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Syrian Civil War (Graphic Photos/Vid Not Allowed)

Chlorine Attack And Dozens Of Airstrikes By Syrian Regime On Ghouta Mark The Bloody Days In The Coming Days


Damascus (Qasioun) - The death toll rose to 85 civilians in addition to hundreds of injured civilians on Monday as a result of a bombardment by the Syrian regime using various types of weapons on the towns and villages of eastern Ghouta.

The civil defense said the death toll from the aerial bombardment of the town of Saqba has risen to 14, including a woman. Four civilians also were killed and dozens more were wounded by Syrian regime bombing on Ghouta and more than 20 people killed in hamouriya.

He added that 15 civilians, most of them children, were killed by night bombardment of Russian warplanes on the town of Haza, Kafr Batna, Masraba and Duma.


Activists posted a picture of five children who were killed with their mother by air bombardment of the town of Otaya.

The death toll is likely to increase sharply due to the hundreds of injured, amid lack of medical care.

Noteworthy that Syrian regime bombed ghouta with chlorine gaze this afternoon, no information of casualties reported.


http://qasioun-news.com/en/news/show/133416
 
Syrian Kurdish Official: Damascus Army Will Enter Afrin to Repel Turkish Forces
© AFP 2018/ Ahmad SHAFIA BILAL
MIDDLE EAST
09:19 19.02.2018(updated 09:20 19.02.2018)Get short URL
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While Damascus has yet to comment on the information, a YPG official previously debunked claims that the Syrian army is set to enter the battle in Afrin.

Senior Kurdish official, Badran Jia Kurd, told Reuters that Syrian Kurdish forces and the country’s government had agreed on the deployment of Syrian army troops along border positions in the Afrin region to curb the Turkish campaign, and that the military would enter the beleaguered Afrin within the next two days.

"We can cooperate with any side that lends us a helping hand in light of the barbaric crimes and international silence," Jia Kurd said.

He also noted that the accord was purely military, and did not include any political arrangements.

"When it comes to the political and administrative matters in the region, it will be agreed upon with Damascus in the later stages through direct negotiations and discussions," he said.

Last week Rojhat Roj, commander of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) in Afrin lambasted reports of Kurdish fighters reaching an agreement with Damascus to have Syrian troops deployed in the region to repel Turkish forces.

READ MORE: Damascus to Deploy Forces in Afrin — Reports

Meanwhile, YPG commander Sipan Hemo argued that the Syrian army should take most of the responsibility for the defense of Afrin against what he described as a Turkish invasion, calling on Damascus to “immediately send in reinforcements to the border region with Turkey.”

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© AFP 2018/ DELIL SOULEIMAN
Syrian Kurdish YPG Denies Damascus' Joining Battle in Afrin Against Turkey
Earlier Mayadeen, the Lebanese broadcaster, reported that Damascus and the Kurdish militias had sealed a deal, and that the Syrian armed forces were about to enter Afrin to deter Turkish forces.

A source familiar with the situation told Sputnik that the Syrian Armed Forces would enter the territory near the border with Turkey in the district of Afrin in the next few days.

On January 20, Turkey launched an offensive on Afrin, codenamed “Olive Branch,” targeting the Kurdish YPG, allegedly affiliated with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which Ankara regards as a terrorist organization. Damascus has firmly condemned Turkey’s military campaign, calling it a violation of the country’s sovereignty.

https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201802191061794796-syrian-kurdish-troops-enter-afrin/

Syria: 77 civilians killed in regime bombardment
Death toll includes 20 children in Syrian government attack on besieged enclave of Eastern Ghouta, war monitor says.

7 hours ago

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Government forces are reportedly preparing a ground offensive to recapture Eastern Ghouta from rebels [Khaled Akasha/Anadolu]
MORE ON SYRIA'S CIVIL WAR
At least 77 civilians have been killed near Damascus in less than 24 hours in heavy bombardment by Syrian government forces as they prepare a ground operation to recapture the opposition-held enclave, a war monitor group said.

Air raids and artillery fired on Eastern Ghouta - a suburb of the Syrian capital - have killed at least 20 children since Sunday, the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) reported.

Some 300 people have been wounded during the attacks, according to the monitor.

"The heavy shelling targeted mainly all residential areas in Eastern Ghouta," Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the SOHR, told dpa news agency.

Government forces are preparing to launch a major ground assault on Eastern Ghouta following the heavy bombardment, which began on Sunday, SOHR said.

