedly being sent by land from Iraq and by sea from Lebanon to the Syrian coast, the report added.

“Some surprising events were expected to occur in Syria in the near future,” the Iranian generals allegedly in attendance said. 

While “surprising events” did occur one month later with the massacre of Alawites on 7 March, the reports of the Najaf meeting are likely fabricated.

It is unlikely that a Turkish newspaper would have access to a detailed account of a secret meeting taking place between top Iranian generals and former Syrian officers. 
It is also unlikely, and even ridiculous, that Iran and Hezbollah would be coordinating with their long-time enemy, ISIS, or with the US-backed SDF.

Kurdish-Syrian commentator Samir Matini amplified the narrative through widely viewed livestreams, pushing the idea of “surprising events” to come. The aim: to pin Israel’s plan on Iran and Hezbollah and create a smokescreen of chaos.

Sectarian killings fuel resistance

Amid the propaganda claiming a foreign-backed Alawite insurgency was being organized, Julani’s security forces stepped up attacks against Alawite civilians in the coastal region.

Syrian journalist Ammar Dayoub reported in Al-Araby al-Jadeed that Alawites were often targeted solely based on their religious identity, rather than because they were “remnants of the regime.” 

Dayoub observed that “these violations have targeted people who opposed the previous regime, and young people who were only children in that period, as well as academics and women.”

In response to the sectarian killings, Alawites began to defend themselves.

One key event occurred on 8 January, when armed men linked to the Damascus government killed three Alawite farmers in the village of Ain al-Sharqiyah in the coastal region of Jableh. The men were working their lands across from the Brigade 107 base when they were killed. 

In response, a local man named Bassam Hossam al-Din gathered a group of local men, arming them with light weapons. They attacked members of Julani's internal security forces, known as General Security, killing one and abducting seven more, before barricading themselves in an Alawite religious shrine.

The General Security launched a campaign against them, swiftly killing Hossam al-Din and his group. 

A former intelligence officer of the Assad government, speaking with The Cradle, says these killings motivated him and others to fight back:

“All this fueled enormous resentment in the area, which grew worse day by day. After Bassam Hossam al-Din’s death, some people here – including former government military personnel and civilians – began to gather.” 

Crucially, they were “encouraged by reports and promises [of help] they received from outside.”

They were told they would receive support, including by sea, from the US-led international coalition, in coordination with the Druze in Suwayda and Kurds in northeastern Syria. 

“They were given hope of escaping this miserable situation,” the former intelligence officer tells The Cradle. 

In the following weeks, Alawites continued to clash with Syrian security forces in an effort to defend themselves from raids and arrests.

In late February, Alawite insurgents attacked a police station in Assad's hometown of Qardaha, located in the mountains overlooking the coastal town of Latakia.

According to Qardaha residents and activists who spoke to Reuters, “the incident began when members of security forces tried to enter a house without permission, sparking opposition from residents.”

“One person was killed by gunfire, with locals accusing the security forces of the shooting,” Reuters added, further suggesting that local Alawite men were acting in self-defense.

What happened in Datour?

The simmering conflict escalated further on 4 March. Reuters reported that, according to Syrian state media, two members of the Defense Ministry had been killed in the Datour neighborhood in Latakia city by “groups of Assad militia remnants,” and that security forces had mounted a campaign to arrest them.

One Datour resident told Reuters there had been heavy gunfire in the early hours and that security forces in numerous vehicles had surrounded the neighborhood.

A security source speaking with the news agency blamed the violence on a “proliferation of arms” among former security and army personnel who had refused to enter into reconciliation agreements with the new authorities.

The source said that local Alawite leaders had, in some cases, cooperated with security forces to hand over former personnel suspected of committing crimes during the period of Assad’s rule in hopes of staving off “crack downs and potential civil unrest.”

Testimonies from residents of Datour collected by Syrians for Truth and Justice (STJ) indicated that security forces carried out random arrests in Datour and indiscriminately fired at civilian homes, resulting in several deaths, including that of a child. 

The campaign was “marked by sectarian rhetoric and intense hate speech directed against the Alawite sect,” STJ added.

