Monday, February 23, 2026

European Anti-Terror Police Just Raided a Charity Helping Middle Eastern Christians.

PULSE POINTS

❓WHAT HAPPENED: Anti-terror police in France raided a charity that aids persecuted Christians in the Middle East over allegations the group gave money to elements of the former Bashar al-Assad government in Syria.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: SOS ChrĂ©tiens d’Orient and its president, Charles de Meyer, French anti-terror police, and leftist media outlet Mediapart.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The raids took place over the weekend in France.

đź’¬KEY QUOTE: “How could a Christian NGO defending Christians and working for peace be complicit in war crimes and crimes against humanity! These qualifications demonstrate the folly of such suspicions. Totally delusional!” – SOS Chretien d’Orient.

🎯IMPACT: The raid is just the latest in an alarming trend of anti-Christian attitudes and attacks in France.

IN FULL

French authorities have launched an investigation into SOS Chrétiens d’Orient, a France-based Christian aid association, over allegations that it may have channeled donor funds to militias that supported former President Bashar al-Assad in Syria. Between Tuesday and Thursday, investigators carried out “several search operations within associations, including the French association SOS Chrétiens d’Orient, companies or at the homes of individuals, as well as several hearings as witnesses or defendants,” the national anti‑terror prosecutor’s office (PNAT) confirmed over the weekend.

The inquiry focuses on whether some of the charity’s funds were diverted to the National Defence Forces (NDF), a militia aligned with Assad. French media outlets report that the investigation is being handled by the Central Office for the Fight against Crimes against Humanity, Genocide and War Crimes (OCLCH).

“How could a Christian NGO defending Christians and working for peace be complicit in war crimes and crimes against humanity! These qualifications demonstrate the folly of such suspicions. Totally delusional!” the charity said in a statement, blaming leftist media group Mediapart for harassing them and their members for a vicious hit piece.

Charles de Meyer, president of the association, acknowledged that his computer was among the items seized by the police and confirmed he was questioned as a suspect.

The case takes place against a backdrop of growing anti‑Christian incidents in France. Churches in the country have been targeted many times in recent years—according to the Observatory of Intolerance and Discrimination Against Christians in Europe, nine churches across the continent were struck by arson attacks in a three‑week span from late August to mid‑September of last year, including one targeting the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Saint‑Omer, France.

During the opening of the Paris Olympics last summer, organizers apologized after a performance was interpreted as mocking the Last Supper. The director of the ceremony defended the scene as inspired by pagan themes, claiming it was not intended to target Christianity.

Image by Bito Bito.

Join Pulse+ to comment below, and receive exclusive e-mail analyses.

show less
show more

The Islamist Persecution of Christians in Syria is the Rotten Fruit of U.S. Foreign Policy.

The new Islamist regime in Syria’s genocide of the country’s ancient and indigenous Christian population is a direct result of long-standing United States foreign policy in the Middle East. While U.S. government officials insisted the ouster of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad in December last year would not result in reprisals against Syrian Christians and other minority groups, including the Alawite Muslim sect to which Assad belonged, over 1,000 religious and ethnic minorities have been killed since late last week.

According to human rights observers, Christians, Alawites, and other minorities have been targeted by Syria’s Islamist government security forces as they also clash with pro-Assad fighters in coastal enclaves. During her Senate confirmation hearing earlier this year, President Donald J. Trump‘s Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, warned that the United States’s decade-long policy of backing al-Qaeda-aligned forces against the Assad regime could embolden the Islamist fighters to carry out genocidal attacks against Syria’s Christians and other minorities once they were in power.

“I have no love for Assad or any dictator. I just hate al-Qaeda. I hate that our leaders cozy up to Islamist extremists, calling them ‘rebels’, as Jake Sullivan said to Hillary Clinton, ‘al Qaeda is on our side in Syria,'” Gabbard said. She added: “Syria is now controlled by al-Qaeda offshoot HTS, led by an Islamist Jihadist who danced in the streets on 9/11, and who was responsible for the killing of many American soldiers.”

LEGACY OF THE IRAQ WAR.

Since the 2003 invasion of Iraq under former President George W. Bush, the United States has funneled weapons and provided military training for several Islamic extremist organizations aligned against Iraq’s late dictator, Saddam Hussein, Syria’s Assad, and the Islamic Republic of Iran. While American government officials were aware of the extremist nature of the Islamist groups, they were viewed as useful assets in undermining Iranian-aligned forces.