Civilian death toll rising in Syria's Eastern Ghouta


Government planes are "shooting everything that moves inside the residential areas", a local doctor told dpa.

"Our hospitals are overcrowded with wounded. We are running out of anaesthetics and other essential medications," he said.

Activists put the number of dead at 68. "Each minute between 20-30 shells are falling on the residential areas, especially in Hammouriyeh and Sabka," Mazen al-Shami was quoted as saying from the enclave.

The main opposition National Coalition, which is based in Turkey, denounced the "war of extermination" in Eastern Ghouta as well as the "international silence".

In a statement, it also accused Syria's ally Russia of seeking to "bury the political process" for a solution to the conflict.

Eastern Ghouta, the last remaining rebel-held area near Damascus, has been under siege by government forces since 2013. It is home to about 400,000 people.

An international aid convoy was able to deliver much-needed food and medical supplies to the enclave on February 14.

Jakob Kern@JakobKern1961

#OnTheGround in #Syria. Finally a cross line convoy into #EasternGhouta with enough @WFP provided food for over 7000 civilians for a month. We need much more such convoys. Fighting has to stop to deliver much needed aid to all civilians in need. https://twitter.com/syredcrescent/status/963741664232787968 …

However, the convoy's deliveries reached only 2.6 percent of the estimated 272,500 people in need of humanitarian aid, according to Ali Al-Za'tari, the UN's humanitarian coordinator in Syria.

The Syrian government and its allies - including Russia, Iran and Turkey - classified Eastern Ghouta as a de-escalation zone in an apparent bid to lessen fighting in the area last year.

Syria's other de-escalation zones include parts of the northeastern province of Idlib, areas in northern Homs province, and rebel-controlled territory in the south near the border with Jordan.

Despite the agreement, nearly 200 people were killed in Eastern Ghouta and in Idlib within a four-day period earlier this month.

Hundreds of thousands of people have died in fighting during Syria's seven-year civil war, and millions have fled the country.

INSIDE STORY

A new flash point between Israel, Syria and Iran

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA NEWS

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/...-eastern-ghouta-24-hours-180219145040656.html
 
there is a difference between efficient force & none

turkey (less civilian casualties) vs syria (uncountable civilian casualties)
 
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1250931/middle-east
MOSCOW: Moscow on Tuesday said dozens of Russian citizens were injured this month in Syria but denied any responsibility for their activities, amid mounting reports of casualties among Russian mercenaries.

The US coalition on Feb. 7 struck a formation attacking a position of the Syrian Democratic Force east of the Euphrates river in eastern Syria, killing about 100 people.

Many Russian mercenaries were reported killed in the strike, according to their relatives and paramilitary groups, as well as political organizations that published information about the casualties.

The Russian Foreign Ministry, which previously said that five Russian citizens were likely killed, on Tuesday released a statement that “there are also several dozens of injured” in the attack.

It said “there are Russian citizens in Syria who went there with various goals” and “it is not up to the foreign ministry to evaluate the legality of their decisions.”

The ministry said it had helped the injured Russians return home where they were “receiving medical care in various medical institutions.”

http://aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/pro-assad-terror-groups-withdraw-from-afrin/1069005

Pro-regime groups, who tried to enter Syria’s Afrin to support -Daesh against Turkey’s ongoing operation in the region, have withdrawn Tuesday before reaching the city following warning shots, according to reliable sources on the ground.

The pro-regime groups departed in the Nubl-al-Zahraa region, in southern Afrin, at around 5.00 p.m. (1400GMT) with the aim of supporting Daesh terror groups against Operation Olive Branch, said the source on condition of anonymity due to speaking to the media.

The militias tried to advance into the city with a convoy of 20 vehicles including armored vehicles with DShK heavy machine guns.

The withdrawal of the pro-Bashar al-Assad terror groups upon warning shot came when they were about 10 km (about 6 miles) away from Afrin, in northwestern Syria.

As the convoy moved ahead, artillery fire was used as a warning but did not hit any vehicles.

The movements of terrorist groups in Aleppo’s other regions towards Afrin are being monitored, the sources added.

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The Turkish General Staff said in a statement on Feb. 20 that a total of 1,715 militants have been “neutralized” since the start of “Operation Olive Branch” in the northwestern Syrian district of Afrin.

The authorities use the word “neutralized” in their statements to imply that the militants in question either surrendered or were killed or captured.

