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Iran's help to Iraq in its fight against Daesh terrorists

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Iranian made Hadid HM 20 MRLS being used by Hashad al-Shabi east of Fallujah, Anbar province.

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Thermal scope RU60G made by Rayan Roshd, being used on a Sayyad-2 sniper rife by Hashad al-Shaabi in Baiji.

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Iranian made Hadid HM 20 MRLS being used by Hashad al-Shabi east of Fallujah, Anbar province.

CJKxfJdUMAEA44A.jpg


9hb1_20090.jpg


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Thermal scope RU60G made by Rayan Roshd, being used on a Sayyad-2 sniper rife by Hashad al-Shaabi in Baiji.

CJExrueWEAAnmF5.jpg


CJD12YYUMAAtesQ.jpg


CJD11y7UsAA8cRx.jpg
Snipers are very useful in war

Moreover most of the the israeli soldiers have gotten killed by Iranian snipers and anti-materials in Qaza.
 
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Iranian citizen Hossein Karimi 25 from Tehran , known as Ariel Kobane, who joined Kurdish forces in Syria to fight ISIS martyred .
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حسین کریمی اولین ایرانی فارس زبان نیست که به کردها در سوریه می پیوندد. امیر قبادی شناخته شده به "روژوان" نیز سال گذشته به صف کوبانی پیوست. امیر قبادی مشهدی بود و او هم در درگیری با داعش شهید و در کوبانی به خاک سپرده شد.

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از نام مستعار محمدحسین کریمی، یعنی آریل کوبانی، پیدا است که حملات سال گذشته داعش به شهر کوبانی در کردستان سوریه او را به جبهه‌های جنگ در سوریه کشانده بود. او اوایل امسال به نیروهای مدافع پیوسته بود. او در غیاب خانواده‌اش دفن شد.

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هزاران نفر سه‌شنبه این هفته در شهر دیرک در کانتون جزیره در مراسم تشیع جنازه محمد حسین کریمی شرکت کردند. او در یک مراسم رسمی با حضور صدها نفر و مقامات محلی در مراسمی نظامی در گورستان شهید خبات دیرک به خاک سپرده شد.

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یکی دیگر از ایرانی‌هایی که چند ماهی است به پیشمرگان پیوسته و در منطقه سنجار علیه داعش می‌جنگد، مهدی شریفی است که به مسیحا شناخته می‌شود. او می‌گوید پس از دیدن تصاویر زن و بچه‌های ایزدی که از دست داعش فرار می‌کردند و تصایر سر بریدن‌‌ها نتوانست آرام بگیرد.

او نیز اهل تهران است و محمد حسین کریمی را از نزدیک می‌شناخت. او می‌گوید: "محمد حسین شخصیتی آرام و خاصی داشت. او در یگانی بود که چند داوطب غربی در آن بودند. محمد حسین نماز می‌خواند و بسیار نگران رشد داعش در منطقه بود. او هیچ گونه تجربه نظامی نداشت."

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ریدور خلیل، به ‎ گفت: "مبارزه مردم روژآوا 'کردستان سوریه' را می‌توان مبارزه همه انسانها دانست. مبارزه ما با داعش مبارزه همه انسانهای آزاده جهان است. محمد حسین کریمی کرد نبود و از ایران آمده بود، اما او همچون سایر همرزمانش برای انسانیت و ارزش‌های انسانی شهید شد."

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محمد حسین کریمی در یک مصاحبه ویدئویی جنگ با داعش را جنگ برای انسانیت نامید: "داعش هم به انسانیت ضربه زده هم به دین".
Every one who fight for these mountain goats is traitor

These mountain goats don't have any historical claim on any syrian lands
 
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Saudi wahhabi ISIS song maker dog is rotting in Hell, Thanks Syria

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Supporters of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) confirmed on Twitter that the extremist group's chief singer and songwriter has been killed in airstrikes in eastern Syria, CBS News' Khaled Wassef reports.

The activists said Maher Meshaal, also known as Abu Hajar al-Hadrami, a Saudi National, was killed Saturday in airstrikes south of the city of Al Hasaka.

Meshaal is the author of jihadi hymns such as "Saleel al-Sawarem" and "Halomoo Halomoo O' lions of war," which are regularly played as background music in combat and execution videos released by ISIS.

