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Iran says it signed deal to rebuild Syria's military

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Iran has signed a deal to rebuild Syria's armed forces, which have been depleted by more than seven years civil war, Iranian Defense Minister Amir Hatami has said.

Hatami, on a two-day visit to Syria, told the Beirut-based al-Mayadeen TV station yesterday that the agreement also stipulates helping rebuild Syria's military industry.


The announcement comes as the US under President Donald Trump shifts is toughening its stance on Iran's support for Syrian President Bashar Assad's government, which has weathered a calamitous civil war.

The White House has demanded that Iran extract itself from Syria as an essential precondition to lifting sanctions that went into effect earlier this month.

Israel has also been critical of Iran's expanding role in Syria, saying it won't tolerate a permanent Iranian military presence near its frontiers.

Iran has been an essential backer of Syria's government in the civil war now in its seventh year, providing advisers, military supplies, training and thousands of militiamen to fight alongside the Syrian army.

Hatami said Iran was in Syria at the invitation of the government.


The precise details of the agreement were not announced.

The Syrian government does not release casualty numbers, but monitoring groups say the government has lost tens of thousands of fighters since the civil war broke out in 2011.

Iran and Russia both intervened on behalf of the government as opposition forces gained ground in the early years of the war.

Assad, who has ruled with an iron fist since inheriting the presidency from his father in 2000, now looks safe in his post but he rules over a shattered country.

At least 400,000 people have been killed in the war, according to monitoring groups, and the UN Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia estimates the economic damage to the country at over USD 300 bn.

The government and its international backers have described the conflict as a war against terrorism and enemies abroad, chiefly the US and other western nations.

Hatami said Syria's government is now in a stronger position and warned against any "foreign aggression" against Syria.

https://www.business-standard.com/a...-rebuild-syria-s-military-118082800042_1.html
 
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Iran has signed a deal to rebuild Syria's armed forces, which have been depleted by more than seven years civil war, Iranian Defense Minister Amir Hatami has said.

Hatami, on a two-day visit to Syria, told the Beirut-based al-Mayadeen TV station yesterday that the agreement also stipulates helping rebuild Syria's military industry.


The announcement comes as the US under President Donald Trump shifts is toughening its stance on Iran's support for Syrian President Bashar Assad's government, which has weathered a calamitous civil war.

The White House has demanded that Iran extract itself from Syria as an essential precondition to lifting sanctions that went into effect earlier this month.

Israel has also been critical of Iran's expanding role in Syria, saying it won't tolerate a permanent Iranian military presence near its frontiers.

Iran has been an essential backer of Syria's government in the civil war now in its seventh year, providing advisers, military supplies, training and thousands of militiamen to fight alongside the Syrian army.

Hatami said Iran was in Syria at the invitation of the government.


The precise details of the agreement were not announced.

The Syrian government does not release casualty numbers, but monitoring groups say the government has lost tens of thousands of fighters since the civil war broke out in 2011.

Iran and Russia both intervened on behalf of the government as opposition forces gained ground in the early years of the war.

Assad, who has ruled with an iron fist since inheriting the presidency from his father in 2000, now looks safe in his post but he rules over a shattered country.

At least 400,000 people have been killed in the war, according to monitoring groups, and the UN Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia estimates the economic damage to the country at over USD 300 bn.

The government and its international backers have described the conflict as a war against terrorism and enemies abroad, chiefly the US and other western nations.

Hatami said Syria's government is now in a stronger position and warned against any "foreign aggression" against Syria.

https://www.business-standard.com/a...-rebuild-syria-s-military-118082800042_1.html
Well,no real surprises there to be honest,tho I expect that it will have to be a combined joint iranian/russian effort to rebuild the syrian military as its losses in equipment were huge and what wasnt lost has likely been heavily used such as the airforces strike aircraft and rotary wing machines,so altho iran can replace some of syrias equipment it cant replace things like that.Ultimately it will have to be a joint cooperative effort by both nations,both to replace syrias losses in materiel and just as importantly to replace its old cold war era soviet doctrines and training with newer more successful doctrines and strategies to better suit syrias present existing military needs against the [many] regional threats it now currently faces.
I wish the syrian military all the success in the world because it certainly deserves it.
 
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I hope Iran has capability to replace:
-more than 300 T-72s destroyed during the war
-more than 200 T-62s destroyed
-more than 200 other T-55s
I hope Iran has capability to replace all of these
 
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I hope Iran has capability to replace:
-more than 300 T-72s destroyed during the war
-more than 200 T-62s destroyed
-more than 200 other T-55s
I hope Iran has capability to replace all of these
Why bother replacing the thoroughly obsolete t55/t62 forces?,their military value is negligible at best.The point here isnt just to replace the numbers of weapons its to completely rebuild the syrian military into something new and militarily effective.
 
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