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Syrian Civil War (Graphic Photos/Vid Not Allowed)

What is there to report? Peshmerga are sissies. Out of 152 Peshmerga, 2 deserted in Arbil, 2 deserted at the border, 5 deserted in Urfa. 9 of them deserted from the temporary camp they stood, but these 9 deserters were later caught by Turkish security.



Peşmerge firarda, ABD telefonun diğer ucunda... - Ahmet TAKAN
Like I said before they entered Syria from turkey
If they go to musel to enter Syria they will not even reach the borders they will be slaughtered but instead they bark at turkey and make propaganda
Ungrateful snakes
 
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Like I said before they entered Syria from turkey
If they go to musel to enter Syria they will not even reach the borders they will be slaughtered but instead they bark at turkey and make propaganda
Ungrateful snakes

YPG suffered great losses. Not much men to hold Ayn al-Arab. Therefore reinforcements from FSA and Peshmerga were needed. FSA became US mercenaries, instead fighting against Assad.

USA wants Ayn al-Arab as Kurdish territory for its pipeline security which stretches from Kirkuk, Iraq to Iskenderun, Turkey. Ayn al-Arab will be staging area for PKK attacks against Turkey.
 
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Marouf lost, his men (SRF) escaped. Jabhat al-Nusrah controls Idlib countryside.


"معروف" ينسحب من أبرز معاقله في "جبل الزاوية" و"ولا تنازعوا" تدخل غرفة الانعاش اخبار سوريا -أخبار سورية - زمان الوصل

IS has lost Zumar, Baiji (Iraq) , Kobane .. and now deir ezzor ??

ISIS Suffers Heavy Casualties in Deir Ezzor; Syrian Army Destroys 2 Tunnels

Baiji City is IS held. Baiji Refinery is government held. Last operation to relieve Baiji refinery went badly for government.

This is the video of tunnel bombing in Deir ez-Zor by SAA.

 
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FSA operations in Daraa countryside. Some IED attacks shown towards the end of the video.

 
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FSA action in Al-Waer, Homs. At least one Assadist soldier shot and wounded, can seen in the video.

 
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Syria's Alawites pay heavy price as they bury sons

DWEIR SHEIKH SAAD, Syria (AP) — The posters of slain Syrian soldiers, put up by families to commemorate their sons killed in the fight against rebels, are plastered on walls throughout the coastal province of Tartous. The impromptu murals of death illustrate the price supporters of President Bashar Assad are paying to defend his rule.

The khaki-clad men often pose with guns, with Assad's image often imposed above the slain soldier.

For government supporters, Assad is synonymous with Syria itself, particularly in Tartous, a scenic Mediterranean port that is majority Alawite, an offshoot of Shiite Islam that is the faith of Assad's family. For Syria's Alawite minority, there is no other way out but to back the president, despite rumblings of dissent. Rebels often indiscriminately target Alawites because they are seen as the firmest pillar of Assad's rule — and because extremists among the rebels consider them heretics.

More soldiers have been killed from Tartous than any other region in Syria in the fighting to quell the armed rebellion seeking to topple Assad, now in its fourth year.

"This is the price we must pay for the country," said Ramadan Haidar, whose 23-year-old son Mahmoud was killed fighting in northern Syria. "Because if the country doesn't regain its sovereignty, then I have lost my son and my home."

It's unlikely that need for the sons of Tartous will ease, with the government seemingly desperate for soldiers as the conflict grinds on.

Some 4,000 soldiers from Tartous have been killed in the war, according to a Syrian official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak to media.

The death toll forms some 10 percent of the estimated 40,400 soldiers killed, even though Tartous' population is fewer than a million people — less than one-twentieth of Syria's pre-war population of 23 million. Alawites form some 13 percent of Syria's population, concentrated in the coastal provinces and the central city of Homs.

They are not the only ones to die in the fighting. Syria's army represents the sectarian makeup of the country: it is largely Sunni Muslim, fighting mostly Sunni Muslim rebels. But Alawite troops are the most trusted by leadership.

School teacher Haidar's son Mahmoud was killed two years ago in a suicide bombing. The family home in the town of Dweir Sheikh Saad in Tartous province is now a memorial for the young man, strung with photos of Mahmoud in his army uniform, with his girlfriend, with his two sisters.

Haidar's wife Ibtisam, 43, stashed away her son's belongings, including red love-heart cushions his girlfriend gave him. She wore a necklace with a pendant of Mahmoud's face, often clutching it as she described her pride in her son for joining the Syrian army.

"He was sacrificed for the homeland," she said, smiling. "He is in my heart. I talk to him and it makes me feel better," she said.

The town, nestled amid olive groves, has lost 34 men so far, said mayor Mohammed Shaban.

Reflecting a broader trend, Shaban said most of the men were killed in the past two years, mostly by the al-Qaida-linked Nusra Front and in mass killings perpetrated by the extremist Islamic State group as they seized a string of military bases in the country's northeast.

Among the massacres was the killing of more than 150 government troops captured when the militants took the Tabqa base in Raqqa province, in August. The militants stripped the soldiers to their underwear and forced to run through the desert before they were shot.

