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Syrian Civil War (Graphic Photos/Vid Not Allowed)

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http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/sy...army.aspx?pageID=238&nID=109728&NewsCatID=352

Turkish security forces returned fire into Syrian territory controlled by the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) on Feb. 13 and killed one militant of the group, the Turkish Armed Forces said on Feb. 14.

It said the clash occurred at a border post in the Nusaybin area of the southeastern province of Mardin, across the border from an area controlled by the Syrian Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), which Ankara considers it to be an offshoot of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).
 
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I find it ironic you criticise me for some kind of mythical religious bias, when you will never criticise Israel for anything, and only attempt to avoid answering any and all forms of criticism towards the barbaric state.

A day with wounded Syrian kids hospitalized in Israel


Dozens of children, who were raised on the belief that Israel is as bad as Satan, are receiving life-saving treatments at the Ziv Medical Center in Safed after escaping the pain and suffering of the civil war in Syria. ‘I was afraid to come to Israel because I was afraid of the Jews, but now I’m not afraid at all,’ says a 10-year-old boy whose hands were saved by Israeli doctors.

Ariela Ayalon |Published: 09.02.17 , 23:34

Seven-year-old A. sits in the isolation room at the Department of Pediatrics at the Ziv Medical Center in Safed. She is waiting for another surgery after undergoing quite a few treatments at the Israeli hospital.

A. is not a regular patient. She arrived at the Pediatrics Department after being critically wounded by shrapnel in an explosion near her home in Syria. Her concerned mother is sitting next to her. They arrived together from their small village, which got caught in the middle of the civil war in the country. Two war refugees alone in an enemy state, and all they have is each other.

“The girl arrived at our trauma room last November on a Saturday morning,” says Dr. Lili Hayari, a senior surgeon at Ziv’s Pediatrics Department. “I was called in from home and found a critically wounded child, with injuries mostly to the abdominal cavity, where she suffered a direct hit. Her intestines were perforated. She was brought here after the hospital in Quneitra failed to stabilize her condition. We immediately sent her into a life-saving emergency operation, with two teams doing everything possible to save the girl. A surgical team stitched and patched up the abdominal cavity, and an orthopedic team operated on her right elbow, which was crushed by shrapnel that infiltrated the area and destroyed vital tissue.”



Seven-year-old A. and her mother (Photo: Efi Shrir)


Since then, the girl has undergone another series of operations. Doctors believe her condition is improving and she is expected to recover and return to her village in Syria.

A. is one of dozens of Syrian children who arrived at the Israeli border over the past two years and were rushed from there, with the IDF’s help, to the Ziv Medical Center.

Since arriving in Israel, the girl and her mother have been cut off from all their relatives. “I don’t know what’s going on with my husband, with my parents and siblings, with our entire family and our neighbors. I know nothing,” the mother says. “I don’t even know if our village still exists. It may have been destroyed.”

She only managed to get through the long period in which her daughter was hanging between life and death thanks to the support of other Syrian mothers who are in Israel with their own wounded children.

“The children come here with no referral, with no records,” says Dr. Hayari. “We don’t even receive their blood type. Often, during our immediate life-saving efforts, we also have to learn the essence and severity of the injury. We have to start from scratch and hope that we can give them the best medical care possible.”

‘I can only pray that my children are alive’

Ten-year-old J., who arrived from a different Syrian village after accidentally touching an exposed high voltage line, is hospitalized in the adjacent room. Both his hands were burned and turned black. His tendons, bones and the internal structure of his hands suffered serious damage. He was rushed to a hospital in Damascus, but could not be treated due to the lack of medical equipment. He arrived at the Israeli border and was taken to the Ziv Medical Center.

“I was afraid to come to Israel,” he admits, “because I was afraid of the Jews, but now I’m not afraid at all.”