A source from Datour speaking with The Cradle reveals that Julani’s government used a prominent local Alawite family to create the proliferation of weapons needed to justify a crackdown.

The Aslan family had previously been close to Maher al-Assad, Bashar’s brother and commander of the army’s elite 4th Division, but quickly established good relations with the new government after it came to power in December.

It became common to see General Security members from Idlib spending time at the Aslan-owned businesses on Thawra Street at the entrance to Datour. 

When residents complained to the General Security about criminal activity by the Aslan family, such as stealing money and confiscating homes, the General Security took no action against the family.

The source speaking with The Cradle says that on 4 and 5 March, members of the Aslan family distributed weapons to Alawite men in the neighborhood, encouraging them to take up arms against the General Security.

This was, of course, strange given the close relationship between the Aslans and the General Security, as well as because such a rebellion had little chance of success. 

“Why would the Aslan family distribute weapons to fellow Alawites in Datour while knowing a rebellion would fail?” the source asks.

What happened in Daliyah?

On 6 March, a major clash erupted in the Alawite villages of Daliyah and Beit Ana, which lie adjacent to one another in the mountains of the Jableh countryside.

Sources from Daliyah speaking with The Cradle confirm that a large General Security convoy entered the village that morning to arrest a local man, Ali Ahmad, who had written posts against the Julani government on Facebook. 

General Security members took Ahmad from his work at the local mini bus station and executed him at the entrance of the village. 

The General Security members then entered the nearby house of a retired army officer, Taha Saad, in the adjacent village of Beit Ana, killing his two adult sons.

In response to the killings, local men from the village gathered light weapons and attacked the General Security members. After the General Security called for reinforcements, a convoy of 20 vehicles arrived to assist the government forces in the fight.

The sources in Daliyah speaking with The Cradle state that around 20 members of the General Security and 17 men from the village were killed in the gun battle.

As the clashes continued, Damascus sent helicopters to drop bombs on Daliyah and Beit Ana until a Russian plane forced the helicopters to withdraw.

Julani's army escalated further by firing artillery at multiple Alawite villages in the mountain areas from the military academy in Rumaylah on the coast, near Jableh city.

A source from Jableh speaking to The Cradle says that the bombings made Alawites “go crazy,” especially because Daliyah is home to an important Alawite religious shrine. 

The massacre and its beneficiaries 

When the Russian plane appeared over Daliyah and Beit Ana, “People thought that this was ‘the moment,’ so they rose up on that basis,” stated the former intelligence officer speaking with The Cradle.

Alawite insurgents attacked General Security and army positions in various areas across the coast, including Brigade 107 near Ayn al-Sharqiyah, where Bassam Hossam al-Din’s group abducted the General Security members before being killed in January.

“There was no Meqdad Fatiha or anyone else from outside, no Iranians or any others. It was purely a popular force rising up against this situation,” the former intelligence officer explains.

However, they were emboldened by promises of outside help from the US-led coalition, the Druze, and the Kurds.

The clashes at the Brigade 107 base lasted all night, but the Alawite insurgents paused the attack early the next morning, on 7 March, thinking that coalition forces would come to their aid and bomb the brigade. 

“They waited two hours, but no strikes came, no support arrived. Their morale collapsed, they realized it was all lies, just a trap,” the source goes on to say.

After the fighting stopped, disillusionment spread, and the Alawite insurgents attacking the base withdrew and returned to their villages. 

Al Jazeera’s role

As the fighting still raged on 6 March, Al Jazeera repeated the false reports from Turkish media claiming Alawite insurgents were receiving massive external support from Iran, Hezbollah, the Kurdish SDF, and even Assad.

The news outlet's propaganda gave Damascus the pretext to mobilize not only formal members of military units from the Ministry of Defense, but also many informal armed factions who responded to calls from mosques to fight “jihad” against Alawites. 

On the morning of 7 March, convoys of military vehicles filled with tens of thousands of Sharaa’s extremist fighters began arriving at the coast.

Because the Alawite insurgency was weak and disorganized, with no help from abroad, it was not able to provide any protection to Alawite civilians as the massacres unfolded. 

