𝗛𝗮𝗯𝗲𝗿𝟳.𝗰𝗼𝗺 (𝟭𝟱 𝗘𝗸𝗶𝗺 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟱): "Şara ikili ilişkilerini güçlendirirken (Kanadalı İsrailli yazar) Suriye'nin bölünmesi gerektiğini savundu" + 𝗜𝘀𝗿𝗮𝗲𝗹 𝗛𝗮𝘆𝗼𝗺 (𝟱 𝗢𝗰𝘁𝗼𝗯𝗲𝗿 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟱): "Partition Syria to save it" + 𝗥𝗲𝘂𝘁𝗲𝗿𝘀 (𝟭𝟱 𝗢𝗰𝘁𝗼𝗯𝗲𝗿 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟱): "Syria's Sharaa tells Putin he will respect past deals with Moscow"

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EMI P

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Oct 15, 2025, 6:20:10 PMOct 15
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Şara ikili ilişkilerini güçlendirirken İsrail Suriye'nin bölünmesi gerektiğini savundu

İsrailli yazar, Suriye'nin bölünmesini, etnik grupların ise kendi devletini kurması gerektiğini, Türkiye'nin kuzeyindeki güçlerin silahlandırılması gerektiğini belirtti. Trump'ın Suriye'ye olan yaklaşımını ise alaycı bir dille eleştirdi.


GİRİŞ 15.10.2025


Şara ikili ilişkilerini güçlendirirken İsrail Suriye'nin bölünmesi gerektiğini savundu - Foto 1 (Haber7.com).jpeg


Suriye’nin Cumhurbaşkanı Ahmet El-Şara bölge ülkeleri ile ilişkilerini yeniden geliştirmek ve güçlendirmek adına harekete geçerek işbirliği anlaşmalarına başladı.

Şara, bugün Moskova’ya giderek Rusya Devlet Başkanı Vladimir Putin ile bir araya gelerek iki ülke ilişkilerine dair kapsamlı bir görüşme yaptı.

İsrail Hayom gazetesinde yazan Jason Shvili ise Suriye’nin Şara’dan kurtulması için bölünmesi gerektiğini belirten bir yazı kaleme aldı.

Siyonizm hareketinin bir parçası olarak Arz-ı Mevud’u savunan İsrail hükümeti Golan Tepeleri’ne de göz koyarak Suriye’ye müdahale etmenin yollarını arıyor.

SURİYE'Yİ BÖLMENİN YOLLARINI ARAMAYA BAŞLADILAR

Suriye’de yer alan Dürziler ve terör örgütlerine destek veren İsrail, bölgede yaşayan etnik grupların kendi kaderini tayin etmesi gerektiğini belirterek kargaşa çıkarmanın yolların arıyor.

Jason Shvili kaleme aldığı yazıda, Sünni Araplar, Alevi Müslümanlar, Hristiyanlar, Dürziler ve Kürtlerin bir arada yaşadığı Suriye’de kan dökülmeden herkese istediği hakların verilmesinin gerektiğini belirtti.



Şara ikili ilişkilerini güçlendirirken İsrail Suriye'nin bölünmesi gerektiğini savundu - Foto 2 (Haber7.com).webp



TRUMP'IN SURİYE GÖRÜŞÜNÜ ALAYCI VE GÜLÜNÇ BULDU

Shivili, Suriye’ye dair kaleme aldığı kışkırtıcı yazısında Trump’ın Suriye’ye yönelik iyimser tavrı ve toprak bütünlüğünü korumaları gerektiğinden söz etmesinden dolayı ABD’nin Suriye’ye olan tavrını gülünç ve alaycı buldu.

Shvili, Trump’ın Suriye’nin bütünlüğüne yönelik verdiği önemden duyduğu rahatsızlığı dile getirerek, “Suriye özel temsilcisi Tom Barrack'ın "Tek millet, tek halk, tek ordu, tek Suriye" olması gerektiğini ilan ettiği Trump yönetimi de aynı şekilde. ABD, en başından beri hiç kurulmaması gereken bir ülkenin toprak bütünlüğünü korumakta neden bu kadar ısrarcı?” dedi.



