I saw this article and thought i would share. As things continue to get worse and worse, remeber
to keep your eyes on the LORD Jesus Christ .Jesus Christ is returning soon to take the true believers
to heaven.
"6 And ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars: see that ye be not troubled: for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet.
7 For
nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and
there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers
places.
8 All these are the beginning of sorrows." Matthew 24:6-8 KJV
On May 23, the Islamic State (IS) perpetrated suicide bombings in
Tartus and Jableh, killing 154 people and wounding more than 300. This
was the first time either coastal city had been targeted by such attacks
since the beginning of the war. Tartus in particular had seemed like a
haven up until Monday. It was still an attractive tourist destination
because of its wide beaches, and it was in the middle of a construction
boom given the arrival of internally displaced people (IDPs) from other
parts of Syria — not just the Assad regime’s fellow Alawites from
Damascus, but also members of the Sunni majority from all across the
country. Many Syrian refugees had even returned from Lebanon to Tartus
because they considered life to be cheaper and safer there.
IS operatives can conduct simultaneous attacks of this nature rather easily given the corruption and
nonchalance at coastal security checkpoints. I saw this problem
firsthand when I visited Tartus and Latakia last month. After I crossed
the border from Beirut via taxi, nobody asked me for my passport or
searched my suitcase. The driver was known at each checkpoint, and by
giving 100-200 Syrian pounds (10-20 cents) to those who stopped us, he
was able to quietly proceed without hassle. Thanks to rampant
corruption, he had also obtained a special permit to use military roads,
further enabling him to avoid stringent controls. So it would be quite
simple for terrorists to regularly infiltrate the Alawite heartland,
which is also home to Russia’s main bases in Syria. Moreover, IS could
readily establish sleeper cell among its fellow Sunnis in these areas,
who number in the hundreds of thousands (both locals and IDPs).
Through the latest attacks, the Islamic State is attempting to send
different messages. The first is for the Alawites — IS wants to show
them that the Assad regime cannot protect them. After all, the group has
not attacked the nearby coastal cities of Banias and Latakia, which
have larger Sunni populations. In Latakia’s case, IDP flows have made
Sunnis the majority, and IS likely prefers to avoid the risk of heavy
Sunni casualties there. Regime security efforts are also more serious in
Banias and Latakia, where Sunni neighborhoods erupted into armed
rebellion in 2011-2012, which was not the case in Jableh and Tartus.
Sending such violent signals to the Alawites could have multiple
ripple effects. IS leaders likely hope that Alawite soldiers serving in
hotspots on the eastern front (e.g., Deir al-Zour, Palmyra) will refuse
to fight if their families back in Tartus and other cities are not given better protection; the
regime might even decide to redeploy eastern troops to the coast. The
group also aims to spark discontent against the regime and Alawite
reprisals against Sunnis. On February 21, IS attacks in Homs affected
Alawite neighborhoods and provoked strong discontent against local
authorities and the security apparatus, with people denouncing the
corruption and inefficiency of officers. For now, such antipathy does
not extend to Bashar al-Assad himself, but that could change if attacks
continue. Meanwhile, Alawite reprisals against Sunnis could undermine
the regime and its army, since many Sunnis are still fighting on Assad’s
side. On Monday, Alawites attacked al-Karnak camp in Tartus, home to
400 Sunni families from Aleppo and Idlib; according to unofficial
sources, seven Sunnis were killed.
Yet the Islamic State’s most important message is presumably to
Moscow. Russia’s only naval base in Syria is located in Tartus, while
Jableh is close to Hmeimim, Russia’s main air base. Moscow is also
attempting to rehabilitate the old Soviet submarine base in Jableh. IS has already shown a pattern of
targeting Russian infrastructure, most recently Tiyas airfield between
Homs and Palmyra, according to the BBC. IS leaders are well aware that
Moscow’s assistance enabled the Syrian army to retake Palmyra and set
its sights on Deir al-Zour, so they aim to increase the price of the
Russian intervention and force a withdrawal from the Syrian theater, or
at least from the eastern fronts.
Finally, Monday’s bombings send a message to other rebel groups.
Although the Islamic State’s goals and methods often differ from those
of Syria’s various anti-Assad factions, it still wants to be regarded as
the leader of the fight against the regime, Russia, and the Alawite
community. It will therefore continue trying to show that it is more
effective and more ruthless than al-Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra,
currently its main rival for that title.
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