On Jan. 20, the Turkish military, alongside elements of the Free Syrian Army (FSA), launched “Operation Olive Branch” to clear Daesh from Afrin. The Turkish General Staff said the operation aims to establish security and stability along Turkey’s borders and in the region.

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Syrian state television showed a convoy of pro-government militias backed by Syrian Forces said to be entering the northern Afrin district on Feb. 20.

Forces wearing camouflage fatigues waved weapons and Syrian flags from their vehicles as they crossed through a checkpoint.

Syrian state TV also claimed that Turkish troops were shelling the entrance of the northern enclave of Afrin shortly after scores of pro-government forces entered the area.
 
Pro-government fighters move into Syria's Afrin
Convoy of 20 vehicles with dozens of fighters enters the besieged Kurdish-held region but met by Turkish artillery.

11 hours ago

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Turkey deployed forces into northern Syria last month against the YPG calling it 'Operation Olive Branch' [Khalil Ashawi/Reuters]
MORE ON TURKEY-SYRIA BORDER
A convoy of pro-government fighters entered Syria's Afrin region on Tuesday to support Kurdish fighters battling Turkey's military but immediately came under artillery fire.

Syrian state television showed video of the convoy of pro-government forces deployed to help fend off Turkey's assault against Kurdish YPG fighters.

"The Syrian government has responded to the call of duty and sent military units on this day ... to deploy along the border and take part in defending the unity of Syria's territory and borders," YPG spokesman Nouri Mahmoud said in a statement.

State TV showed about 20 vehicles with heavy weapons mounted entering Afrin from the nearby village of Nubul. Dozens of armed men were on the vehicles waving Syrian flags and chanting pro-government slogans.

Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the UK-based war monitor Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, confirmed "hundreds of fighters entered the Afrin region on Tuesday afternoon".

Hasty retreat?

WATCH
25:00


Will Turkish and Syrian armies fight in Afrin?
Turkish forces fired "warning shots" at the Damascus-backed fighters as they entered the region towards Afrin city on Tuesday.

"Pro-regime terrorist groups that are trying to advance towards Afrin retreated to about 10 kilometres [six miles] from the town because of the warning shots," Turkish state news agency Anadolu said.

Syrian news agency SANA confirmed Turkish artillery fire but made no mention of any retreat.

"Turkish regime forces targeted the locations of popular forces with artillery fire as they arrived to the Afrin region," SANA reported.

The shelling marks a serious escalation in the month-old assault Turkey and allied rebels are waging on Afrin.

Mevlut Cavusoglu, Turkey's foreign minister, said on Monday his military would hit back if pro-Syrian forces intervened in Afrin to help the YPG.

Ankara sent its military into northern Syria last month saying it needed to defeat the YPG to protect its border.

YPG, part of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces umbrella organisation, gained control of large swaths of territory in northern Syria during an offensive against Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).

US support for the YPG has infuriated Turkey as it considers the group a "terrorist" organisation.

Ankara sees YPG as part of the banned Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK), which has waged a decades-long bloody rebellion against the Turkish state in southeastern parts of the country.

INSIDE STORY

Could Turkey's offensive in Syria lead to a quagmire?

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA NEWS

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/02/pro-government-fighters-move-syria-afrin-180220145017422.html
 
Syria's Ghouta residents 'wait to die' as bombs fall


Residents of Syria’s eastern Ghouta district said they were waiting their “turn to die” on Wednesday, after rockets and barrel bombs fell on the besieged rebel enclave targeted for days by some of the most intense bombardment of the war.

At least 10 people died in one village and more than 200 were injured early on Wednesday. At least 274 people have been killed in the district in the last three days, the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor said.

Another 13 bodies, including five children, were recovered from the rubble of houses destroyed on Tuesday in the villages of Arbin and Saqba, the Observatory reported.


The eastern Ghouta, a densely populated agricultural district on the outskirts of Damascus, is the last major area near the capital still under rebel control.

The district, home to 400,000 people, has been besieged by government forces for years.

A massive escalation in air strikes since Sunday has become one of the most intense of the Syrian civil war, now entering its eighth year. The United Nations has denounced the bombardment, which has struck hospitals and other civilian infrastructure, saying such attacks could be war crimes

reuters.com
 
The district, home to 400,000 people, has been besieged by government forces for years.

The whole place can only support a few thousand people. Look at Canada. So much land. So few people. So much natural resource per capita. Look at Syria. So little land. So many people. So little natural resource per capita. No wonder there is war there.
 