When he was hospitalized more than two months ago, J. underwent immediate surgery to save his hands. Later, he was treated by a plastic surgery expert from the Hillel Yaffe Medical Center in Hadera, who specializes in skin transplants. His hands were plastered up to the elbows, and he had to rely on his mother and on the medical staff for every single action.


Ten-year-old J. having his cast removed to learn his hands had recovered from their injury (Photo: Efi Shrir)

The mother, who is 26 years old, left her husband and their three other children—aged nine, eight and six—at their village. “Of course I was afraid to come to Israel,” she, smiling shyly. “I was afraid of everything.”

Like the other mothers accompanying their wounded children, she doesn’t know what happened to her family either. “We don’t have and we’re not allowed to have any contact with Syria, so I can only pray that my children are alive and that they have everything they need,” she says.

During my visit to the department, I got to witness a moment which J.’s mother and doctors had been waiting for for months. Throughout his entire time at the hospital, they were unsure whether the hands placed in the cast could be recovered. When the doctor removed the cast from J.'s little hands, he discovered that the boy had recovered and that his hands would heal completely after a rehabilitation process.

J.’s mother doesn’t know if they will have a home to go back to after the treatment that saved her son’s life is done. In the meantime, she is focusing on his treatment.

‘How was he chosen of all children?’

R., a six-year-old boy, is hospitalized in the same room. He arrived at the hospital with serious damage as a result of inborn cerebral palsy, which was not treated with the required medical measures. After studying the severity of his condition and stabilizing him, the medical team began focusing on R.’s long rehabilitation process, which included learning how to walk with a walker while strapped with supported belts, prescribing eyeglasses by a child optometrist who came to his bedside, and other treatments.

The treatment of the wounded Syrians is paid by the state, but only donations from different associations make it possible to fund crutches, wheelchairs, prostheses, toys, etc.


A wounded Syrian child at the Ziv Medical Center (Photo: Efi Shrir)

Like all the other mothers in the department, R.’s mother is also afraid to speak. They don’t share their experiences from the horror they fled with their wounded children, leaving everything they cared about behind.

In some sense, the mothers are prisoners in the hospital. Their freedom of movement is limited to the department. When they want to go out for a breath of fresh air or to take a short walk in the sun, they are accompanied by a soldier or policeman who is responsible for their safety. Their entire world is reduced to their wounded child, and to the other mothers.

The other person accompanying them is Fares Issa, a social worker who coordinates the treatment of all wounded Syrians and their parents. He is the contact who greets the wounded as soon as they arrive and accompanies the family from that moment until the child is discharged from the hospital.

“At any given moment, at least one wounded Syrian is hospitalized at the medical center,” says Issa. “Not only is he hurting and suffering, he is also terrified and embarrassed to be hospitalized in Israel. My job is to calm him and his escorting relative down, mediate from Arabic to Hebrew between him and the medical team, and make sure that all their basic medical needs are met on an immediate and regular basis.”


The Ziv Medical Center in Safed (Photo: Efi Shrir)

The escorting relatives, who arrive hastily with nothing but the clothes on their bodies, receive a package of basic and vital products. “We think about everything,” says Isaa. “From soap, underwear, clothing and nail clippers to toys and children’s books in Arabic.”

The escorting relative is often a minor brother or sister, the only survivors of a family that was killed in the bombings, “and then they are in a state of post-traumatic stress and I refer them to a psychiatrist.”

But although Issa is one of the only people who can really help these victims of war, he is frustrated too. “We provided a rolling walker at a cost of more than NIS 10,000 to a child suffering from cerebral palsy, we will equip him with medicine, clothes and all the instruments that will improve his life. We won’t spare any effort to help him, but where will he actually go back to? Even something of his small village remains, he'll return to a destroyed place, without infrastructure, in which he will have no way of using the walker.”

Interior Minister Aryeh Deri announced recently that Israel would take in, for the first time, about 100 orphaned war refugees from the civil war in Syria, but the children recovering at the Ziv Medical Center are not included on the list of those who will receive a permanent home in Israel.