Şara ikili ilişkilerini güçlendirirken İsrail Suriye'nin bölünmesi gerektiğini savundu - Foto 3 (Haber7.com).webp



"GÜÇLÜ DEVLETLERDEN DESTEK ALMALILAR"

Suriye’de Aleviler Lazkiye, Kürtler Suriye’nin kuzey ve kuzeydoğusunu, Dürziler Süveyda’yı, Hristiyanlar Vadi el-Nasara’da ve Sünni Araplar Suriye’nin geri kalan kısmında yaşamasını ve oluşturulması planlanan bu devletlerin bağımsızlıklarını güvence altına almak için güçlü devletlerden destek almaları gerektiği belirtildi.

İsrailli yazar, Sünni Araplar’a Türkiye’nin yardım edeceği, Suriye’nin kuzeydoğusundaki Kürt güçlerine ise İsrail hükümetinin destekleyebileceğini belirterek, bölgedeki SDG’yi desteklemek zorunda olduklarını, Türkiye gibi güçlü bir devletin bölgede SDG’ye askeri güç kullanama ihtimaline değindi.



Şara ikili ilişkilerini güçlendirirken İsrail Suriye'nin bölünmesi gerektiğini savundu - Foto 4 (Haber7.com).webp
İsrail'in desteklediği Suriye'deki Dürziler


TÜRKİYE'YE KARŞI SURİYE'DEKİ GÜÇLERİNİ SİLAHLANDIRMA PEŞİNDE

Shvili, Türk askerinin ülke sınırlarını koruduğu, Suriye ordusu ile kuzeydoğudaki teröristlere karşı aldığı önlemlerden duyduğu rahatsızlığı da belirterek, “Kuzey ve kuzeydoğu Suriye'nin büyük bir bölümünü işgal etmiş durumda” diyerek algı girişiminde bulundu.

Shvili, bölgede ABD askerlerinin ülkelerine dönme ihtimali olduğu ve İsrail’in bu fırsatı değerlendirerek güçlerini silahlandırıp Türkiye ve DEAŞ’a karşı hareket edebileceğini belirtti.


Kübra Beyazoğlu
Haber7.com - Muhabir


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Partition Syria to save it

Alawite Muslims, Christians, Sunni Arabs, Druze, and Kurds deserve self-determination. They should have the right to go their separate ways.


Jason Shvili is a freelance writer in Toronto, Canada.

Published on  10-05-2025


President of Syria Ahmed al-Sharaa addresses the United Nations (UN) General Assembly during the 80th session of the annual event on September 24, 2025, in New York City  (Photo - Spencer Platt, Getty Images, AFP).webp


Syria doesn't work. It never worked, and it never will work. It needs to be partitioned. Its major ethnic and religious groups – Alawite Muslims, Christians, Sunni Arabs, Druze, and Kurds – deserve self-determination. They should have the right to go their separate ways. The alternative is more bloodshed. Yet, the US is stubbornly and ridiculously trying to maintain Syria's territorial integrity following a decades-long civil war.

Hence, President Trump has embraced Syria's new leader, Ahmed Al-Sharaa, an Islamist terrorist, who, until December last year, had a $10 million bounty on his head. Al-Sharaa has promised that under his rule, "The Syrian state is committed to protecting all minorities and communities in the country." But his actions and those of his regime say otherwise. In March of this year, forces linked to Al-Sharaa's regime ruthlessly massacred over 1,000 Alawite Muslims in the Syrian coastal region of Latakia. A few months later, in July, Bedouin tribesmen and other forces loyal to Al-Sharaa brutally murdered hundreds of Druze in Syria's Sweida province. And just recently, Alawite Muslims were forced from their homes in Damascus.

Despite these atrocities, however, all of Syria's minorities have expressed their willingness to remain part of the country. All they ask is that they have some autonomy to govern their own communities and not be subject to tyranny at the hands of Syria's Sunni Arab majority. But Al-Sharaa refuses to discuss any possibility of regional autonomy for Syria's minority communities, and insists on a unitary Syrian state. So does the Trump Administration, whose special envoy for Syria, Tom Barrack, declared that there must be "One nation, one people, one army, one Syria." Why does the US ridiculously insist on maintaining the territorial integrity of a country that should never have been created in the first place?

