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Syrian Civil War (Graphic Photos/Vid Not Allowed)

congratulations to turkey.

you officially became the first state stupid enough to send your own troops en masse to do battle in the Syrian death trap.... a battlefield far more intense then the one that defeated soviet occupation of Afghanistan.

and orders of magnitude more intense then the insurgencies that eventually wore down American occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

everyone tried DESPERATELY to make Iran commit this mistake. yet Iran played it smart, and only used direct miltiary power in strategic circumstances (qusair, and liberation of nubl/Zahra and breaking of Aleppo siege). while always maintaining that Syrians should be doing the mass street fighting for their country.

Turks have now only 2 options remaining in Syria. Death or Humiliation.
 
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Iranian mortar shells produced in February 2020!

Khamenai produced them, delivered to Assad in order to slaughter Syrian kids in Idlib, but coward coward Khamenai mercenaries lost them and rebels used against Khamenai mercenaries themselves. All in 1 month:


Also today Khamenai aka Putin mercenaries bombed market in Idlib, murdering 10 civilians including 5 little kids:


Khamenaistic regime does not have money to cure own kids but sends billions to slaughter Syrian kids.
 
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Turkey shoots down third plane as Syrian forces retake town
Rebel commander says key Saraqeb city now under the full control of Syrian government forces after Russian air strikes.

by Linah Alsaafin
9 hours ago

MORE ON BATTLE FOR IDLIB
Reyhanli, Turkey - Turkish forces downed a fighter jet flown by Syrian government forces over southern Idlib on Tuesday as a strategic town in northwest Syria fell under the control of President Bashar al-Assad's military.

It was the third such shoot-down in three days after Turkey hit two other Syrian aircraft on Sunday.

"Turkish regime forces targeted one of our warplanes, which led to its fall in the northwest area of Maarat al-Numan," Syrian state media reported.

More:
On Twitter, the Turkish defence ministry confirmed the news, saying "an L-39 plane belonging to the [Syrian] regime has been downed".




Meanwhile, Syrian government forces overnight took over the key city of Saraqeb, which lies at the junction of the M4 and M5 commercial highways that connect the country's major cities.

Saraqeb has changed hands twice in the last month, but a dramatic escalation in fighting over the past few days saw armed opposition groups retreat to the villages of Nairab and Afis in the west, as Syrian government forces - under cover of Russian air power - secured the city.

Rashwan Abu Hamza, a field commander in Saraqeb belonging to one of the rebel groups, told Al Jazeera the battle against al-Assad's forces intensified on Monday night.

"Regime forces began to advance into the city at 2am and an hour later entered the neighbourhoods and began combing them," Abu Hamza said. "The shelling from Russian warplanes escalated and forced us to withdraw west of the city."

At 4am (01:00 GMT) on Tuesday, Saraqeb was under the full control of the Syrian forces, he said, but added a counteroffensive was imminent.

'Operation Spring Shield'
Since December, al-Assad's forces intensified their offensive to take control of Idlib province, the last rebel stronghold in Syria where Turkey backs some opposition fighters.

The operation has resulted in the internal displacement of nearly one million Syrians, the majority fleeing to the Turkish border, and killed at least 300 civilians.

Under the 2018 Sochi agreement with Russia, which designated Idlib as a de-escalation zone, Turkey set up several observation points throughout the province, but incurred heavy losses as Syrian forces targeted its troops.

Child dies as refugee boat capsizes off Lesbos
Turkey launched a military operation it called Spring Shield, its fourth and biggest intervention yet into Syria's nine-year civil war. It came in response to the killing of 34 Turkish soldiers in Idlib last week, the deadliest strike against the Turkish army in decades.

Turkey's defence ministry said so far more than 2,500 Syrian soldiers have been "neutralised" - a term that means wounded, captured or killed.

One Turkish soldier was killed during fighting on Tuesday, Defence Minister Hulusi Akar was quoted by broadcaster NTV as saying.

The head of Turkey's far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), Devlet Bahceli, said in Ankara on Tuesday the threat from across the border demanded military action.

"Turkey is not joking. The Idlib issue is directly related to the survival and protection of a homeland. Russia and Syria should not try Turkey's patience any more," said Bahceli.