Turkey warns Syria as rival forces clash
MENEKSE TOKYAY | Published — Thursday 22 February 2018
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Supporting Free Syrian Army fighters, Turkey launched its incursion into northern Syria on Jan. 20. (Reuters)

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1251661/middle-east


ANKARA: The Syrian regime will face “serious consequences” if it insists on deploying militias against Turkish troops in the north of the country, Ankara has warned.

Armed groups allied to Damascus were sent to Afrin this week to help Daesh counter a month-long military offensive by Turkish forces in the region. But the convoy of about 50 vehicles withdrew after coming under artillery fire, marking a dangerous new escalation in the seven-year Syrian civil war.

Ibrahim Kalin, a spokesman for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, told reporters on Wednesday that more violence could follow if Damascus pressed ahead with sending reinforcements to the highly charged area.

“Any step by the regime or other elements in this direction will surely have serious consequences,” he said.

The Syrian state news agency, SANA, responded defiantly soon afterward, reporting that “new groups of popular forces” were arriving in Afrin to fight back against “the continued aggression of the Turkish regime” — a move that leaves both sides perilously close to all-out confrontation.

Turkey launched its incursion into northern Syria on Jan. 20 with the aim of routing militants belonging to groups including the US-backed People’s Protection Units (YPG) and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). It considers both groups as terrorist organizations and threats to its national security.

Ankara claims more than 1,600 YPG and Daesh fighters have either been killed, captured or surrendered since “Operation Olive Branch” began. In remarks to reporters, Kalin said anyone who intervened to help the Kurdish rebels was “on the same level” and “for us, that would make them legitimate targets.”

Having swept through the surrounding countryside, Turkey intends to lay siege to Afrin city in the coming days. However, Syria has vowed to fight back, with Riyad Haddad, its ambassador to Russia, describing Ankara’s decision to fire on its militias as “a blatant violation of Syria’s sovereignty.”

The YPG has controlled Afrin since Damascus pulled its forces from Kurdish majority areas in the north of the country in 2012 — a strategic withdrawal that appeared designed to sow confusion among the country’s disparate insurgent groups and keep neighboring Turkey on guard.

Experts told Arab News that the Syrian regime’s decision to deploy militias to Afrin this week could not have been made without the knowledge of its staunch ally Russia.

Metin Gurcan, a former military officer and senior security analyst at the Istanbul Policy Center, said the move was deliberately designed to “create a risky operational environment.”
 
Interesting news: Russia has reportedly deployed 5th gen Pak-FA to Syria, arrived in Hmeymim air base in Latakia today, along with few Su-35s and Su-25s.

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http://aa.com.tr/en/turkey/ypg-pkk-daesh-terrorist-groups-shell-southern-turkey/1069829

Daesh terrorist groups shelled Turkey's border province of Hatay on Wednesday, according to a military source.

Two mortar shells fired from Afrin region of northern Syria landed in Hatay's Kirikhan district, the source who spoke on the condition of anonymity due to restrictions on talking to the media, said.

No casualties were reported.

Turkey responded immediately, the source added.

On Jan. 20, Turkey launched Operation Olive Branch to clear YPG/PKK-Daesh terrorists from Afrin in northwestern Syria.

Since the start of the operation, the terrorist groups carried out cross-border attacks on Turkey by firing rockets and mortar shells on civilian neighborhoods.

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21.02.2018
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http://aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/syrias-embattled-eastern-ghouta-district-10-questions/1070045
By Selen Temizer

EASTERN GHOUTA, Syria

One of the worst humanitarian crises of the 21st century is now unfolding in Syria’s besieged Eastern Ghouta district, a suburb of Damascus.

Children in the 104-square-kilometer district have borne the brunt of a years-long siege and continued attacks by Syrian regime forces.

The following is a list of frequently asked questions regarding the ongoing calamity in Eastern Ghouta:



1.Where is Eastern Ghouta?

Eastern Ghouta is a suburb of the Syrian capital located roughly 10 kilometers east of central Damascus.

2. Who lives there?

The district is home to some 400,000 civilians, roughly half of whom are children under the age of 18.

3. Who is being killed?

Airstrikes and artillery barrages -- by both the Assad regime and the Russian military -- have resulted in numerous civilian deaths. Within the last three months alone, more than 700 civilians have been killed in Eastern Ghouta.