Dr. Lili Hayari (Photo: Efi Shrir)

Issa is not the only one finding it difficult to deal with the difference between the hospital and what is waiting for the patients once they are discharged. “I have no choice but to internalize that at a given moment I am saving lives and treating the Syrian children as if they were our own children,” says Dr. Hayari. “Even more so, because in additional to the medical care, we provide all their additional needs. There is no HMO to help and complete the treatment.

“Nonetheless, I don’t forget that after our extremely committed treatment, they go back to nothing. A thought that occasionally crosses my mind, as I look at these wounded children, is how lucky they are to be saved. Every time a Syrian child comes in, I ask myself again, how was he chosen of all children? Who decided that he would receive treatment and that another child would perhaps die?”

The treatment of the 900 Syrian adults and children is overseen by Dr. Salman Zarka, the hospital director. Zarka is an IDF colonel in reserves and co-founder of the military hospital in the Golan Heights.


Dr. Salman Zarka (Photo: Efi Shrir)

“There is no sweeping order in the IDF to coordinate the treatment of the Syrian children here at Ziv, but that’s the way it turned out, likely for reasons of convenience,” he says. “We give the children and all the Syrian patients medical care beyond the defined level of humanitarian aid, which is primarily defined as saving lives and providing immediate and basic needs. We also insist on improving the quality of life, and when a person arrives with a wounded leg, the medical team will fight to save it and avoid amputation.”

How do the patient-doctor relations work between Israelis and Syrians?

“As far as they are concerned, they are coming to an enemy state. They were told for years that we are as bad as Satan, while we were also raised on the verse 'Out of the north evil shall break forth,' so it has created a situation, emotionally complex and filled with two-sided barriers, that has to be solved. It’s not easy and it creates natural initial fear. That’s why I am so proud to show them and the world our humanity.”

@salarsikander
 
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http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/10...ria-.aspx?pageID=238&nID=109776&NewsCatID=352

A total of 10 Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) suicide bombers were killed in fierce clashes with Ankara-backed Free Syrian Army (FSA) members during an attack on a temporary base belonging to the Turkish army in northern Syria, the Turkish military has said.

In a written statement issued on Feb. 15, the Turkish General Staff said that at around 09:10 a.m. (06:10 a.m. GMT) on Feb. 15, a bomb-laden vehicle along with around eight to 10 ISIL militants tried to attack a temporary base belonging to the Turkish forces positioned in the south of the northern Syrian town of al-Bab.

FSA members, who were standing guard on the outer line of the base realized the approaching jihadists and launched massive fire on them.

Some eight ISIL militants, who were wearing suicide vests and came to the scene on foot to aid the main attack of the bomb-laden vehicle, were killed in the exchange of fire, the army said.

Some seven FSA members were killed after an estimated two ISIL militants inside the vehicle detonated the bomb placed on the car, it added.

The army said that as the bomb-laden vehicle had exploded on the outer skirts of the base no Turkish soldier had been affected.

Turkey since Aug. 24, 2016 has been conducting the Euphrates Shield operation inside Syria with the aim to clear its border line of terrorist organizations.

FSA forces, which are being backed by Turkish artillery and air strikes, have been trying to capture al-Bab from ISIL since December last year.

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım recently said on Feb. 14 that al-Bab was now “largely” under the control of the Syrian rebels after months of clashes with jihadists.

After a rapid advance retaking several towns close to the border, the Euphrates Shield operation faced the biggest challenge in the campaign so far with dozens of Turkish soldiers killed in the space of a few weeks.

In the same statement, the Turkish military said that 17 ISIL militants were separately “neutralized” as part of the artillery fire, air strikes and clashes conducted as part of the operation.

The army uses the term “neutralized” to state that the militants were either killed, wounded or captured.

It said that two other ISIL suicide bombers, who were readying to conduct their attack, were neutralized in a residential district of al-Bab.

