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WAR REPORT
Trump wants to 'sit back,' watch Russia fall into Syria 'trap'
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 4, 2015


Syria detains dissident who criticised Russian strikes
Damascus (AFP) Oct 4, 2015 - The Syrian authorities on Sunday briefly detained a prominent opposition figure days after he criticised Russian air strikes in Syria, he told AFP.

Munzer Khaddam, 67, spokesman for the National Coordination Committee for Democratic Change, was stopped at a checkpoint near Damascus.

"I was released after being arrested at a military checkpoint at Kutayfeh and held from eight o'clock (0500 GMT) until four in the afternoon because of a military security arrest warrant," Khaddam said.

He said a military security official ordered that he be released or freed, adding: "I am now heading for Latakia" on the coast.

On Thursday, Khaddam wrote critical comments on Facebook about the air strikes that Russia, a long-time ally of Damascus, launched against jihadists and rebels in Syria the previous day.

"The Syrian crisis is nowhere near being solved as some dreamers think, and the Russian intervention further complicates" the conflict, he wrote.

He added that a Russian military presence would only serve to attract more jihadists to Syria.

It was the second time that the writer and university professor has been held since war broke out in Syria in 2011.

In December 2013, Khaddam was briefly detained at a military checkpoint in the coastal town of Tartus in the northwest.

He was jailed for his political views from 1982 to 1994.

Although the group to which he belongs is generally tolerated by President Bashar al-Assad's regime, several members of the political alliance are in jail in Syria.

On November 20, 2013, top NCCDC official Rajaa Nasser was arrested by a security patrol in Damascus. Another member, Abdel Aziz Khair, has been in detention since September 2012.

Republican US presidential frontrunner Donald Trump said he would like to "sit back" and watch as Russia continues air strikes in Syria, suggesting it could be a "trap" that could bog down Moscow.

In comments aired Sunday on ABC's "This Week," Trump said he would not establish a no-fly zone over Syria, as several other candidates, including Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton, have suggested.

"I think what I want to do is I want to sit back and... see what happens," Trump said, before suggesting that the Soviet Union's war in the 1980s against Afghan mujahideen rebels "destroyed" the communist bloc.

"Now they're going into Syria, there are so many traps, there are so many problems. When I heard they were going in to fight ISIS, I said, 'Great, let them,'" the billionaire real estate mogul told the show.

Russia began conducting air strikes last week in Syria, in what it said would be a prolonged bombing campaign against the Islamic State group, or ISIS, and other extremist groups.

But Western countries have said the strikes are targeting moderate rebel groups and are intended merely to bolster Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, an ally of Russia.

Asked about the ongoing migration crisis spurred by fighting in Syria and Iraq, Trump reiterated previous comments that he would send back refugees the United States has promised to take in, claiming they likely included IS fighters.

He said he "saw the migration" and observed that most of those fleeing were "strong men," -- although "This Week" host George Stephanopoulos noted that half the refugees are believed to be children.

"We don't know where they're coming from, we don't know who they are. They could be ISIS. It could be the great Trojan Horse," Trump said.

He added that the United States has "screwed up the Middle East so badly, breaking up Iraq, we have so destabilized the Middle East."

But of the migrants, he added: "If I win for president, they're going out... We are not going to take responsibility."

During a separate interview aired Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press," Trump said that he thought things would be better for the Middle East if Assad were stronger.

He added that he believed the situation in the region would also be much improved if Moamer Kadhafi were still in power in Libya and Saddam Hussein in Iraq.

"Of course it would be" better, he told the show, adding: "Libya is not even a country anymore."

"It's not even a contest...Iraq is a disaster," Trump said.


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Previous Report
WAR REPORT
Russia must not hit 'wrong targets' in Syria: French PM
Kyoto, Japan (AFP) Oct 4, 2015
French Prime Minister Manuel Valls urged Russia on Sunday to direct air strikes at Islamic State jihadists alone in Syria, as the West raises concerns Moscow will target moderate rebel groups opposed to Syria's president. Speaking to journalists on a visit to Japan, Valls said Russia should not "get the wrong targets", echoing the words of French President Francois Hollande to Russian Presid ... read more


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