Aleppo May be Over in a Few Days as the US is Whining About Terrorists Dying

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
December 14, 2016

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At last.

This is finally ending.

ZOG has lost.

RT:

The situation in eastern Aleppo may be resolved in two to three days, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said. The Russian Reconciliation Center reported earlier that about 6,000 civilians have been evacuated from militant-controlled areas in the last 24 hours.

“I hope that the situation in Aleppo will be resolved in two to three days. [Russia] has created humanitarian corridors [in Aleppo] that have been and are being used by tens of thousands of civilians,” Lavrov said, adding that guarantees of safety have been given to militants who voluntarily lay down their arms, and corridors have also been organized for them to safely leave the city.

Lavrov was speaking before participants of the annual Dialogue for the Future Research and Education Program.

At the same time, Lavrov stressed that the crisis can only be solved by political means.

“This concerns Syria, this concerns Libya, Yemen, Iraq,” he said, adding “what is happening in these countries, especially in Iraq – the attempt to take the city of Mosul – is no less dramatic.”

“No one in Iraq, Libya, or Yemen demands a ceasefire, or a week or two of complete ‘silence,’ before negotiations. But in Syria they call for it,” he said.

According to Lavrov, demands for such a ‘silence’ are being made simply so that the militants can “take a breath” and be resupplied with new weapons and ammunition.

“It happened in Palmyra. When the highly promoted operation to free Mosul was stopped, the city wasn’t encircled and one corridor was left for the bandits – Islamic State fighters who, safe and sound, exited through it and headed to Palmyra, getting a signal that Mosul wouldn’t be captured now.”

Yeah.

Gotta let those terrorists out.

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RT has done a new interview with Assad. It airs later today, but they’ve released a section of it which is probably the most interesting part (as the most interesting part is what usually gets released first).

RT:

RT: Palmyra is another troubled region now, and it’s now [being] taken by ISIS, but we don’t hear a lot of condemnation about it.

President Assad: Exactly, because if it was captured by the government they would be worrying about the heritage. If we liberate Aleppo from the terrorists, the western officials and the mainstream media, they are going to be worrying about the civilians. They do not worry when the opposite happens, when the terrorists are killing those civilians or attacking Palmyra and destroying the human heritage, not only the Syrian heritage.

[The Palmyra offensive of] ISIS, if you look at the timing of their attack is related to what is happening in Aleppo. This is the response to what is happening in Aleppo – the advancement of the Syrian Arab Army – and they wanted to undermine the victory in Aleppo and at the same time to distract the Syrian Army from Aleppo to make it more toward Palmyra and stop the advancement. But, of course, it did not work.

RT: Western countries have been repeatedly asking Russia and Iran to put pressure on you to, as they put it, stop the violence. Just recently, six western nations asked Russia and Iran again to put pressure on you, asking for a ceasefire in Aleppo. At the time when your army was progressing, they were asking for a ceasefire.

Assad: It’s always important in politics to read between the lines, not to be literal. It doesn’t matter what they ask. The translation of their statement is for Russia [to] “please, stop the advancement of the Syrian Army against the terrorists.” That is the meaning of their statement, forget about the rest: “You went too far in defeating the terrorists, that shouldn’t happen. You should tell the Syrians to stop this. We have to keep the terrorists and to save them.”

Yeah, they aren’t even really masking it.

It’s pretty literal.

Ah well. I’m glad this is ending. I’m pretty sick of reporting on it. It’s a very complicated situation, and I just don’t have time to know a lot about every situation that is happening, nor do I have an expert on Middle East affairs to write for the site (I would like to get one), so I’m stuck just writing superficial reports, which is boring to me.

Here’s a good interview with Peskov on these issues – and Donald Trump.