After the First World War, the victorious Allied Powers decided to divide the spoils of the defeated Ottoman Empire in the Middle East amongst themselves, drawing up arbitrary borders with no regard for the aspirations of the different peoples living in the region. This is how Syria and much of today's Middle East was created. The result: A century of long and bloody conflict between competing ethnic and religious groups.

Putting an end to this vicious cycle of conflict means correcting the injustice committed against the peoples of the Middle East by Western colonial powers a hundred years ago. In the case of Syria, it means allowing the various groups in the country the right to self-determination – deconstructing the Syrian state in its entirety and replacing it with separate states for the Alawites, Druze, Sunni Arabs, Christians, and Kurds. This is the only option for Syria's minorities to gain or maintain autonomy, since Al-Sharaa refuses to consider any form of decentralization.

Fortunately, all of these groups are geographically concentrated – the Alawites in Latakia, the Kurds in Rojava (north and northeastern Syria), the Druze in Sweida, the Christians in Wadi Al-Nasara (Valley of the Christians), and the Sunni Arabs in the rest of present-day Syria. Thus, creating borders for these new states should not be too difficult.

What will be difficult, however, is ensuring the viability of the newly-independent states. Latakia, Wadi Al-Nasara and Sweida have few natural resources, and the latter two have small populations. Rojava has significant natural resources and a sizeable population, but is landlocked and faces a powerful enemy in Turkey, which detests the idea of any part of Kurdistan obtaining independence. Wadi Al-Nasara and Sweida are also landlocked, as will the new Sunni Arab state be.  All of these new states will need help from abroad to secure their independence.

The new Sunni Arab state can probably expect ample support from other Sunni Arab states and Turkey. Latakia can expect support from Russia as it still hosts vital Russian air and naval bases.

Israel will surely help the Druze of Sweida maintain their security and develop their economy. It has already taken action against Al-Sharaa's forces to protect the Druze from further atrocities. It would also be advantageous for the Jewish state to secure new allies by aiding the new states of Wadi Al-Nasara, Latakia, and particularly Rojava, as Israel and the Kurds have a long history of friendship.

In fact, Israeli support for Rojava may be a necessity as Turkey will almost certainly use military force to prevent the now semi-autonomous region from achieving independence – unless another major power, such as Israel, promises to defend it. Indeed, Turkey and its proxy, the Syrian National Army, already occupy large parts of northern and northeastern Syria, where they have massacred and displaced thousands of Kurds. Moreover, there is no guarantee that US troops now stationed in Rojava will remain there. President Trump has already reduced their numbers, and eventually, wants all US troops to leave the area. Israel can secure a very strategically advantageous alliance with Rojava by arming its forces and guaranteeing its security from Turkey and the Islamic State group (ISIS).

But neither Rojava nor any part of present-day Syria stands a chance of achieving prosperity if they are all forced to remain part of the same country. By insisting that Syria remain united, the US and its allies will be condemning its people to many more years of tyranny and bloodshed. President Trump has consistently stated that he aims to see a new, more prosperous Middle East. He can start by allowing and encouraging the peoples of the present-day Syrian Arab Republic to seek self-determination in their own independent states.


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Syria's Sharaa tells Putin he will respect past deals with Moscow



October 15, 2025


Russia's President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with Syria's President Ahmed al-Sharaa during a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, October 15, 2025. (Alexander Zemlianichenko, Pool via REUTERS).jpeg
Russia's President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with Syria's President Ahmed al-Sharaa during a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, October 15, 2025. 
Alexander Zemlianichenko/Pool via REUTERS


  • Summary
  •  Putin and Sharaa hold face-to-face talks in Moscow
  •  Fate of Russian bases in Syria is being discussed
  •  Sharaa will ask Putin to hand over former president Assad, Syrian sources say