A total of 194 ISIL targets were hit with Turkish artillery fire, while another 30 ISIL targets were shot in Turkish Air Force air strikes. These include 16 buildings, three military quarters, one bomb-laden vehicle, 10 defensive positions and one armory.

February/15/2017
 
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Assad aka Khamenai terrorists use human shields to fire unguided rockets at civilian areas (double crime):

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http://wikimapia.org/#lang=en&lat=32.623631&lon=36.098971&z=18&m=b

Khamenai aka Asad indisriminate bombiing of Waer neighborhood in Homs. hats after truce deal and rebels leaving. Their eim to to exterminate and expell everyone who is not loyal enough to degenerate inbred dictator.


 
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http://aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/21-daesh-terrorists-killed-in-northern-syria/753298

At least 21 Daesh terrorists were killed in northern Syria in the last 24 hours as part of the ongoing Operation Euphrates Shield by Turkish-backed Free Syrian Army and Turkish forces, according to a Turkish General Staff statement Saturday.

The statement said 95 Daesh targets, including shelters and gun emplacements, had been hit by Turkish Land Forces.

In addition, Turkish fighter jets destroyed 9 targets including a building used as a hideout and two vehicles.

Turkey and the FSA have been focused on liberating Al-Bab from Daesh since late November as part of Operation Euphrates Shield, launched in late August to clear the terror threat along Turkey’s southern border.

In addition, two PKK terrorists were killed in an ongoing anti-terror operation in the southeastern Mardin province, the General Staff said in another statement.

The PKK -- listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the U.S., and EU -- resumed its armed campaign in July 2015 and has since been responsible for the deaths of approximately 1,100 security personnel and civilians, including women and children.
 
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12:02 19.02.2017(updated 12:03 19.02.2017)
https://sputniknews.com/military/201702191050836873-kh-101-cruise-missile/

The Russian Aerospace Forces sent the time-tested Tupolev Tu-95 (Bear) strategic bombers equipped with the Raduga Kh-101, one of the most advanced cruise missiles in Russia's arsenal, to destroy Daesh targets near the city of Raqqa, the so-called capital of the terrorist group in Syria.

The stealthy airborne Kh-101, developed by the Raduga Design Bureau, has a length of 7.45 meters (more than 24.4 feet) with a maximum launch weight of 2,400 kilograms (5,300 lb). The missile carries a 400-kilogram (880 lb) warhead. Its variation, known as the Kh-102, carries a 450 kT nuclear warhead.

The cruise missile is believed to have a range of up to 5,500 kilometers (over 3,400 miles). It is capable of travelling at a maximum speed of 270 m/s. The missile has a low altitude flight profile, travelling at 30-70 meters (100-230 feet) above the ground. The Kh-101 uses GLONASS, the Russian satellite navigation system, for trajectory correction and is reported to have an accuracy of five to six meters.


The Kh-101 is likely meant to replace the Kh-55, a subsonic air-launched cruise missile which has been in service since 1983.

Up to 12 Kh-101s can be equipped onto the Tupolev Tu-160 (Blackjack), while the Tupolev Tu-95 (Bear) is capable of carrying a maximum of eight of these missiles.


The Kh-101, in service since 2013, was first tested in the 1990s. The missile is one of the newest and most technologically sophisticated weapons which made their debut in Syria. It was first used in combat on November 17, 2015 as part of Russia's limited aerial campaign aimed at helping Damascus destroy radical groups trying to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad.


The operation also marked the first time that the Tu-160 and the Tu-95 took part in a combat operation.


The Tu-160 unleashed a total of 32 Kh-101 missiles on militant targets on November 19-20, 2015. Two Kh-101 missiles were also used to strike Daesh targets near the cities of Idlib and Homs on November 17, 2016.

The mission, which took place on February 17, marked the fifth time that Russia has used the Kh-101 in combat.