In Iraq, the United States’s policy of aggressive de-Bathification resulted in thousands of Sunni Muslim soldiers and government workers being forced into unemployment. Subsequently, these Sunni Muslim men flocked to the Islamic State group (ISIS), and in 2014, ISIS overran the cities of Fallujah and Mosul—effectively capturing a large swath of northern Iraq. However, during his first term in the White House, President Donald J. Trump effectively ended ISIS’s presence in Iraq—culminating in the 2019 death of the group’s leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

REGIME CHANGE IN SYRIA.

Meanwhile, following the outbreak of the Syrian Civil War in 2011, the United States actively backed the Free Syrian Army (FSA)—a decentralized coalition of rebel groups that included Islamist forces associated with al-Qaeda. U.S. policy in Syria culminated in the shocking December 2024 overthrow of Bashar al-Assad with Abu Mohammad al-Julani—leader of the al-Qaeda franchise Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), formerly al-Nusra—declaring himself the country’s interim President.

While al-Julani initially claimed he would ensure the protection of Syrian Christians and other minority groups, that pledge appears to have been entirely discarded. Human rights groups dedicated to protecting the Middle East’s Christian minorities contend that al-Julani’s security forces are using the clashes with pro-Assad forces as cover to carry out a genocidal campaign and have wiped out numerous Christian villages. Even more troubling is that the weapons being used to carry out the religious and ethnic genocide may have been—at least in part—provided by the U.S. government.

show less
The new Islamist regime in Syria's genocide of the country's ancient and indigenous Christian population is a direct result of long-standing United States foreign policy in the Middle East. While U.S. government officials insisted the ouster of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad in December last year would not result in reprisals against Syrian Christians and other minority groups, including the Alawite Muslim sect to which Assad belonged, over 1,000 religious and ethnic minorities have been killed since late last week. show more

RECEIPTS: Media Tries to Smear Trump Cabinet Nominee, Admits Malpractice on E-Mail.

An email exchange between Trump transition team spokeswoman Alexa Henning and Newsweek reporter Sophie Grace Clark appears to expose a concerted effort to smear Director of National Intelligence (DNI) nominee Tulsi Gabbard as a pro-Russia, pro-Assad flunkie.

Clark alleges in now-published e-mails that her story is “merely providing context around [Gabbard’s] choice” as a cabinet pick, but  the London-based reporter, formerly of “celeb” magazines such as OK!, outright rejected materials provided by the Trump transition that undermine her claims.

Clark reached out to the Trump transition team, indicating they were running a story on Gabbard allegedly spreading pro-Russia and pro-Assad propaganda. However, when the Trump transition team requested specific quotes and examples from Newsweek, Clark responded with another of her articles making the same baseless claims, according to a post by Henning on X (formerly Twitter). The materials provided by Newsweek, Henning charges, take Gabbard out of context and truncate quotes to make them appear supportive of Putin and Assad.


In response, Henning supplied Clark with exact quotes from Trump’s DNI nominee, which clearly show her referring to Assad as a “brutal dictator” who “has used chemical weapons against his people.” Additionally, Henning provided Clark with Gabbard’s full quote regarding a meeting with Assad, in which the DNI nominee clearly states that it was done “in the pursuit of national security and the pursuit of preventing more of our brothers and sisters from being sent into harm’s way on missions that make our country less safe… .”

Additionally, Henning provided admissions by the U.S. government regarding the presence of bio labs in Ukraine.

Despite these direct quotes and statements contradicting the crux of her story, Clark published the smear against Gabbard anyway. When Henning asked if she included the direct quotes provided, Clark replied, “That is not what the story is about. I’m merely providing context around her choice as a cabinet pick.”

Image by Gage Skidmore.

show less
An email exchange between Trump transition team spokeswoman Alexa Henning and Newsweek reporter Sophie Grace Clark appears to expose a concerted effort to smear Director of National Intelligence (DNI) nominee Tulsi Gabbard as a pro-Russia, pro-Assad flunkie. show more

Pentagon Admits There Are Over 1,000 More U.S. Troops in Syria than Previously Claimed.

The Pentagon has disclosed a significant increase in the number of U.S. troops stationed in Syria, totaling around 2,000 personnel. This figure exceeds previous counts of approximately 900, as reported to the media over recent months. Pentagon Press Secretary Brig. Gen. Ryder addressed the discrepancy during a briefing on Thursday, claiming that the previously unreported forces are temporary rotational deployments adapting to mission needs, unlike the core contingent on longer missions.

