I pray for the Christians of Syria. I am a member of the Syriac Solidarity Council (Lebanon) group on Facebook so I often get these kinds of reports from Christians there of all communions, and it is hard to read and see. The Turks bombed Qamishli, once the stronghold of Syriac Christianity in the region (founded by survivors of the Sayfo/Syrian Genocide done by the Turks at the same time as the more well-known Armenian Genocide). Some of the Christians were killed. There are almost no Christians there now.
To cheer on what is happening in Syria (for whatever reason, like this stupid "culture of death" thing) is to celebrate the death of Christianity in the region for external political purposes (what Erdogan wants, what Trump wants, etc. -- all of these people who are
not Syrians). It's horrible. Lord have mercy.
I like HH Moran Mor Ignatius Aphrem II's take on the situation in the country, from
an interview HH gave a few years ago when the conflict was newer:
“Syria belongs to its people. And its people should be able to come together and rebuild it again. If the Syrian people are left for themselves, with support from the international community, without taking sides, I believe they will be able to pull together, establish peace and rebuild Syria. People need to be assured that they can trust each other and work together. As religious leaders we have a role to bring people together to show them it’s still possible to accept each other.”
Syria belongs to its people. Its people need protection to stay in their own country, and that should be given to all, but they and their country should not be used as pawns in wider world politics. Turkey's actions are an invasion, and they need to leave. The only "human garbage" in this situation are the terrorists like Jabhat el Nusra, FSA, etc. and wannabe dictators like Erdogan. Syria opened its borders to the the Syriacs and Armenians who had come from Turkey. We should remember that.