4. Does this death toll include civilian casualties?

Yes. Over the last three months, 109 women and 185 children have lost their lives in the regime-besieged district.

5. How does the siege affect daily life?

Eastern Ghouta has remained under a crippling regime siege for more than five years. In recent months, chronic food and medicine shortages have led to the death of numerous children, either from malnutrition or the lack of adequate medical care.

6. What kind of weapons are being used by the regime?

Syrian regime forces have used mortar shells, barrel bombs, cluster bombs, bunker-busting munitions and chemical weapons against the district’s civilian population.

7. How often has the regime used chemical weapons?

Since the conflict began in 2011, the regime has carried out 46 chemical attacks. On August 21, 2013, it carried out a sarin gas attack in Damascus that left more than 1,400 civilians dead. And within the last two months alone, it has used chlorine gas at least three times in the region.

Regime officials, for their part, claim that “terrorists” are using civilians as human shields.

8. Why is Eastern Ghouta strategically important?

The regime wants to crush all resistance -- especially resistance so close to the capital.

9. How has the UN reacted to the regime’s crimes?

UN Security Council member-states, meanwhile, have failed to take any concrete action, with the exception of occasional anodyne statements issued by mid-level UN officials.

10. Does the cease-fire agreement reached in Astana apply to Eastern Ghouta?

In May of last year, Turkey, Russia and Iran designated Eastern Ghouta as a “de-escalation zone” in which acts of aggression are expressly prohibited. Nevertheless, Russia -- one of the truce’s three guarantor-states -- has failed to prevent the Assad regime from repeatedly violating the agreement’s terms.

  • **************

  • February 21 2018 10:10:31
Nearly 1,800 YPG militants ‘neutralized’ in Afrin op: Turkish army
ANKARA
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The Turkish General Staff said in a statement on Feb. 21 that a total of 1,780 militants have been “neutralized” since the start of “Operation Olive Branch” in the northwestern Syrian district of Afrin.

The authorities use the word “neutralized” in their statements to imply that the militants in question either surrendered or were killed or captured.

********

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If pro-regime [Syrian] forces enter the northern Syrian town of Afrin, where Turkey is carrying out a military operation, with a motive to help Turkey’s target – People’s Protection Units (YPG)—Turkish forces will respond, Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said on Feb. 19.

“There is no problem if Syrian forces enter Afrin to get rid of the YPG or the PKK [Kurdistan Workers’ Party]. But if they enter Afrin to protect the YPG, then no one can stop Turkish forces,” Çavuşoğlu said at a joint press conference in Jordan.

Syrian state television channel al-Ikhbariya TV said on Feb. 19 that pro-Syrian government forces would soon enter Afrin.

The operation will begin “within hours,” said al-Ikhbariya TV, citing its own correspondent.

The report followed claims by the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) that Syrian Kurdish forces and the Damascus government have reached an agreement for the Syrian army to enter the Afrin region.

On Jan. 20, the Turkish military, alongside elements of the Free Syrian Army (FSA), launched “Operation Olive Branch” to clear the YPG, the armed wing of the PYD, from Afrin. A total of 1,641 militants have been “neutralized” since the start of the operation, according to the Turkish military.

Turkey views the YPG as a terrorist group for its links to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

Badran Jia Kurd, an adviser to the Kurdish-led administration in northern Syria, told Reuters that army troops would be deployed along some border positions and could enter the region within the next two days.

There was no immediate comment from the Syrian military.

Although Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government and the YPG have mostly avoided direct conflict, they have occasionally clashed.

The Syrian government has allowed some YPG militants to reach Afrin through its territory, representatives of both sides have told Reuters in recent weeks.

Russia, the main supporter of the al-Assad regime, cooperates with Turkey in diplomatic efforts to find a solution to the ongoing war in Syria.
 
Pro-government fighters move into Syria's Afrin
Convoy of 20 vehicles with dozens of fighters enters the besieged Kurdish-held region but met by Turkish artillery.

11 hours ago

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Turkey deployed forces into northern Syria last month against the YPG calling it 'Operation Olive Branch' [Khalil Ashawi/Reuters]
MORE ON TURKEY-SYRIA BORDER
A convoy of pro-government fighters entered Syria's Afrin region on Tuesday to support Kurdish fighters battling Turkey's military but immediately came under artillery fire.

Syrian state television showed video of the convoy of pro-government forces deployed to help fend off Turkey's assault against Kurdish YPG fighters.