Facing no resistance, Julani’s forces began systematically slaughtering any Alawite men they could find, as well as many women and children, in cities, towns, and villages across the coast, including in Jableh, Al-Mukhtariyah, Snobar, Al-Shir, and the neighborhoods of Al-Qusour in Baniyas and Datour in Latakia.

The massive scope and systematic nature of the massacres, involving such large numbers of armed men in so many locations, suggests pre-planning by Julani and his Defense Minister, Murhaf Abu Qasra – a former commander-in-chief of the HTS military wing.

A media creation

The mobilization of Julani’s forces was also aided on 6 March by new videos appearing online claiming to show Meqdad Fatiha and members of the Coastal Shield Brigade vowing to fight against the new government.

In one video, the man claiming to be Fatiha was masked (this time dressed like a character from the popular video game, Mortal Kombat, and standing against a blank background), making it impossible to know who he was and whether he was in the mountains of Latakia or in a television studio in Tel Aviv or Doha.

In a separate video, Fatiha was masked and dressed just like an ISIS militant beheading Christians on video in Libya in 2015, leading to speculation the video was fake and had been created using artificial intelligence (AI).

Another video was later released in which Fatiha appeared without a mask, saying that previous videos of him were indeed real, and not created using AI. However, the new video also appeared fake, his face, shoulders, and eyes moving in an unnatural way as he spoke.

During multiple visits to the Syrian coast, The Cradle was not able to find any Alawites who expressed support for Fatiha or believed his group was real.

The source from Daliyah states that, “No one here supports Meqdad Fatiha. We all believe he works for Julani. The Coastal Shield Brigade is fabricated.”

A former Alawite officer in Assad’s army from the Syrian coast tells The Cradle, “We only see videos of Meqdad Fatiha online. We believe he is just a media creation.”

After showing The Cradle his rotting teeth, the former officer remarks, “Do you think we are getting help from Iran or Hezbollah? I don’t even have money to fix my teeth.”

An Alawite woman whose husband and two grown sons were murdered on 7 March suggests to The Cradle that Fatiha is a fictitious person, only existing on Facebook and created by the authorities to justify the massacres.  

“Who is he? Julani created him. It’s a lie,” she explains.

General Security fatalities

The mobilization of Sharaa’s extremist forces from across the country was also aided by claims that Alawite insurgents had killed 236 members of the General Security in attacks on 6 April. 

Some General Security members were certainly killed, but Syrian authorities never provided any evidence for this large number, suggesting it was vastly inflated to heighten sectarian anger. When Reuters requested the names or an updated tally, Syrian officials refused to provide them.

In one case, the pro-HTS “Euphrates Shield” Telegram channel published a photo collage allegedly showing General Security members killed by “regime remnants” during the fighting. 

However, one of the fighters shown in the photos quickly posted a story on his Instagram with a “laugh out loud” emoji to show he was still alive, the Syrian Democratic Observatory showed.

Israeli ambitions 

On 10 March, before the victims of the massacres had been buried, i24 News published a letter claiming to be written by Alawite leaders, asking Netanyahu to send his military to protect them. 

“If you come to the Syrian coast, which is predominantly Alawite, you will be greeted with songs and flowers,” the letter stated. 

It also called on Israel to unite against the “Islamic tide led by Turkiye,” while asking for help in separating from “this extremist state.”

When Israel secretly “greenlit” Julani’s massacre of Druze in Suwayda in July, the goal of dividing Syria was further advanced. Many Druze are aware of the covert relationship between Damascus and Tel Aviv, but, fearing extermination, feel they have little choice but to call on Israel for protection and to establish an autonomous region in south Syria. 

Three weeks after the massacres of Alawites in March, an Israeli general quietly admitted that sectarian violence in Syria benefits Tel Aviv.

“This thing where everyone is fighting everyone, and there’s an agreement with the Kurds one day, and a massacre of the Alawites the second day, and a threat to the Druze on the third day, and Israeli strikes in the south. All this chaos is, to some extent, actually good for Israel,” stated Tamir Hayman while speaking with Israeli Army Radio.

“Wish all sides good luck (but) do it quietly. Don't talk about it,” the general added.