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Sayyed Nasrallah Clarifies Hezbollah's Position towards Situation in Syria - ENG Subs

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Uploaded by on Nov 19, 2011

The Secretary General of Hezbollah, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, explains the criteria which determines his party's position towards all the Arab revolutions and uprisings. In this video, Sayyed Nasrallah focuses on the protests in Syria, and responds to accusations of double standards against Hezbollah in this regard.

This was an excerpt from an interview of Sayyed Nasrallah by Al-Manar Tv on the 24th of October 2011.

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Uploader Comments (TheKeysToEternity)

  • Everything he said in this interview is irrelevant, as thousands of innocent people are being killed by the Syrian government's forces. Kids, mothers, fathers, loved ones grieving. Even if the Assads were angels in the past, and defended Palestine in the past and are willing to make reforms, how can you turn a blind eye to the *current* actions of the Syrian regime? How can you turn a blind eye to innocent kids bleeding? Laa hawla wa laa quwwata ilaa billaah.

  • @haqqulyaqeen Why are these children dying? Can we only blame fire from government forces for these deaths? Is there not blame for the armed opposition groups? Let's move out of the small details and look at the greater picture, otherwise, we will drown in details and lose sight of truth and falsehood, and be fooled by the great game being played against Syria and the Ummah by the U.S., Israel, the EU, 'Moderate' Arab countries, and Al-Qaeda even!

  • who blocks the comments on this site?

  • @Sockevollpopcorn1 No one blocks the comments on this video, they are merely moderated before going public by myself, because there are people who don't know how to speak decently unfortunately.

  • The Assad Regime is a fake Sadam Hussain Regime. Both are Baathist Arab Nationalist. Even Saddam was more nationalistic .Both are or were minority sects in there country. Both aliened themselves with other minorities like christians and majority sect puppets and clerics. I mean the former iraqi foreign minister was a christian. Both killed a lot of the majority sects. Assad senior killed 1982 about 47000 sunnis in Hama alone. Not to mention torturing them. Saddam did the same. Maybe more.

  • @Sockevollpopcorn1 The Hezbollah movement does not reject or justify any of the awful crimes done by Hafez Al-Assad or by the current regime, nor does it essentially endorse the ideology of that regime (Bathist Arab Nationalism) - this is well known. The historic relationship between Hezbollah and Syria is based on a strategic cooperation in the face of continous American-Israeli projects for the region. Even now, the larger interest of all of the regional people is still to support Assad.

Top Comments

  • @FadiLebanese Truth be told you'd be a sniveling servant of Israel if it wasn't for this man & Hizb'Allah that's if you actually are Lebanese, I can't tell through all the mainstream propaganda and agenda in your words. If you can deny what happened in 2006 then your'e truly beyond help.

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All Comments (33)

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  • If the current Syrian regime survives the opposition it will truly be an exception. It would show the limits of Western influence, in the same way that Iran's nuclear program is being handled with 'care'.

  • @drsymab1 All I can see is the children and innocents of Syria with their bodies bleeding and body parts missing! My sister/my brother, the talk Nasrallah gave is eloquent but where is the help to the children of Syria? Please my brothers and sisters, stand for what is right and you will truly be of "Hizbullah" - the Party of Allah!

  • alah ye7mik ya saied ya 7eme l 2ome l2eslemye , ana w wlede fidek .

  • @Sockevollpopcorn1 remember what happen in Hama 1981 before the 1982 hama uprising led by Muslim brotherhood a Sunni terrorist group. either someone is not telling you the whole story or your being selective on your facts.

  • @ZENICA95 in lebanon it's the sunni and christians the march 14th camp against hezbollah, so get your facts straight before you want to talk your rubbish.

  • @TheKeysToEternity Beautiful answer

  • @TheKeys ToEternityThe Assad Regime is a wannabe Sadam Regime. Both are Baathist Arab Nationalist. Even Saddam was more nationalistic.Both are or were minority sects in there country. Both aliened themselves with other minorities like christians and majority sect puppets and clerics. I mean the former iraqi foreign minister was a christian. Both killed a lot of the majority sects. Assad senior killed 1982 about 47000 sunnis in Hama alone. Not to mention torturing them. As Saddam did to shia.

  • @TheKeysToEternity In principle I appreciate you allowing me to post my comments and express my opinion freely. But what you cannot dispute is that if we were having this debate in Syria I would be very likely killed by now or the best scenario put in prison.Is it too much to wish for the Syrian's the same freedoms we enjoy?.NOW! Expressing an opinion does not require years, months or days to be made legal. That would be step that will show the opposition that the regime is serious about change.

  • @FadiLebanese It is the same excuse, but nevertheless, it is a credible excuse and the question still remains: how can a regime carry out reforms while there are armed groups fighting it in the country? Its impossible, it wont happen in any other country. As for killing protesters, put it this way, we know that the Syrian regime is not a bed of roses! But the alternative to toppling this regime now is either civil war, the division of Syria, or a client American-Israeli state.

  • @FadiLebanese In your heart, you know that loyalty is a false word to use in this context. Sorry, that doesn't make sense my friend, its obvious that the Syrian regime is the one that decides whether Lebanese would be allowed to enter its borders during the July War. Anyway, this is just a small example of the decisive and strategic role that the regime has played agaisnt the American-Israeli project, at least beginning from 1982.

  • @FadiLebanese What is clear from the realities on the ground is that many Syrians have come out in large numbers in Damascus, Aleppo & many othe Syrian cities and towns, to express support for the efforts of the regime to begin reforms. No one isjustifying the mistakes of the past that they have done, even Assad himself admits to these mistakes. Also, when you mention 'international observers', it is out of the question, becoz the West has proven their ill-intentions for the resistant regime.

  • @TheKeysToEternity : On the second point that Syria cannot reform while there is uprising,don't you think this excuse is the same one used for 40 yrs by Al Assad dynasty that they cannot remove emergency laws because they are at war with Israel, even though no bullet was ever fired!? Or the excuse that the Bahraini regime uses to oppress the Shia majority. Sayyed Nasrallah, shouldn't indiscriminate killing of armless protesters on the street (thousands on youtube videos) be one of your criteria?

  • @ZENICA95 Yeah, that's why people like Nasr'Allah fight for the rights of Palestinians. Because shi'as are against muslims? I'm sure in your world that makes perfect sense. It's people who spread this hatred who are the real enemy!

  • @FadiLebanese The Sayyed spoke for 14 mins and that paragraph is what you deduced?! Clearly you weren't listening.

  • I appreciate Hesbollah's and Nasrallah's loyalty to Syrian regime, but it is the syrian people who welcomed us in their homes and gave us money when we ran for cover during our wars with Israel, they build our roads and houses after the war, they got treated awful after death of Hariri...our loyalty is with the Syrian people not the regime. And no one can deny the Syrian regime is extremely aggressive to its people...so how people cannot see the correlation?

  • @TheKeysToEternity The first lessons in logical arguments, if the individual elements are wrong than the summation of the them is wrong. If really Al Assad regime is welcomed by the majority of Syrian, why they would not allow anyone to stand against him in elections, why no mult-party system allowed, and finally why not allow open free election open to international observers to finally put that answer to rest.

  • Salam to Syed Hassan Nasrallah and his clarification for his stance on syria. Long live Hassan Nasrallah and Bashar al asad and death to USA and Israel.

  • @ZENICA95 Please stop supporting the American-Israeli project in the region with your incorrect comments!

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