Ryder highlighted that U.S. deployments, including those in Syria, may vary due to diplomatic and operational considerations. These additional forces were present before President Bashar al-Assad fled to Russia as his regime collapsed under the pressure of a jihadist offensive. According to the Pentagon, the U.S. troops are mostly involved in missions aimed to continue diminishing Islamic State (ISIS) capabilities in the region.

The revelation occurs amidst a heightened focus on Syria following Assad’s departure. Turkish military actions against the U.S.-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have escalated, posing a threat to security in the region. SDF Commander Gen. Mazloum Abdi cautioned that Kurdish fighters’ potential withdrawal could facilitate an ISIS resurgence. He noted reduced guard numbers at key detention facilities like the Raqqa ISIS prison, emphasizing the growing vulnerability of those sites.

If Kurdish forces, threatened by Turkish hostility, are compelled to retreat by Turkey and its jihadist proxies, U.S. forces may face withdrawal as well.

U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. William Howard.

show less
The Pentagon has disclosed a significant increase in the number of U.S. troops stationed in Syria, totaling around 2,000 personnel. This figure exceeds previous counts of approximately 900, as reported to the media over recent months. Pentagon Press Secretary Brig. Gen. Ryder addressed the discrepancy during a briefing on Thursday, claiming that the previously unreported forces are temporary rotational deployments adapting to mission needs, unlike the core contingent on longer missions. show more

Alleged Syrian Mass Graves Reveal Atrocities Comparable to Nazi Era, Prosecutor Claims.

A former U.S. war crimes ambassador has claimed that mass graves have been discovered in Syria, alleging at least 100,000 people were tortured and killed by the former al-Assad regime. Stephen Rapp, former U.S. war crimes ambassador, described the situation as a “system of state terror.” The graves, uncovered by Syrian Civil Defense teams, known as the White Helmets, reportedly contained remains showing signs of widespread torture and death.

Over 100,000 individuals are believed to have been tortured and killed under Assad’s regime, referred to by Rapp as a “machinery of death.” The regime, spanning Bashar al-Assad and his late father’s rule, has been accused of executing political prisoners and conducting systematic disappearances since Syria’s civil war began in 2011. Assad, now in Russia, has consistently denied these accusations.

The International Commission on Missing Persons, based in The Hague, has received reports of 66 mass grave sites in Syria. It has collected data on 28,200 individuals reported missing by Syrian families.

Reports from Syria remain somewhat unreliable, however, as the rebels, led by al-Qaeda franchise Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), consolidate their power. CNN, for example, aired footage reportedly showing a prisoner being freed from prison, but it later emerged that the man was a member of the former Assad regime. The man was also accused of torturing and extorting locals.

show less
A former U.S. war crimes ambassador has claimed that mass graves have been discovered in Syria, alleging at least 100,000 people were tortured and killed by the former al-Assad regime. Stephen Rapp, former U.S. war crimes ambassador, described the situation as a "system of state terror." The graves, uncovered by Syrian Civil Defense teams, known as the White Helmets, reportedly contained remains showing signs of widespread torture and death. show more

Syria’s Alawite Minority Looking to Migrate Under New Al-Qaeda Regime.

Members of Syria’s Alawite minority in the Latakia region, once a stronghold of the Assads in Syria, claim to be pleased the family‘s reign has been ended, but many fear reprisals from the incoming jihadist-led regime. Alawism is an offshoot of Shia Islam that believes in a kind of trinity that has incarnated multiple times. Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), the former al-Qaeda franchise that took control of Damascus on December 8, is Sunni and regards the Alawites as heretics.

Fabrice Balanche, from France’s University Lumière Lyon 2, estimates the Alawite population to be approximately 1.7 million, about nine percent of Syrians. The community’s historical ties to the Assad family, serving as its “Praetorian Guard,” are raising fears the Sunni majority will exact collective revenge on them under HTS.

HTS, originating from the Al-Nusra Front, a former Al-Qaeda franchise, is claiming it will tolerate non-Sunni communities by pledging to protect their rights. However, it has targeted the Druze and other religious minorities in the past. Within Syria, many Alawites have sought refuge in areas like Latakia, where their numbers are greater, fearing past violence might recur. Many told the AFP that they or their relatives and associates hope to leave the country altogether. “I can see the comments online saying ‘Your turn is coming’ or ‘We will kill you’,” said one Alawite university student in the country.

Alawite religious leaders have requested amnesty and safe return assurances for all displaced individuals.

In the early stages of the rebel offensive, the United Nations (UN) warned that renewed hostilities could cause 1.5 million Syrians to migrate, with many likely to end up in Western countries. Around a million, mostly Sunni Syrians, migrated to Europe during the 2015-16 migrant crisis, with family chain migration eventually swelling their numbers to around 4.5 million.