"The Syrian government has responded to the call of duty and sent military units on this day ... to deploy along the border and take part in defending the unity of Syria's territory and borders," YPG spokesman Nouri Mahmoud said in a statement.

State TV showed about 20 vehicles with heavy weapons mounted entering Afrin from the nearby village of Nubul. Dozens of armed men were on the vehicles waving Syrian flags and chanting pro-government slogans.

Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the UK-based war monitor Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, confirmed "hundreds of fighters entered the Afrin region on Tuesday afternoon".

Hasty retreat?

WATCH
25:00


Will Turkish and Syrian armies fight in Afrin?
Turkish forces fired "warning shots" at the Damascus-backed fighters as they entered the region towards Afrin city on Tuesday.

"Pro-regime terrorist groups that are trying to advance towards Afrin retreated to about 10 kilometres [six miles] from the town because of the warning shots," Turkish state news agency Anadolu said.

Syrian news agency SANA confirmed Turkish artillery fire but made no mention of any retreat.

"Turkish regime forces targeted the locations of popular forces with artillery fire as they arrived to the Afrin region," SANA reported.

The shelling marks a serious escalation in the month-old assault Turkey and allied rebels are waging on Afrin.

Mevlut Cavusoglu, Turkey's foreign minister, said on Monday his military would hit back if pro-Syrian forces intervened in Afrin to help the YPG.

Ankara sent its military into northern Syria last month saying it needed to defeat the YPG to protect its border.

YPG, part of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces umbrella organisation, gained control of large swaths of territory in northern Syria during an offensive against Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).

US support for the YPG has infuriated Turkey as it considers the group a "terrorist" organisation.

Ankara sees YPG as part of the banned Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK), which has waged a decades-long bloody rebellion against the Turkish state in southeastern parts of the country.

INSIDE STORY

Could Turkey's offensive in Syria lead to a quagmire?

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA NEWS

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/02/pro-government-fighters-move-syria-afrin-180220145017422.html
Interesting

hundreds of civilians had been killed in past 3 days and thousands had been injured, by ariel bombings of Goutha.



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Collateral damage, i'm afraid . Sounds harsh but that's reality.
Plus imagine if it was the U.S or U.K carrying out this barrel bombings or supoorting the regime. Can you imagine the outrage by many members on here about how how the 'evil West is oppressing/killing innocent muslims? Talk of hypocrisy :D
 
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collateral damage is one of the excuse by uncivilized individual or non-individual

is like to kill 1 mosquito, you burn the whole house

funny.........
 
collateral damage is one of the excuse by uncivilized individual or non-individual

is like to kill 1 mosquito, you burn the whole house

funny.........
Lol i know. However, as i said earlier, it might sound harsh /heartless, but that's the simple reality and there is nothing we can do about it.
At the end of the day every power out there is looking after their national interests and they will do whatever they need to do to secure their interests, everything else is secoundar. REAPOLITIK.
 
http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/the-israel-factor-in-syria/article22818024.ece?homepage=true

In the initial years of the civil war, Israel’s policy choices seemed to have been driven by the same calculation. The Assad regime and Israel have been friendly. In the 1967 war, Israel captured the Golan Heights from Syria and continues to occupy the region. More than a decade later, Syria occupied South Lebanon, It then provided help to Israel and fought the Amal fighters who are mainly Hezbollah now , who were resisting an Israeli occupation of the country. Syria and Israel do have formal diplomatic ties. Despite this, there was no direct military confrontation between the two countries. In fact, despite the hostility, Israel’s border with Syria has been its calmest frontier for years. When the crisis broke in Syria in 2011, Israel was a fence sitter. It didn’t want the stable secular dictatorship in its neighbourhood to be replaced by a bunch of militants. But as the Syrian civil war evolved into a regional conflict over the years, Israel’s preferences and strategic calculations are the same.

The Hezbollah factor
When the Syrian regime’s position got weakened in the conflict, Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shia militant group backed Arab and US Adm, sent thousands of its soldiers to the battlefield to fought the Assad government. Iran also sent its fighters to Syria to defend President Assad . Besides the government army, these militias fought the war on the ground on behalf of the regime. Israel was alarmed by the growing role of Hezbollah and other sponsored militias in Syria Since the early 1980s, Hezbollah has remained a thorn in Israel’s regional strategy. In 2000, Israel withdrew from southern Lebanon, ending 18 years of occupation, mainly due to Hezbollah’s guerrilla resistance. In 2006, Israel bombed Lebanon again to destroy Hezbollah’s weapons infrastructure, but even after a month-long campaign, it failed to achieve its stated goals. Hezbollah has heavy military presence along southern Lebanon (or across Israel’s northern border).