The Russian Ministry of Defense released a video of the operation, which saw the aircraft annihilate a command center of one of a major Daesh unit, as well as several militant camps and training centers.


http://tass.com/defense/931566

MOSCOW, February 17. /TASS/. Russia’s Tupolev Tu-95MS long-range strategic bombers have attacked the Islamic State’s facilities near the Syrian city of Raqqa with the H-101 cruise missiles, the Russian Defense Ministry said in a statement on Friday.

"On February 17, 2017, the Tu-95MS strategic bombers, flying from the Russian territory through the airspace of Iran and Iraq, attacked the ISIL (former name of the Islamic State terror group outlawed in Russia) facilities near the Syrian city of Raqqa with the KH-101 cruise missiles. The targets included militant camps and training centers as well as a command center of one of the major ISIL units," the statement reads.

According to the Russian Defense Ministry, all targets were destroyed. The bombers were covered by the Russian Sukhoi Su-30SM and Su-35S fighters scrambled from the Hmeimin air base.
 
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http://aa.com.tr/en/todays-headlines/28-daesh-terrorists-killed-in-northern-syria/753600

At least 28 Daesh terrorists were killed in northern Syria in the last 24 hours by Turkish forces and the U.S.-led coalition, according to a Turkish General Staff statement Sunday.

Turkish army forces killed at least 12 Daesh terrorists as part of the ongoing Operation Euphrates Shield which on Sunday marks the 180th day.

Meanwhile, 16 other Daesh terrorists were killed by airstrikes carried out by a U.S.-led coalition in northern Syria, the statement added.

The statement said 41 Daesh targets, including shelters, had been hit by Turkish Land Forces while 11 others were struck by the U.S.-led coalition.

In addition, Turkish fighter jets destroyed nine targets, including a building used as a hideout and two vehicles.

The jets also killed eight terrorists in Avasin-Basyan and Zap areas of northern Iraq in strikes on the PKK terror group, Turkish military said in another statement.

The Turkish-led Operation Euphrates Shield began in late August to improve security, support coalition forces, and eliminate the terror threat along the Turkish border using Free Syrian Army fighters backed by Turkish artillery and jets.

Last October, the Iraqi army, backed by the coalition and local allies on the ground, began a wide-ranging campaign to retake Mosul, which Daesh overran in mid-2014.

*Reporting by Sarp Ozer; Writing by Hatice Kesgin, Fatih Hafiz Mehmet

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Iraqi forces on Sunday launched a ground offensive to drive the Daesh terrorist group from their last stronghold in Mosul in northern Iraq.

“We announce the start of a new phase in the operation,” Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi said in a televised statement.

While Iraqi forces moved into western Mosul from the city’s northern and western fronts, fighters of the pro-government al-Hashd al-Shaabi militia attacked the area from the west, military spokesman Brigadier-General Yahya Rashool said. a

“Our forces are advancing to achieve their set goals,” he told Anadolu Agency.

Iraqi forces are reported to have captured seven villages and a power plant from Daesh militants in western Mosul as part of the offensive.

Federal police units are aiming to capture Mosul airport, just south of the city, according to police First Lieutenant Faisal al-Khafaji.

“The airport will allow our forces to have an airbase close to the city and facilitate airstrikes” against Daesh, he said.

In October, the Iraqi army -- backed by a U.S.-led air coalition and local allies on the ground -- began a wide-ranging campaign to retake Mosul, once Iraq’s second largest city in terms of population.

In January, the Iraqi army announced the "total liberation" of eastern Mosul -- after three months of fighting -- from the grip of the terrorist group.

Daesh has overrun Mosul -- along vast swathes of territory in northern and western Iraq -- in 2014.

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http://aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/syria-regime-shelling-kills-17-in-eastern-damascus/753607

At least 17 people were killed and scores injured in regime shelling in eastern Damascus late Saturday, according to local sources.

Regime forces shelled the Qaboun neighborhood in eastern Damascus for the second day, killing four people, the sources told Anadolu Agency.