"We can't live with them. We are fighting ignorance and terrorism" said Issa Mariam, 54, whose son Abdullah was killed two years ago fighting in Aleppo.

Posters of Abdullah, 25, were plastered around the house, alongside his framed death certificate. His mother also bore a gold pendant bearing Abdullah's image.

There appears to be growing resentment toward Assad, particularly after the mass killings by militants. Some families say they felt their sons were sacrificed for the survival of one family.

But as Islamic militants become more powerful, many Syrians see little choice — better Assad's rule than the extremists.

An aid worker who works closely with Syrian officials said because the fate of Alawites was tied with Assad's rule, some were demanding the government pound rebel areas harder.

"If anything, their critique of Bashar is that he is too weak, so they would rather have a hard-line guy in power," said the aid worker, who requested anonymity because he wasn't meant to speak to reporters.

A demonstration in early October in an Alawite-dominated neighborhood of the central Syrian city of Homs may be instructive. After twin bombings killed 25 children there, hundreds of Assad supporters held a rare protest, accusing the Homs governor of not doing enough to stop rebel attacks on their neighborhood.

Haidar, the school teacher who lost his soldier son, suggested there was weariness.

"Certain provinces are motivated to go to the army, and perhaps they are affected more," Haidar said, referring to Tartous. "Many people were killed, and they are buried here in this cemetery."

The government appears to be trying to mitigate potential dissent.

A Syrian economics expert said the state was prioritizing social affairs spending on families of slain soldiers. But a decision to grant first priority in civil service jobs to those families was cancelled this week, said the Health Minister Nizar Yaziji. It appeared that the decision had caused an outcry.

As the war grinds on, with no decisive winner and no political headway, the military is becoming low on personnel resources, meaning there'll be no rest for Alawites soon.

"They will have to be patient, what can they do?" said Assad adviser Bouthaina Shabaan. "We all in Syria have to be patient, and we all have to persist in our resilience. What is the alternative?"

This week, soldiers at checkpoints in Tartous began stopping men aged between 23 and 42 years old, examining their ID cards and ordering some of them to report for reserve duty. Men were taking alternative routes to avoid being caught.

There was no formal announcement of the move, and an official on state-run television this week denied what he called "rumors" that men were being seized.

Parents of slain Alawite soldiers said they would allow their other sons to volunteer service if they wanted.

But the price is clear. In the provincial capital city of Tartous, an informal mural made of the posters of slain soldiers stretched for meters on a wall.

Further down, there was an official memorial: it was a large billboard featuring Assad's face, and thousands of names of slain soldiers scrawled on either side.

Across the road there was another billboard, also listing names of the killed. It too, was full.

Syria's Alawites pay heavy price as they bury sons
 
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Islamic State sends some fighters to support al- Nusra Front in Idlib
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Idlib Province: Reliable sources informed SOHR that some IS fighters reached individually to the village of al- Barah, town of Kensafrah and the eastern countryside of Ma’arret al- Nu’man to support al- Nusra Front and Jund al- Aqsa Organization in their clashes against the Syria Revolutionaries Front.

The regime forces shelled areas in the village of Mere’yan in al- Zaweyyi Mountain and other areas in the town of Taftanaz.

A man and a child died due to the regime’s shelling on places in the village of Balyon in al- Zaweyyi Mountain.

IS militants take control over Hayyan Gas Company in Homs
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Homs Province: IS militants took control over Hayyan Gas Company affiliated to Sha’er Gas Field in the eastern countryside of Homs. They also could cut off the road that links Damascus with Tadmor and Tadmor with Homs reaching to Hama- al- Raqqa road junction after violent clashes with the regime forces. IS militants took control over wide areas from Sha’er Gas Field where they seized 3 wells 3 days ago. These clashes resulted in death of more than 30 soldiers from the regime forces.

The number of people who died by dropping 4 barrel bombs on the city of al- Rastan has risen to 5, including 2 childern.

The number of people from al- Qaryaten City who tortured to death inside the regime’s jails has risen to 43.

Violent clashes erupted between the regime forces and the Islamic battalions in Om Sharshoh and al- Hlaleyyi areas in the countryside of Homs City, information reported casualties on both sides.

Source: SOHR

A Pro-regime twitter activist's map (doesnt reflect the realities on the ground, but eye-opening for those who arent aware of situation around Homs)

 
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ISIS radicals attack Kurdish villages near Syria’s Hasakah

October 31, 2014

Hasakah, Syria – On Thursday militants of the Islamic State (IS/ISIS) attacked villages in the countryside of Hasakah in northeastern Syria.

Local sources told ARA News that the IS radicals besieged the Kurdish village of Qolo (8 km north of the town of Tel Brak in eastern Hasakah city and set agricultural warehouses on fire early Thursday morning.

“The militants prevented villagers from working on their agricultural lands, and burned some warehouses to intimidate them,” a farmer in Tel Brak told ARA News under condition of anonymity.

The same source said that the IS group confiscated cars and harvesters from the villagers.

