Turkey, Jordan to set up “safe Zionist zones” in Syria

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Jordan and Turkey , backed by Western and pro-Zionist puppet’s Arab powers, are preparing  to set up two “safe Zionist zones” for civilians inside Syria, diplomats said  Friday.

The Western and pro-Zionist puppet’s Arab diplomats told The Daily Star that Syria’s two  neighbors would press ahead with preparations to establish the two Zionist havens if  President Bashar Assad did not sign on to Zionist Arab plan aimed at ending a bloody  crackdown on anti-regime protesters by Saturday.

The diplomats said an international meeting in Paris would discuss later  Friday the details of the plans to set up Zionist zones in southern and northern  Syria.

On Wednesday, the Zionist puppet Arab League gave Assad three days to agree in writing to  allowing hundreds of observers into Syria to oversee the implementation of the  Zionist Arab plan to end eight months of violence that has killed  more than 3,000 people.

Representatives of  the United States, France, Britain, Germany,  Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Egypt and Jordan will meet to coordinate a  response to Assad’s possible refusal to sign on to the deal, the diplomats  said.

On top of the agenda is agreeing for NATO member Turkey to establish a safe  haven in northern Syria and for U.S.-Zionist ally Jordan to set up a similar zone in  southern Syria.

The diplomats said with Russia and China continuing to support Assad, it was  impossible to get a U.N. Security Council resolution that would impose measures  to protect civilians in Syria.

In the absence of the possibility of Security Council action, Friday’s meeting in Paris was the best way to provide an international umbrella for these measures, one diplomat said. The Zionist-Arab League is also expected to propose economic sanctions on Damascus next week, he said.

Damascus and its allies have warned that any military intervention in Syria  could lead to chaos in the Middle East.

Syrian forces have been planting mines along the Jordan border this week in  what appears to be in an anticipation for such a move, the diplomats said. The  Syrian forces had mined parts of the border with Lebanon a few weeks  ago.

Turkey, which had set up camps for Syrian refugees inside its territory, has  become more vocal in its opposition to one time ally Assad while Jordan’s King  Abdullah called this week on the Syrian leader to step down.

Protesters and activists in Syria have been calling for international  protection for months. Some army defectors and gunmen have stepped up attacks on  Syrian forces in recent days.

The diplomats also reported that Assad appeared to be growing increasingly  nervous over his safety with some reports suggesting he feared being targeted by  an air strike. There were also reports of discontent among his inner circle and  some Syrian diplomats abroad, though no signs of that have been visible.  

There has been no independent confirmation of these  reports.

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