As mourners paid tribute to the four dead people, regime forces shelled the area again, killing 13 other people, the sources added anonymously due to security reasons.

According to the sources, the shelling is part of a regime policy to pile pressure on opposition-held areas in the Damascus suburb of eastern Ghouta.

The shelling came despite a ceasefire deal brokered by Turkey and Russia that went into effect on December 30 throughout war-torn Syria.

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http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/tu...rces.aspx?pageID=238&nID=109934&NewsCatID=352

Control of an emptied road that separates the Ankara-backed Free Syrian Army (FSA) from the forces of the Syrian regime in the south of Syria’s al-Bab has been given to Turkish and Russian commanders on either side, with the aim of avoiding any confrontation, sources told daily Hürriyet.

Sources speaking on condition of anonymity said that the road between Turkey-backed FSA rebels and forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had been formed after the former forces started advancing to the south after encircling al-Bab from the north, east and west, and the latter trying to move to the northern more parts of the city from the south.

The emptied road - between rival forces that are both fighting the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in al-Bab - is comprised of between eight to 10 kilometers linking the town of Manij to Aleppo, sources stated.

While the line emptied of soldiers is as narrow as 200 meters in some places, it widens to as much as one kilometer in others.

FSA members to the north of the line are led by a Turkish commander, while Syrian regime forces to the south of the road are led by a Russian commander, sources said.

With a deal reached between Turkey and Russia, a cease-fire across Syria has mostly held since Dec. 30, 2016. Ankara and Moscow, which support opposite sides in the six-year-old war, say they are trying to turn the cease-fire into a permanent truce and launch credible peace negotiations.

Turkey backs FSA rebels as part of its ongoing Euphrates Shield operation that it launched in August last year in order to clear its border of terrorists.

A total of 28 ISIL militants were “neutralized” over the weekend as part of the Euphrates Shield operation, the Turkish military stated.

Authorities often use the word “neutralized” in their statements to imply that the militant in question surrendered, was killed or was captured.

While 16 ISIL militants were neutralized in northern Syria on Feb. 18, another 12 were neutralized on Feb. 19, the military said in two separate statements.

The U.S.-led anti-ISIL coalition forces also killed a total of nine ISIL militants in air strikes on the mentioned days, the statements said.

February/19/2017
 
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http://indianexpress.com/article/world/four-russian-military-dead-in-syria-blast-agencies-4535003/
Four Russian military dead in Syria blast: agencies


The four deaths raise the number of Russian military officially reported killed in Syria to 26 since it started its campaign in Syria in support of President Bashar al-Assad in September 2015.



By: AFP | Moscow | Published:February 20, 2017 7:34 pm
Four Russian military personnel were killed and two injured when their vehicle was targeted with explosives in central Syria last week, a defence ministry statement quoted by Russian agencies said today.

“Four Russian servicemen died when their car exploded on a radio-controlled IED on February 16, 2017, in Syria,” the statement said. “Two more were injured. Russian military medics are trying to save their lives.”

“The convoy of Syrian army cars, in which the vehicle with Russian military advisers was travelling, was en route from the Tiyas airfield area toward the city of Homs,” it said.

“After they travelled four kilometres, a radio-controlled explosive was activated under the car with Russian servicemen.”

The four deaths raise the number of Russian military officially reported killed in Syria to 26 since it started its campaign in Syria in support of President Bashar al-Assad on September 30, 2015. Another soldier committed suicide.
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FSA Al Majd brigades digs a trench in Al Marj eastern Ghouta of Damascus
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http://www.arabnews.com/node/1057076/middle-east
BEIRUT: Syrian regime forces Monday escalated their bombing campaign around Damascus, raining shells down on rebel territory and sending out a “bloody message” just days before renewed peace talks in Geneva.

Representatives from the opposition and of President Bashar Assad’s regime are to head to Switzerland on Thursday for another attempt to end their country’s brutal six-year war.

But regime forces Monday escalated their bombing of the edges of Syria’s capital, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and activists on the ground.