“Most of the young people escaped the village of Qolo weeks ago for fear of IS militants, especially after the extremist group seized the nearby town of Tel Brak,” he said.

Meanwhile, the IS insurgents forced residents of several town and villages in the countryside of Hasakah to leave their homes on Wednesday.

According to activists, the villages of Gir Zin Khatooni, Gir Mir, Gir Miseen and Bahira (inhabited by Kurds and Arabs) were evacuated.

“The villagers were forcibly displaced by the IS militants, who accused civilians of links to the Kurdish forces of the Popular Protection Units (YPG) –which battle IS in northern Syria,” activists in the area told ARA News.

ISIS radicals attack Kurdish villages near Syria's Hasakah - ARA News
 
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Disputes break out among FSA rebels in Kobane

November 1, 2014

Suruc, Turkey
– A group of 14 fighters from the Free Syrian Army (FSA), who entered the city of Kobane two days ago, returned to Turkey after rifts among them concerning distribution of arms, a military source in Kobane told ARA News on Friday.

The source, on the condition of anonymity, pointed out that the FSA group, who were supposed to be responsible for heavy guns of Dushka type in the fight against IS in Kobane, returned back to Turkish territory, after a dispute over the distribution of weapons.

The same source said that Kurdish forces of the People’s Protection Units (YPG) intervened immediately to resolve the dispute among the FSA rebels in Kobane.

Around 200 FSA fighters entered Kobane through Turkey in the last two days, local sources told ARA News.

In another context, Ismat Sheikh Hassan, head of the Defense Council in PYD-linked Auto-Administration told ARA News on the phone that he expects a high level of coordination between the Peshmerga forces –who came from Iraqi Kurdistan to back kinsmen in the fight against militants of the Islamic State (IS/ISIS)– and the YPG in Kobane.

Speaking to ARA News in Kobane, the civil rights activist Barzan Khalil reported that sporadic clashes broke out on Friday morning, between militants of the Islamic State and Kurdish fighters from the YPG.

Meanwhile, the IS group launched mortar fire against several YPG-held neighborhoods in the city.

Khalil added that the international coalition’s fighter jets targeted an IS-led military vehicle full of explosives in Kobane on Friday.

Disputes break out among FSA rebels in Kobane - ARA News
 
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Clashes around Nayreb Airport, Aleppo.


#Syria #Daraa #Assad-forces try to invade Shaykh Miskin city from north & east axes

#Syria #Daraa The #SAA-commander of 5th Division killed in battle about control of Shaykh Miskin city

#Syria #Damascus Rebels destroyed T-72 tank & 2 dozens of#Assad-forces in Hawsh al Farah area

Source: Mark (@markito0171) on Twitter

One or two days ago, I saw a graphic video on youtube where rebels repelled SAA assault in Hawsh al-Farah. Rebels claimed tens of SAA dead, though I saw only 4 dead SAA members.
 
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IDLIB
Idlib province: Jabhat la-Nusra took control on Der Sonbol town the main stronghold of SRF, what made the majority of al-Zawiya mount towns and villages under control by Jabhat al-Nusra after 5 days of clashes against SRF. Trusted sources reported to SOHR that many fighters from SRF joined Jabhat al-Nusra and fighters from the IS arrived to al-Bara, KanSafra and east of al-Ma’ra, to back up Jabhat al-Nusra against the SRF


ALEPPO
Aleppo Province: The clashes between the rebel and Islamic battalions against the regime forces supported by NDF and Hezbollah fighters renewed in the neighborhoods of al-Ramousa and al- Aamereyyi in south of Aleppo. Clashes also renewed between the two sides in Seifat and Hendarat, reports of losses in both sides.
helicopters dropped explosive barrels on al-Malah and Retian, what caused material damages.


DIMASHQ
Reef Dimashq province: a mortar shell fell on Dahya al-Assad, what caused material damages . Clashes taking place between regime forces and Islamic battalions in Hawsh al-Fara in eastern Ghouta and around Zamalka and Harasta, accompanied by missiles fell on Zamalka and mortars shelling on areas in the city. a mortar shell fell on al-Janyen in Jaramana, what wounded 9 civilians including a child . regime forces opened heavy machine gun fire on areas in Kanaker in the western countryside of Damascus.


HOMS
Homs province: a shell fell on al-Muhajrin neighborhood in Homs, what wounded 2 civilians and caused material damages in the area. Regime forces bombarded areas in Talbisa what killed a child and wounded others. Clashes renewed between regime forces and ISIS in the eastern countryside accompanied by regime's bombardment and air strikes around the area. a man from al-Za'farana killed by regime's bombardment on the town 3 days ago.


Source: SOHR
 
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#Hezbollah are indeed refusing to take part in the upcoming regime offensive on Khan Sheikhoon in #Hama & insist on remaining in the city.

#Hezbollah even shot dead a regime security officer today (Ibrahim Khadour) due to a dispute on the Zalaqiat checkpoint in #Hama.

Major disputes between Hezb & regime in Hama, governor spoke out against them. They want to police the city, reduce losses

Source: Paradoxy (@Paradoxy13) on Twitter
 
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