According to Mother Jones, "Saleel al-Sawarem" celebrates martyrdom and holy war, with lyrics such as: "The banner has called us, to brighten the path of destiny, to wage war on the enemy, whosoever among us dies, in sacrifice for defense, will enjoy eternity in paradise."

Reuters reported that U.S.-led forces conducted 16 air strikes targeting ISIS positions in Syria on Saturday. The bomb and drone attacks were conducted near Al Hasakah, Ar Raqqah, Aleppo and Kobani, according to a statement from the U.S. military.

ISIS' chief singer and songwriter Maher Meshaal killed in Syria airstrikes, activists say - CBS News
 
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Iraqi Army Kills over 160 ISIL Terrorists in Anbar Province in First Day

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The Iraqi army and volunteer forces killed tens of Takfiri terrorists in daylong clashes in Anbar province.

"Over 160 ISIL militants were killed in the Iraqi army's operations in the city of Ramadi on Thursday," the Iraqi defense ministry announced in a statement on Friday, in reference to militants of the so-called 'Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant' takfiri group.

Earlier today, the Iraqi defense ministry announced that its fighter jets launched massive air raids on ISIL positions in the nearby areas of Ramadi which resulted in the killing of tens of militants.

"The Iraqi airstrikes against hideouts of the ISIL militants in the surrounding areas of Hasiba and the outskirts of al-Khalediya City and Ramadi, killed and wounded a large number of the terrorists, and destroyed a large store of their booby-trapped vehicles," the ministry said.

ISIL takfiri terrorists currently control shrinking swathes of Syria and Iraq. They have threatened all communities as they continue their atrocities across the two countries.

Senior Iraqi officials have blamed Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and some Gulf states for the growing terrorism in their country.

ISIL has links with Saudi intelligence and is believed to be indirectly supported by the Zionist regime.

Thank God.
@SALMAN AL-FARSI @Malik Alashter
 
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Suicide bombers in Iraq are mostly foreigners ( Almost 50% from Saudis )

Suicide bombers in Iraq are overwhelmingly foreigners bent on destabilizing the government and undermining American interests there, two independent studies have concluded.

JESSICA BERNSTEIN-WAX - MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPER
WASHINGTON — Suicide bombers in Iraq are overwhelmingly foreigners bent on destabilizing the government and undermining American interests there, two independent studies have concluded.

The studies report that the number of suicide bombings in Iraq has now surpassed those conducted worldwide since the early 1980s. The findings suggest that extremists from throughout the region and around the world are fueling Iraq's violence.

"The war on terrorism — and certainly the war in Iraq — has failed in decreasing the number of suicide attacks and has really radicalized the Muslim world to create this concept of martyrs without borders," said Mohammed Hafez, a visiting professor at the University of Missouri in Kansas City and the author of one of the two studies.

Hafez, whose new book is "Suicide Bombers in Iraq," has identified the nationalities of 124 bombers who attacked in Iraq. Of those, the largest number — 53 — were Saudis. Eight apiece came from Italy and Syria, seven from Kuwait, four from Jordan and two each from Belgium, France and Spain. Others came from North and East Africa, South Asia and various Middle Eastern and European countries. Only 18 — 15 percent — were Iraqis.

In the second study, Robert Pape, a University of Chicago professor who runs the Chicago Project on Suicide Terrorism, identified the nationalities of 55 suicide bombers in Iraq. Sixteen were Saudis, seven were Syrians and five were Algerians. Kuwait, Morocco and Tunisia each supplied three bombers. Thirteen — 24 percent — were Iraqi Sunni Muslims.

Hafez and Pape said Iraqi Shiite Muslims hadn't carried out suicide attacks so far and instead had restricted their role in the sectarian violence to militia activity.

Pinning down the nationalities of suicide bombers can be tricky because they leave few physical remains, and extremist groups often don't claim the attacks until much later. The U.S. military says it does some DNA testing to investigate the bombers' identities.

Both researchers relied on extremist Web sites, "martyr" videos, news reports and statements to compile the data on nationalities. Hafez also gathered some information from online chats and discussion forums.

U.S. intelligence estimates based on interviews with detainees and captured documents indicate that most suicide bombers in Iraq are non-Iraqi, said a senior defense official who can't be named because of departmental rules

Suicide attacks more than doubled each year from the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 to 2005, Pape said. In 2006, he said, they jumped just under a third. The American military has reported more than 1,400 since January 2004. Before the U.S.-led invasion, there had been no suicide bombings in Iraq.