“Regime air strikes killed four people and wounded another 15 in escalation on Barzeh,” a northern rebel-held district of Damascus, the Observatory said.

The Britain-based monitor said rockets also hit the northeastern opposition-controlled neighborhood of Qabun overnight and into Monday morning.

Rebels and regime forces reached a local cease-fire deal in Qabun in 2014, but violence has built up in the neighborhood since last week.

At least 16 people were killed on Saturday in regime rocket fire on a funeral in Qabun, according to the Observatory.

“This is the third day of bombardment — rockets, artillery, mortars, and air strikes,” said media activist Hamza Abbas, speaking to AFP via Internet from Qabun, where he said he could hear non-stop shelling.
“The bombardment is targeting three neighborhoods — Qabun, Barzeh, and Tishreen,” Abbas said.

A Syrian military source contacted by AFP declined to comment on the operations.

Syria’s opposition on Sunday lambasted the regime's renewed bombing campaign around the capital, calling it a “bloody message” aimed at sabotaging the peace talks.

The High Negotiations Committee (HNC) said the attacks near Damascus and elsewhere across the country were “obstructing the efforts aimed at a political transition in Syria.”

“It is a bloody message from a criminal regime just a few days ahead of political negotiations in Geneva that demonstrates its rejection of any political solution,” the HNC said in an online statement.

The HNC — formed in December 2015 and which has emerged as the leading umbrella group for Syria’s opposition factions — has a new chief opposition negotiator for the Geneva talks, lawyer Mohammed Sabra.

Sabra replaces Mohamed Alloush of the Army of Islam (Jaish Al-Islam), a powerful rebel faction headquartered in the opposition bastion of Eastern Ghouta.

Eastern Ghouta — which has faced a blistering army offensive in recent months — lies neat to the opposition-controlled districts of Damascus being increasingly targeted by the regime.

Assad’s regime is “bitterly determined to rid itself of the insurgent enclave, one way or another,” wrote analyst Aron Lund in a post for the Carnegie Endowment’s Middle East Center.

“However weakened and contained, Eastern Ghouta remains a dagger pointed at the heart of Assad’s regime and it ties down many thousands of soldiers,” Lund said.

Overrunning the area could have a significant impact on peace talks “since no opposition delegation would be of much value” without the Army of Islam, Lund added.

The talks in Switzerland are the fourth round of UN-hosted peace negotiations.
Since the last round in April 2016, rebels have lost their stronghold in east Aleppo and seen a new partnership form between their main ally Turkey and regime backer Russia.

Ankara and Moscow teamed up in December to secure a truce deal between rebel groups and regime forces, but the cease-fire is barely holding across Syria.

Along with regime ally Iran, the two powers also hosted two rounds of talks between regime officials and prominent rebels in the Kazakh capital.


More than 310,000 people have been killed and millions forced to flee their homes since Syria’s conflict broke out in 2011 with protests against Assad’s rule.
 
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Cowrds care less about their own type which they hire from Pakistan.
Who knows how they die... were they killed in action or while asleep by friends, to keep the closed secret as close as possible.
 
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12:02 19.02.2017(updated 12:03 19.02.2017)
https://sputniknews.com/military/201702191050836873-kh-101-cruise-missile/

The Russian Aerospace Forces sent the time-tested Tupolev Tu-95 (Bear) strategic bombers equipped with the Raduga Kh-101, one of the most advanced cruise missiles in Russia's arsenal, to destroy Daesh targets near the city of Raqqa, the so-called capital of the terrorist group in Syria.

The stealthy airborne Kh-101, developed by the Raduga Design Bureau, has a length of 7.45 meters (more than 24.4 feet) with a maximum launch weight of 2,400 kilograms (5,300 lb). The missile carries a 400-kilogram (880 lb) warhead. Its variation, known as the Kh-102, carries a 450 kT nuclear warhead.

