The Cover-Up: Evidence Points to Syrian Government Involvement in Church Attack
While Syrian authorities quickly blamed the Islamic State for the June 22, 2025 suicide bombing that killed 25 Christians and injured 63 others during Divine Liturgy at Mar Elias Greek Orthodox Church in Damascus, members of Syria’s Christian community allege the attack was a government-orchestrated false flag meant to terrorize minorities while preserving plausible deniability.
Christian sources are openly challenging the official narrative. “This statement by the government is a lie, and the Julani government’s narrative should not be conveyed because we give them legitimacy,” one source said.
The reference to “Julani” invokes President al-Sharaa’s former nom de guerre, Abu Muhammad al-Julani, under which he fought with al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) under Abu Musab al-Zarqawi—the group that later became ISIS. Many Syrian Christians believe the current president is the same jihadist leader once wanted by the U.S. with a $10 million bounty.
Sources further allege that “more than one source has confirmed the bomber was a member of General Security affiliated with al-Julani,” suggesting the attack was not carried out by external terrorists but by the regime’s own security forces.
On the ground, many Christians believe the bombing was orchestrated by the Damascus government, now under the control of Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), a designated terrorist group. “This is how all people think in Syria,” one source remarked.
Such accusations reflect a deep erosion of trust in the regime’s claim to protect religious minorities. One Christian described the bombing as “full-blown terrorism represented by the empty terrorist head of the Syrian regime,” again referring to al-Sharaa as the former jihadist commander. For many, the current government is simply a rebranded version of the extremist threat that has long plagued them.
Doubts have also been raised about the group that claimed responsibility for the bombing. “A group calling itself Saraya Ansar al-Sunna claimed the attack,” one Christian source noted, “but based on our monitoring, it was only founded last February.” They concluded the group was likely “a fake page created to claim responsibility for acts carried out by terrorists within the government.”
This assessment aligns with Syrian analysts who describe Saraya Ansar al-Sunna as an obscure outfit that emerged following the regime’s collapse in late 2024. Believed to include defectors from HTS and other jihadist factions, it is suspected of being either an independent offshoot or a front for ISIS, reportedly led by former HTS and Hurras al-Din commanders.
The timing has raised particular suspicion: a new group surfaces just months before the worst church attack in over a decade, conveniently providing cover for regime involvement while maintaining the illusion of an external jihadist threat.
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2025/06/cover-up-evidence-points-syrian-government-involvement-church/
1 of 2