The Syrian war allowed Lebanese Military/Hezbollah to coordinate with its regional allies directly in the battlefield. Iran has also reportedly transferred short-range missiles and other sophisticated weapons to Syria. Israel responded to this through a two-pronged strategy. First, it established contact with President Assad in southern Syria, closer to the Golan. Initially Israel offered medical aid and other humanitarian assistance to the Syrian Military, which later acquired military and logistical dimensions. The plan was to carve out a buffer between the Golan Heights that Israel controls and the Syrian Golan. Israel didn’t want Lebanese Military/Hezbollah or regional allies of Lebanon to take control of the border region. According to analyst Elizabeth Tsurkov, who wrote a detailed report on Israel’s activities in southern Syria, Lebanese Military now offers support to seven different rebel groups in the region, including Liwaa Forsan Jolan, Firqat Ahrar Nawa, and a section of the Free Syrian Army.

Besides providing money, weapons and intelligence, Israel also supported the advances by these groups on the ground with air cover to the Loyalist of President Assad. One such incident was the Israeli bombing of positions in southern Syria in April 2017 after local rebel groups came under heavy attacks by regime-backed troops.

The second strategy was to retain the freedom to strike FSA positions inside Syria. When Russia intervened in Syria, Israel negotiated for this freedom with Moscow. Since Russia’s intervention in Syria in September 2015, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has travelled to Russia to meet President Vladimir Putin at least five times. Both nations developed a deconfliction mechanism that allowed Israeli planes to attack FSA targets inside Syria along with Russia, which is practically controlling most of the Syrian skies. This agreement worked perfectly for Israel. Last year alone, Israel said it struck weapons shipments to FSA around 100 times.

The Iran heat
But despite these on-and-off interventions, Israel has failed to build any substantial leverage in Syria’s conflict zones. True, it has built influence among Loyalist of President Assad groups in southern Syria since many years. But developments in Syria over the past two years have scuttled Israel’s strategic plans. The Israelis may have initially thought that the Russian intervention could reduce the Syrian regime’s dependence on Iran, which is Tel Aviv’s primary concern. But the Russians played on both sides. Their only strategic target was to rescue the regime. They neither stopped the Israelis from attacking FSA targets inside Syria nor did they stop the Iranians from expanding their footprint in the country. Later, when the regime stabilised its rule, thanks to the Russian intervention, Iran’s influence also grew. Iran now has various military facilities across Syria’s regime-held territories.

In southern Syria, Israel had built a network for loyalist of President Assad. But even in this area, its position has weakened over the past year. Jordan, which had offered support to the rebels in the early years of the civil war, changed its policy in the wake of heavy refugee flow. Last year, the Trump administration review the US military operation command in Amman that was coordinating with FSA, assisting the FSA particularly those in the south, entirely taking the blunt of Israeli airforce strikes which is to make the regime forces to making advances towards the south. Israeli and the President Assad loyalist have already established some posts near Quneitra in northern Golan. Late last year, the regime regained a foothold on the de facto border with Israel by capturing Beit Jinn from FSA. In effect, Israel even worked to spread of Iranian influence in Syria, but is also under pressure to increase the advances of regime forces towards the south.

It was against this background that Israel strengthened its bombing campaign in Syria this month. Prime Minister Netanyahu has also warned Iran “ to test our resolve.” But beyond rhetoric, as the past incidents suggest, Israel’s capacity to shape reality in Syria is limited. In seven years, Iran has built a huge network in Syria and check Hezbollah. This cannot be eliminated by occasional aerial raids. A full-scale intervention is already going on Russia directly backs the regime. And if the FSA capture Idlib and the Damascus suburbs, which is only a matter of time, they will shift their focus to the Israeli occupied Golan Heights in the south, dragging Tel Aviv deeper into the conflict.

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Actually Patriot Syrians want to liberate occupied Syrian Territories of Golan heights and end the loot of Syrian Oil and the war in Syria is about this only and the same is with the Lebanese who want to liberate Sheeba Farms. Problem is occupation and colonalization.

By the way , what President Assad is taking from Israel for the oil supplies ?
 
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