The cruise missile is believed to have a range of up to 5,500 kilometers (over 3,400 miles). It is capable of travelling at a maximum speed of 270 m/s. The missile has a low altitude flight profile, travelling at 30-70 meters (100-230 feet) above the ground. The Kh-101 uses GLONASS, the Russian satellite navigation system, for trajectory correction and is reported to have an accuracy of five to six meters.


The Kh-101 is likely meant to replace the Kh-55, a subsonic air-launched cruise missile which has been in service since 1983.

Up to 12 Kh-101s can be equipped onto the Tupolev Tu-160 (Blackjack), while the Tupolev Tu-95 (Bear) is capable of carrying a maximum of eight of these missiles.

The Kh-101, in service since 2013, was first tested in the 1990s. The missile is one of the newest and most technologically sophisticated weapons which made their debut in Syria. It was first used in combat on November 17, 2015 as part of Russia's limited aerial campaign aimed at helping Damascus destroy radical groups trying to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad.

The operation also marked the first time that the Tu-160 and the Tu-95 took part in a combat operation.


The Tu-160 unleashed a total of 32 Kh-101 missiles on militant targets on November 19-20, 2015. Two Kh-101 missiles were also used to strike Daesh targets near the cities of Idlib and Homs on November 17, 2016.

The mission, which took place on February 17, marked the fifth time that Russia has used the Kh-101 in combat.

The Russian Ministry of Defense released a video of the operation, which saw the aircraft annihilate a command center of one of a major Daesh unit, as well as several militant camps and training centers.


http://tass.com/defense/931566

MOSCOW, February 17. /TASS/. Russia’s Tupolev Tu-95MS long-range strategic bombers have attacked the Islamic State’s facilities near the Syrian city of Raqqa with the H-101 cruise missiles, the Russian Defense Ministry said in a statement on Friday.

"On February 17, 2017, the Tu-95MS strategic bombers, flying from the Russian territory through the airspace of Iran and Iraq, attacked the ISIL (former name of the Islamic State terror group outlawed in Russia) facilities near the Syrian city of Raqqa with the KH-101 cruise missiles. The targets included militant camps and training centers as well as a command center of one of the major ISIL units," the statement reads.

According to the Russian Defense Ministry, all targets were destroyed. The bombers were covered by the Russian Sukhoi Su-30SM and Su-35S fighters scrambled from the Hmeimin air base.

Every world power testing their advanced weapons in real life conditions. Russia (SU-35s, SU-30s, raduga cruise missiles, nuclear missile subs), U.S(F-16s, F-22, F-15s,F-18s,strategic bombers, reconnaissance spy aircrafts), France(rafale jets aboard it's nuclear aircraft carrier, and it's cruise missiles), U.K(Typhoons, drones, stop shadow cruise missiles, brimstone , tornado fighters etc) and Iran/Turkey to some extent. The country is now a hotbed for foreign countries to also test their weapons and develop new fighting doctrines in real life situations. :D
 
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Every world power testing their advanced weapons in real life conditions. Russia (SU-35s, SU-30s, raduga cruise missiles, nuclear missile subs), U.S(F-16s, F-22, F-15s,F-18s,strategic bombers, reconnaissance spy aircrafts), France(rafale jets aboard it's nuclear aircraft carrier, and it's cruise missiles), U.K(Typhoons, drones, stop shadow cruise missiles, brimstone , tornado fighters etc) and Iran/Turkey to some extent. The country is now a hotbed for foreign countries to also test their weapons and develop new fighting doctrines in real life situations. :D

Don't forget Zimbabwe!
 
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Don't forget Zimbabwe!

Obviously how can I forget the Great most benevolent leader and leader of the anti free world for life. :D
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He too should intervened in Syria and help the country's improve its economy a la socialist way, that way SYRIA will recover and rebuild quickly from its current economic malaise. Follow the Mugabe Zimbabwean socialist model for eternal prosperity. :enjoy:
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