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Syrian Civil War (Graphic Photos/Vid Not Allowed)

Seems the new moderated beheader offensive in Aleppo fails, anyone know what are their gains at the moment?
Their only gain is making jackasses believe they have conquered Aleppo
 
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Reuters / Sunday, October 30, 2016
A rebel fighter in Dahiyet al-Assad fires a shell towards regime-held Hamdaniyah neighborhood, west Aleppo city, Syria. REUTERS/Ammar Abdullah
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Real life in Syrian jihads kharjis areas which media doesn't show you
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^^^^^jihadi supreme court
 
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Assad boy is confused:

View attachment 348202

Let me solve his confusion:

View attachment 348203

Anymore questions?

Stupid comparison, again. Hader is in southwest Aleppo, far far away from the border, most of residents fled the country already. They wouldn't take the risk of going back only because it's captured by one side. Jarablus is a border town, hundreds of thousands of refugees leave on the other side of border, it's not hard to make 300-400 people come back to Jarablus. See? That's why your comparison here is lame at its best.
 
Stupid comparison, again. Hader is in southwest Aleppo, far far away from the border, most of residents fled the country already. They wouldn't take the risk of going back only because it's captured by one side. Jarablus is a border town, hundreds of thousands of refugees leave on the other side of border, it's not hard to make 300-400 people come back to Jarablus. See? That's why your comparison here is lame at its best.
Safira is deep inside Assadist territory. Still empty after two years of Assad aka Khamenai liberation.
 
Safira is deep inside Assadist territory. Still empty after two years of Assad aka Khamenai liberation.

First, show me recent pics from Safira. Even if it's true, it doesn't show anything.

Second, the opposite example is city of Homs which was almost emptied in 2013, but now thousands of people have came back to Homs. Again, you are not going anywhere with these lame examples.
 
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First, show me recent pics from Safira. Even if it's true, it doesn't show anything.
There is no recent pics in Safira because its empty ethnically cleansed by ur thugs.

Second, the opposite example is city of Homs which was almost emptied in 2013, but now thousands of people have came back to Homs. Again, you are going anywhere with these lame examples.
Homs was barrel bombed like crazy. Assad Khamenai genocidal tactics in action:

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First, show me recent pics from Safira. Even if it's true, it doesn't show anything.

Second, the opposite example is city of Homs which was almost emptied in 2013, but now thousands of people have came back to Homs. Again, you are going anywhere with these lame examples.

Losing to an israeli, this is what happens when your claims are based on lies.
 
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http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/tu...tary.aspx?pageID=238&nID=105654&NewsCatID=352
Turkey hit 80 Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) targets in northern Syria on Nov. 1 as part of the ongoing Euphrates Shield operation, the Turkish army has stated.

Three members of the Ankara-backed Free Syrian Army (FSA) were killed and four others were injured in clashes with ISIL, the Turkish General Staff said in a written statement.

It said the FSA-controlled towns of Aq Burhan, Vash, al-Baruzah, Al-Gharz, Tlatinah in northern Aleppo, and Jabal Khirbat al-Kanisah in southern Akhtarin, were recaptured by ISIL.

Turkey launched the Euphrates Shield operation with the FSA in late August to clear Syria’s northern border area of ISIL and the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD), which Ankara regards as a terrorist organization due to its links with the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

However, the Turkish Air Forces were forced to halt airstrikes in support of the operation after the Syrian regime warned that it would shoot down any Turkish warplanes entering Syrian air space. The Turkish Air Forces have been unable to carry out operations in Syrian airspace since Oct. 22, when the country’s air defense systems were activated.

November/02/2016
 
Safira is deep inside Assadist territory. Still empty after two years of Assad aka Khamenai liberation.
you are obsessed with Khameinei. You have an infatuation with that guy. kind of weird. it affects your logic too. if only you were as smart and tactical as he is.
 
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In Syria's capital, the civil war suddenly seems far away
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Pedestrians lounge near the newly installed "I love Damascus" sign in Damascus, Syria, on Oct. 31. (Nabih Bulos / Los Angeles Times)

By Nabih Bulos
October 31st 2016


The guns have been silenced; that is the first change a returning visitor notices while driving around Syria’s capital.

