วันเสาร์ที่ 3 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2555

Syria's rebels fear foreign jihadis in their midst

As Salafists seek to achieve final battle against the Shiites, an ancient village said: "They call to the seventh century '

early summer, Abu Ismail, a veteran of six seasons of al-Qaida, to the left of the insurgency still burns in his native Iraq and went to he believes to be the beginning of the Apocalypse.

guaranteed cash benefactor in northern Iraq Erbil, then went to an arms dealer in Anbar province, a desolate corner of the country that no longer one breakpoint for jihadists from Syria and now is a gateway for those going in the opposite direction.

"It was easy," he said in the living room of a house in the Syrian city of Aleppo. "The money was not a problem, nor the weapon, or motivation. It will be a great fight against the enemy. "

Around

tanned 23 years, had three members of a Syrian rebel militia acting as your hosts. They looked at the floor as a young jihadist explained Quranic teachings were said to shape the coming battle. "Whatever the future," he said. "I care about today. Muhammad is the Messenger says there will be a battle between the Persians and the Sunni. And to come.

"When the regime falls, all those who fought against Muslims will be my enemy, particularly the Shiites," he said, reiterating a view shared by some extremist Sunnis that Shiites are their greatest enemies.

hosts trembling, avoiding eye contact. The stranger in their midst had sought refuge among them two months ago. Since then had rented a house, won a trip to the combat zone when he wants and has won the support of some of the rebel units in the region.

Even won a coveted award:. The right to marry the daughter of a cousin of the fighter, a union which took place on Thursday with the blessing of qualified residents and clerics

Not everyone in the unit was happy with the marriage. "Are you scratch my back, I'll scratch yours," said a young rebel, Abu Saif. "It is a Salafist, no doubt about it," he added, referring to the ultra-fundamentalist school of thought Koran. "And it is not what we believe."

discuss with the uncle of the girl without a name, a young man who was sitting nearby, Abu Saif said. "Tell me what are the benefits we derive from it, or that your family receives" The guy shrugged without giving an answer.

As Syrian civil war grinds inexorably become so much a clash of ideologies as a military battle of wills. The first lines were hastily carved ancient stone heart of Aleppo and the suburbs of concrete during sunny summer days, now seems almost secondary in the contest to determine the kind of society that will one day stand on ruins.

For the most part, the opposition remains faithful to the spirit that has led to many cities and citizens to use control state President Bashar al-Assad on their lives. But around the periphery, there are indications that the original values ??of the revolution began to unravel. The story of a street facing a difficult condition drastically, so simple in March 2011, is now much more complicated.

"We got exactly what Tunisia and Egypt," said Mahmoud Razak, a trader in the suburbs. "The freedom and the opportunity to progress in life. But we thought that it would take 19 days as it did [in Egypt]. Now, 19 months. Knew it would not be too hard. "

For those who now hosts Abu Ismael, the Iraqi jihadist embodies one of the main problems. While men more conservative and pious in this part of Aleppo refuse to see the crisis that now consumes Syria in existential terms. For them, it is always a struggle for self-determination, not a place of confrontation with an enemy apocalyptic predestined.

Iraqi girl's dress and behavior are clearly those of a Salafist. He refused to cigarettes, handcuffed in the back of his uniform at the ankle and wore a black hat on black hair very short. More informative, spoke with contempt of Shiite Muslims, who were increasingly he said travel to Syria to fight the Sunni opposition.

"They say they will protect Zeinab Mosque in Damascus Sit," he said in a shrine revered by Shiites. "The Jaish al-Mahdi [Mahdi Army] and Hezbollah just use it to cover the rest into Syria. We will not let them. Let the attack, perhaps not to destroy, but to fulfill them.

"There are about 50 Iraqis in every region of northern Syria. Maybe more. Is not it hard to get here, and it is difficult to find another mujahideen. We can fight where we want and when I want. Y God willing we will prevail. "
agitated Your hosts were not so sure. Bound by social mores that provide shelter and hospitality walkers, the rebel unit seemed to realize that the problems brewing between them and the global jihadist group growing. Numerous rebel groups The Guardian spoke this week, said a looming confrontation with newcomers.


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