Pape attributed the attacks to the presence of some 150,000 American troops in the region.

The notion that most of the suicide bombers are foreigners engaged in a global movement is exaggerated, he said, since about 75 percent come from the Arabian Peninsula, which is close to the U.S. forces in Iraq.

"The Arabian Peninsula isn't that big: It's somewhat bigger than Texas," Pape said. "The Americans have all the capability and are right there. That's what allows terrorist leaders to build a sense of urgency."

After losing safe havens in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Europe, militant organizations needed a new base for their operations, Hafez said. U.S. intelligence analysts, however, have concluded that al Qaida has built new training camps along the Afghan-Pakistani border, and that the group al Qaida in Iraq operates for the most part independently.

According to Hafez, extremist groups in Iraq conduct suicide bombings against fellow Muslims rather than U.S. troops to destabilize the fledgling government and spark sectarian warfare.

The groups' objectives in Iraq are different from "other places like in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict or in Lebanon," he said.

In Lebanon, Shiite suicide bombers helped drive U.S., British, French, Italian and Israeli troops out of the country with a series of attacks. Sunni Palestinian suicide bombers have attacked in Israel and the Palestinian territories in an effort to loosen Israel's grip on what they say are Arab lands.

There's widespread agreement that Saudis are represented more heavily than any other nationality among the bombers, said Assaf Moghadem, a research fellow at Harvard University who studies suicide bombers' motivations. Insurgent groups sometimes recruit Saudis because of their relative prosperity, he said.

The ultra-conservative brand of Sunni Islam that's prevalent in Saudi Arabia also accounts for the large number of Saudis who participate in suicide bombings and the insurgency in Iraq, said Mike Davis, a University of California at Irvine professor who wrote a recent history of car bombs.

"The religious current in modern Islam that encourages this kind of sectarian attitude toward the Shiites is the religious orthodoxy enshrined in Saudi Arabia," Davis said.

Most experts say that while the American presence in Iraq has radicalized Muslims, withdrawing the troops may not stem the number of suicide attacks, at least not right away.

Extremist groups in Iraq have a common goal of expelling foreign occupiers and destabilizing what they see as a U.S.-controlled government, Pape said. But if the U.S. withdraws, insurgent organizations probably will engage in a bloody power struggle, he added.

"If we stay, that tends to encourage people to flock to Iraq," Hafez said. "Leaving will mean genocidal violence for the Iraqi people. It will mean a failed Iraqi state. The jihadists will declare, `We drove out America.' "

Since 2003 one million Iraqis have gotten killed by suicider bomber pigs in Iraq.

Read more here: Studies: Suicide bombers in Iraq are mostly foreigners | McClatchy DC

@SALMAN AL-FARSI @Malik Alashter @B@KH @opruh @haviZsultan @Atanz @Irfan Baloch @waz
 
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Suicide bombers in Iraq are mostly foreigners ( Almost 50% from Saudis )

Suicide bombers in Iraq are overwhelmingly foreigners bent on destabilizing the government and undermining American interests there, two independent studies have concluded.

JESSICA BERNSTEIN-WAX - MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPER
WASHINGTON — Suicide bombers in Iraq are overwhelmingly foreigners bent on destabilizing the government and undermining American interests there, two independent studies have concluded.

The studies report that the number of suicide bombings in Iraq has now surpassed those conducted worldwide since the early 1980s. The findings suggest that extremists from throughout the region and around the world are fueling Iraq's violence.

"The war on terrorism — and certainly the war in Iraq — has failed in decreasing the number of suicide attacks and has really radicalized the Muslim world to create this concept of martyrs without borders," said Mohammed Hafez, a visiting professor at the University of Missouri in Kansas City and the author of one of the two studies.

Hafez, whose new book is "Suicide Bombers in Iraq," has identified the nationalities of 124 bombers who attacked in Iraq. Of those, the largest number — 53 — were Saudis. Eight apiece came from Italy and Syria, seven from Kuwait, four from Jordan and two each from Belgium, France and Spain. Others came from North and East Africa, South Asia and various Middle Eastern and European countries. Only 18 — 15 percent — were Iraqis.