In years past, the booms of artillery, mortars and rockets exchanged between the forces of Syrian President Bashar Assad and the rebels arrayed against his rule provided an ominous backbeat to city life. (“That one is outgoing,” residents would confidently say to flinching visitors.)

In their stead, all that could be heard in the Christian quarter of Bab Touma on Saturday night was the chatter of an early Halloween celebration. It was another sign of a resurgent Damascus that appears to have shuffled off the war weariness prevalent before the country’s Russian-backed military began making gains against rebel groups over the last year.

Women in high heels teetered on the narrow, decrepit sidewalks.

They joined gaggles of young people congregating in front of a popular shawarma joint, strategically nestled among a newly opened strip of bars on Mustaqim Street.

Inside the smallest of them, a bar called Abu George, the decor features kitschy lamps, “antique” baubles and posters of bikini-clad women. The walls are covered with thousands of scribbles, lurching from the joyful (“I’m so happy to be here. Wish I could stay forever in Damascus!”) to the defiant (“Only the God [sic] can judge me.”)

The mustachioed bartender, Abu Issam, held court near a tiny counter.

ONE YEAR AGO: In Damascus, Syrians express a surprising level of optimism »

Even though it was a work night (Sunday is the beginning of the workweek in Syria), there was barely space to stand.

Across the street, at the Tiki Bar, one Halloween-themed party was in full swing; while a pirate danced with a milkmaid, flat-screens looped a video of skeletons dancing a can-can.

Elsewhere, people took selfies and loafed around a large “I love Damascus” sign — in English -- as cars and buses careened into the Umayyad roundabout. One couple took a seat within the folds of the “m” before snapping a picture. The sign, a nearby policeman says, was installed a little over a month ago.

“What you’re seeing now is the result of six years of stress,” said Khaled Mahjoob, a Damascus-based businessman who is said to be close to the Assad family and is a self-described civil activist, referring to the pent-up frolicking. “People will go back to living their lives even with the minimum amount of security.”

That sense of security, Mahjoob and others say, has come largely due to recent government advances in areas around the capital.

Ali Haidar, Syrian minister for reconciliation, ticked off the names of four Damascus suburbs formerly held by rebels, who used them to regularly lob mortar shells and rockets into government-held areas. “They’ve all reconciled,” he said.

By that, he meant that the rebels had accepted an amnesty in return for laying down their arms and reintegrating into government institutions.

“The aim was to stop these areas from being a battlefield, and for them to become islands of peace and stability. It’s a major difference between today and two months ago,” he said.

Critics insist that “reconciliation” is a continuation of “surrender or starve” tactics, and that those who reconcile continue to be pursued by the government.

For those who have not run afoul of Assad, life appears better, at least for the time being.


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A busy thoroughfare near Damascus University. (Nabih Bulos / Los Angeles Times)

In one major sign of renewed vitality, business owners have returned and reopened factories and companies destroyed or looted in the war.

“I’ve bought new equipment and will start production soon,” said Anton Bathanjani, an olive-oil merchant. He showed a visiting reporter dozens of messages from business owners on a WhatsApp group for foodstuffs manufacturers.

“We have more than 56 companies in this group alone,” he boasted, adding that in Tel Kurdi, an area recently taken by the government, troops had allowed merchants to restart their businesses.

Yet signs of the conflict, which has devastated the country and killed hundreds of thousands, linger.

Another businessman, who asked not to be identified for security reasons, spoke of a fear of rising corruption and emboldened warlords, especially near areas still out of government control.

Checkpoints remain sprinkled in many neighborhoods. Electricity is still prone to daily cuts, although it has improved. Cars jostle their way into long lines at gas stations.

Even in Bab Touma, the Christian quarter, young men toting AK-47s could be seen among the throng of revelers.

International sanctions levied on the Syrian government also bedevil attempts to restart the country’s economy.

A pharmacist, Rouba Mirza, complained bitterly about the lack of basic medicines, including painkillers and children’s antibiotics – cheap and freely available before the war.

“We have an 80% loss of production. We don’t lack the capacity to manufacture, but we don’t have the raw materials,” said Mirza, who spoke at a two-day workshop organized by the British Syrian Society.

“If you spend a day in a clinic here,” he added, “it’s a tragedy.”
 
Assad aka Putin aka Khamenai terrorists drop unguided thermobaric ODAB-500 parachute bombs on Sarakeeb town full of civilians:



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