Image by Beshr Abdulhadi.

show less
Members of Syria's Alawite minority in the Latakia region, once a stronghold of the Assads in Syria, claim to be pleased the family's reign has been ended, but many fear reprisals from the incoming jihadist-led regime. Alawism is an offshoot of Shia Islam that believes in a kind of trinity that has incarnated multiple times. Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), the former al-Qaeda franchise that took control of Damascus on December 8, is Sunni and regards the Alawites as heretics. show more

Assad Breaks Silence, Claims He Intended to Continue Fighting from Russian Base.

Former Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad has issued his first statement since his ouster by Turkey-backed jihadist rebels, denying he fled the country as “part of a plan” and claiming he initially intended to carry on fighting from the Alawite heartland of Latakia. “As terrorism spread across Syria and ultimately reached Damascus on the evening of Saturday 7 December 2024, questions arose about the president’s fate and whereabouts,” reads the statement—posted to a Telegram account associated with the Syrian presidency but not yet independently verified. It complains of “a flood of misinformation and narratives far removed from the truth, aimed at recasting international terrorism as a liberation revolution for Syria.”

Assad, if he is the author of the statement, said he traveled to the Russian airbase of Hmeimim in Latakia, only hours after rebel forces had entered Damascus, intending to “oversee combat operations.” Latakia is home to most of Syria’s Alawite minority, which the Assad clan hails from, and he may have hoped members of the Shia offshoot sect would offer stiffer resistance to the mostly Sunni jihadists of the HayĘĽat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) group than government forces elsewhere.

However, Assad claims he found that Syrian soldiers had already left their posts and that the Russians made the decision to exfiltrate after Hmeimim began to be targeted by drones.

“With no viable means of leaving the base, Moscow requested that the base’s command arrange an immediate evacuation to Russia on the evening of Sunday 8 December,” Assad said. “This took place a day after the fall of Damascus, following the collapse of the final military positions and the resulting paralysis of all remaining state institutions.”

NO PLAN TO LEAVE. 

“At no point during these events did I consider stepping down or seeking refuge, nor was such a proposal made by any individual or part,” Assad insisted, claiming that, in his mind, the “only course of action was to continue fighting against the terrorist onslaught,” and he “did not leave the country as part of a plan as it was reported earlier.”

The whereabouts of Assad, his wife Asma, and their three children were initially unclear. Russian officials later confirmed their departure following negotiations with rebels. There are concerns hundreds of thousands of Syrians, including Alawites like Assad, may attempt to leave the country like their former leader, fearing reprisals by the al-Qaeda-linked new regime.

READ:

Image by watchsmart. 

show less
Former Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad has issued his first statement since his ouster by Turkey-backed jihadist rebels, denying he fled the country as "part of a plan" and claiming he initially intended to carry on fighting from the Alawite heartland of Latakia. "As terrorism spread across Syria and ultimately reached Damascus on the evening of Saturday 7 December 2024, questions arose about the president's fate and whereabouts," reads the statement—posted to a Telegram account associated with the Syrian presidency but not yet independently verified. It complains of "a flood of misinformation and narratives far removed from the truth, aimed at recasting international terrorism as a liberation revolution for Syria." show more

REPORT: CNN Freed Notorious Assad Torturer, Claimed He Was an Imprisoned Dissident.

CNN, which continues to bleed viewers and struggle to remain solvent, claimed a man in Syria they helped free last week was a political prisoner of the Assad regime. However, the individual is now believed to be a notorious regime torturer who disguised himself to evade capture.

In a video that has gone viral online, CNN journalist Clarissa Ward and a camera crew—accompanied by a Syrian rebel solider—help escort a man identifying himself as Adel Ghurbal from a Damascus prison. According to Ghurbal, he had been imprisoned 90 days before the fall of the Syrian capital and was confined to a windowless cell. However, the man’s behavior appeared strange to many who viewed the video.

While Ghurbal claimed to have not seen sunlight in 90 days, he didn’t wince when outdoors in the sun again. Additionally, Ghurbal was well groomed for someone confined to a damp and dark cell for three months—his hair and fingernails appeared well-kept, and he showed no signs of torture commonly seen in other prisons freed by the rebels.

NOTORIOUS TORTURER.