In the second study, Robert Pape, a University of Chicago professor who runs the Chicago Project on Suicide Terrorism, identified the nationalities of 55 suicide bombers in Iraq. Sixteen were Saudis, seven were Syrians and five were Algerians. Kuwait, Morocco and Tunisia each supplied three bombers. Thirteen — 24 percent — were Iraqi Sunni Muslims.

Hafez and Pape said Iraqi Shiite Muslims hadn't carried out suicide attacks so far and instead had restricted their role in the sectarian violence to militia activity.

Pinning down the nationalities of suicide bombers can be tricky because they leave few physical remains, and extremist groups often don't claim the attacks until much later. The U.S. military says it does some DNA testing to investigate the bombers' identities.

Both researchers relied on extremist Web sites, "martyr" videos, news reports and statements to compile the data on nationalities. Hafez also gathered some information from online chats and discussion forums.

U.S. intelligence estimates based on interviews with detainees and captured documents indicate that most suicide bombers in Iraq are non-Iraqi, said a senior defense official who can't be named because of departmental rules

Suicide attacks more than doubled each year from the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 to 2005, Pape said. In 2006, he said, they jumped just under a third. The American military has reported more than 1,400 since January 2004. Before the U.S.-led invasion, there had been no suicide bombings in Iraq.

Pape attributed the attacks to the presence of some 150,000 American troops in the region.

The notion that most of the suicide bombers are foreigners engaged in a global movement is exaggerated, he said, since about 75 percent come from the Arabian Peninsula, which is close to the U.S. forces in Iraq.

"The Arabian Peninsula isn't that big: It's somewhat bigger than Texas," Pape said. "The Americans have all the capability and are right there. That's what allows terrorist leaders to build a sense of urgency."

After losing safe havens in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Europe, militant organizations needed a new base for their operations, Hafez said. U.S. intelligence analysts, however, have concluded that al Qaida has built new training camps along the Afghan-Pakistani border, and that the group al Qaida in Iraq operates for the most part independently.

According to Hafez, extremist groups in Iraq conduct suicide bombings against fellow Muslims rather than U.S. troops to destabilize the fledgling government and spark sectarian warfare.

The groups' objectives in Iraq are different from "other places like in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict or in Lebanon," he said.

In Lebanon, Shiite suicide bombers helped drive U.S., British, French, Italian and Israeli troops out of the country with a series of attacks. Sunni Palestinian suicide bombers have attacked in Israel and the Palestinian territories in an effort to loosen Israel's grip on what they say are Arab lands.

There's widespread agreement that Saudis are represented more heavily than any other nationality among the bombers, said Assaf Moghadem, a research fellow at Harvard University who studies suicide bombers' motivations. Insurgent groups sometimes recruit Saudis because of their relative prosperity, he said.

The ultra-conservative brand of Sunni Islam that's prevalent in Saudi Arabia also accounts for the large number of Saudis who participate in suicide bombings and the insurgency in Iraq, said Mike Davis, a University of California at Irvine professor who wrote a recent history of car bombs.

"The religious current in modern Islam that encourages this kind of sectarian attitude toward the Shiites is the religious orthodoxy enshrined in Saudi Arabia," Davis said.

Most experts say that while the American presence in Iraq has radicalized Muslims, withdrawing the troops may not stem the number of suicide attacks, at least not right away.

Extremist groups in Iraq have a common goal of expelling foreign occupiers and destabilizing what they see as a U.S.-controlled government, Pape said. But if the U.S. withdraws, insurgent organizations probably will engage in a bloody power struggle, he added.

"If we stay, that tends to encourage people to flock to Iraq," Hafez said. "Leaving will mean genocidal violence for the Iraqi people. It will mean a failed Iraqi state. The jihadists will declare, `We drove out America.' "

Since 2003 one million Iraqis have gotten killed by suicider bomber pigs in Iraq.

Read more here: Studies: Suicide bombers in Iraq are mostly foreigners | McClatchy DC

@SALMAN AL-FARSI @Malik Alashter @B@KH @opruh @haviZsultan @Atanz @Irfan Baloch @waz
Bro Baath still strong and it's the one who ruling the sunni areas as you know baathist are secular they don't believe so they use these saudis donkeys to do the suicides.
 
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