MOSCOW, Oct 15 (Reuters) - Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa told Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday he would honour all past deals struck between his country and Moscow, a pledge suggesting Moscow's two main military bases in Syria are safe.
Sharaa, who once headed the Syrian branch of al Qaeda and who toppled predecessor Bashar al-Assad, a close Russian ally, late last year, was speaking at the start of Kremlin talks with Putin on his first visit to Russia since coming to power.
"There are bilateral relations and shared interests that bind us with Russia, and we respect all agreements made with it. We are working on redefining the nature of relations with Russia," Sharaa, who was speaking in Arabic, told Putin.
Putin told him that Moscow was ready to do all it could to act on what he called "many interesting and useful beginnings" that had already been discussed between the two sides when it came to renewing relations.

OIL PROJECTS AND MILITARY BASES

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak told reporters after the talks that Moscow was willing to work on oil projects in Syria and help it to restore energy, rail and other infrastructure destroyed during years of civil war. The two leaders had discussed this at length, he said.
"Russian companies have been working in Syria for a long time, at oil fields. There are fields that require development, those that are mothballed, and new fields. We are ready to participate," Novak said.
The Kremlin said before the talks that the fate of Russia's two main bases in Syria - the Hmeimim air base in Syria's Latakia province, and its naval facility at Tartous on the coast - would be discussed.
Russia has a military presence at Qamishli airport - in the northeast near the borders of Turkey and Iraq - as well.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Monday that Moscow believed Damascus wanted the military bases to stay and spoke about using them as logistics hubs to get aid to Africa.
Syrian officials are seeking guarantees that Russia will not help rearm remnants of Assad's forces, a Syrian source said before the talks. Sharaa is hoping that Russia might also help rebuild the Syrian army, the same source said.

SENSITIVE VISIT

Sharaa's visit was sensitive. Russia used its military muscle to back Assad for years against Syrian rebels who came to power in December last year led by Sharaa. Moscow then granted asylum to Assad and his family when they fled the country.
The Assads now live discreetly in Moscow, according to Russian media.
Two Syrian sources told Reuters that Sharaa would use the talks to formally request that Moscow hand over Assad to face trial over alleged crimes against Syrians.
Russia prides itself on being able to protect its foreign allies and was not likely to agree to hand over Assad to Damascus. Lavrov said on Monday that Russia had given Assad refuge because his life had been under threat.
Sharaa, who is hoping to secure economic concessions from Russia, including the resumption of wheat supplies on favourable terms and compensation for war damage, was also expected to press for Moscow's backing to resist Israeli demands for a wider demilitarised zone in southern Syria.
One of the two sources said he might also raise the issue of redeploying Russian military police as a guarantor against further Israeli encroachments.

Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin and Andrew Osborn in Moscow; Suleiman Al-Khalidi and by Ahmed Elimam and Tala Ramadan; writing by Andrew Osborn; editing by Mark Trevelyan and Ros Russell




Talip Sarıbaş

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Oct 16, 2025, 6:11:11 AMOct 16
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Belini kırdık...!

Inlerine  girdik...!

Kökünü kazıdık....!

Misli ile karşılık verdik...

129 kişi kaldılar....!

Ayakkabı numaralarını,dahi biliyoruz...!

Teröristlerle, pazarlık olmaz...!

Millete ne çok yalan söylenmiş, hâlâ  daha söylenmekte....

Yalancının mumu ,40 günde sönermiş, derler ya....

Bunların ki,25 yilldir yanmakta sönmeden hemde....

Teröristlerle  ilişki kurdu derdi hep AKP...CHP ye....oyları böyle aldi bilinen gerçek bu....

Yalanmış oda ,gördüğümüz...

Şimdi Imraliya gidecekler,heyet kuracaklarmış...Bülent Arınç gönüllü bu işe...kimse gitmezse ben hazırım,buradayım der durur..

Haaa....hemen çağrışım.yapmazmi ...bana.....yaptı, bile...Götürdu o günlere....

Kozmik odayida, o açtı,hemde ne büyük, ne ucuz bir yalanla.....

 

Unutmadık, aklımızda.....!!!

 

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