However, analysis by the independent Syrian civil war fact checker Verify-Sy suggests that the prisoner’s real name is not Adel Ghurbal at all. Instead, the man in the video is actually believed to be Salama Mohammad Salama. A first lieutenant in Syrian Air Force intelligence, Salama is an alleged war criminal and one of the Assad regime’s top torturers, who would often extort prisoners for money in exchange for not torturing them.

According to local Damascus residents, Salama was confined in the prison for just a few weeks following a dispute with a superior over dividing the extortion money.

CNN says it is aware that the man in its video may have given a false identity and is investigating the matter.

WATCH:

show less
CNN, which continues to bleed viewers and struggle to remain solvent, claimed a man in Syria they helped free last week was a political prisoner of the Assad regime. However, the individual is now believed to be a notorious regime torturer who disguised himself to evade capture. show more

WATCH: Syrians Burn Tomb of Assad’s Father.

Jihadist rebels in Syria have set the tomb of Hafez al-Assad, the former dictator and father of ousted President Bashar al-Assad, on fire. Rebels, led by al-Qaeda re-brand Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), took control of Syria after Assad fled to Russia.

Video footage shared on social media shows members of the rebels setting the tomb of Hafez al-Assad on fire in Qardaha, in the Latakia region, a stronghold of Syria’s Alawite minority.

Hafez al-Assad, a member of the Alawite minority, was the dictator of Syria from 1971 until 2000 when his son Bashar was declared President. Since the fall of the Assad government, rebels have taken to the streets to destroy statues and images of both Assad and his father across the country.

The rebels, which were partially trained by the Ukrainian armed forces, are wanted terrorists in many countries. Their leader, Abu Mohammad al-Julani, declared in 2018 that he and HTS aimed to conquer Jerusalem following the conquest of Damascus.

“Allah willing, we will reach not only Damascus. Jerusalem awaits us as well. Every bullet we fire here will reverberate throughout the Islamic world. Your place as a Jihad fighter on this blessed land is in itself a grace of Allah, Who chose you from among billions of people,” he said.

Following the Islamist rebels’ victory, several countries have begun freezing asylum claims from Syrian nationals, including the United Kingdom and Germany, which has the largest population of Syrians in Europe.

It remains to be seen how the rebels will treat minorities like the Alawites, Syrian Christians, Druze, and others.

show less
Jihadist rebels in Syria have set the tomb of Hafez al-Assad, the former dictator and father of ousted President Bashar al-Assad, on fire. Rebels, led by al-Qaeda re-brand Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), took control of Syria after Assad fled to Russia. show more

John Bolton is Going ABSOLUTELY NUTS Over Tulsi Gabbard.

Neocon John Bolton, the former security adviser to President Donald J. Trump, is furious about President-elect Donald J. Trump’s Director of National Intelligence pick, Tulsi Gabbard, following the fall of Bashar al-Assad in Syria. Bolton alleged on Sunday that Gabbard has “an inclination to believe the most outrageous propaganda against the United States by some of its strongest enemies,” claiming there are “serious questions about her judgment.”

Trump transition spokesman Alexa Henning dismissed Bolton as “irrelevant,” saying, “him saying he would write in Dick Cheney for president this year should tell you everything you need to know about his disastrous and failed foreign policy instincts of never-ending wars and more American deaths.”

Bolton has cheerleaded for every major U.S. war for decades, steadfastly supporting the disastrous Iraq War in 2003. He has actively opposed President Trump since Trump fired him from his role as National Security Adviser in 2019.

Despite being an avid war enthusiast, Bolton avoided serving in the Vietnam War—which he supported—in his youth, stating he “had no desire to die in a southeast Asian rice paddy.”

By contrast, Tulsi Gabbard served in the Iraq War and is still a Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve. She has been a vocal critic of foreign conflicts, including the escalation against Russia in Ukraine.

The former Democrat congresswoman met with Assad in 2017 after it had become evident that many of the rebels opposing him were jihadists. Notably, she expressed skepticism over claims that the Syrian leader had used chemical weapons during the country’s civil war. Organization for Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) whistleblowers have also cast doubt over the evidence for these alleged chemical attacks.

Gabbard describes neoconservative critics such as John Bolton and Dick Cheney as “warmongers.”

Jack Montgomery contributed to this report. 

Image by Gage Skidmore.

show less
Neocon John Bolton, the former security adviser to President Donald J. Trump, is furious about President-elect Donald J. Trump's Director of National Intelligence pick, Tulsi Gabbard, following the fall of Bashar al-Assad in Syria. Bolton alleged on Sunday that Gabbard has "an inclination to believe the most outrageous propaganda against the United States by some of its strongest enemies," claiming there are "serious questions about her judgment." show more