Return to Idlib
At the Reyhanli-Cilvegozu border crossing on the Turkish side, Ahmad Abeed stood near the gate smoking a cigarette.

The 22-year-old, who works in a hazelnut factory in Antakya, has been in Turkey for the past five years, but is now longing to return to Syria where his parents and siblings are.

"My family are from a village in Saraqeb's countryside," he said. "Two weeks ago they were displaced to Sarmada."

Abeed wants to enter Idlib to fight against the Syrian government forces.

"When I first came to Turkey, I thought the war in Syria would end after a year or two," he said. "I didn't support any side. But now the enemy is clear. I can't leave my younger sisters inside to die, so that's why I want to pick up arms."

A few metres next to him, Umm Asad stood facing the border crossing, her eyes full of tears.

"I've been trying to go back to Idlib for a while now," she told Al Jazeera, holding her one-year-old daughter Shams.

"I want to be with my children who are frightened out of their wits by the shelling. They need their mother," Umm Asad said.

Her husband and two other children are in the town of Binnish, some 6km (3.7 miles) from Saraqeb. Heavily pregnant at the time, Umm Asad left her family a year ago to accompany her six-year-old son to a hospital in Turkey's Hatay for a medical emergency.

Her son is now in a permanent comatose state, and she longs to return to Idlib.

"I don't have a house in Hatay," she said. "I gave birth to Shams here and rely on the kindness of my relatives here. But my children need me," she said.

Lesbos migrant crisis: Thousands trying to reach Greek island


SOURCE: AL JAZEERA NEWS

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...yrian-forces-retake-town-200303135102188.html
 
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Tensions escalate in Deraa, 'cradle of the Syrian revolution'
As Syrian government battles opposition in the northwest, clashes erupt in a former opposition stronghold to the south.

by Mariya Petkova
16 hours ago
4b8e342187444ccd85ab6c83129f8708_18.jpg

Deraa province was an opposition stronghold until 2018 when the government forces captured it [File: Reuters]
MORE ON TURKEY-SYRIA BORDER
Tensions escalated in southern Syria's Deraa province after government troops and armed volunteers launched a raid against opposition fighters controlling parts of Al-Sanamayn town.

On Monday, after a day of heavy shelling and fighting led by the Fourth Division of Maher al-Assad, brother of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, an agreement was brokered by Russia that saw two dozen opposition fighters leave the town for opposition-held areas in the country's northwest, local residents told Al Jazeera.

At least seven civilians were killed in the clashes.

On Tuesday, Syria's state news agency SANA said an operation conducted by security forces and police units "ended the state of chaos" in Al-Sanamayn, but did not report any casualties.

More:
Deraa province, where the Syrian uprising started nine years ago, was an opposition stronghold until 2018, when government forces backed by Russian and Iranian forces launched an operation to retake it. After months of heavy fighting that killed hundreds of people and displaced hundreds of thousands, opposition factions and the government reached a reconciliation agreement brokered by Moscow.

Under the deal, opposition fighters were allowed to remain in partial control of several areas, including Al-Sanamayn, as well as retain some light weapons. Despite the agreement, however, tensions in the province have simmered ever since, as government forces, militias and local armed volunteers have continued arrests, intimidation and killings of local residents and members of the opposition.

According to Adham al-Kirad, a former commander in the Free Syrian Army, the raid on Al-Sanamayn was preceded by intermittent clashes between opposition fighters and members of pro-Assad armed volunteer groups, known as popular committees.

"The regime forces joined the fighting on the side of the popular committees. Then the Russian side intervened," said al-Kirad, who was also part of the 2018 reconciliation deal.

On Sunday, al-Kirad was among hundreds of protesters who took to the streets of Deraa city to call on the government to stop its attack on Al-Sanamayn.

The escalation in the south comes as government forces and their allies have been fighting opposition factions in the country's northwest, prompting neighbouring Turkey to intervene militarily.

The government currently controls most of Syria's territory, except for the opposition stronghold in Idlib province in the northwest; three small pockets in the north held by Turkish forces and their Syrian allies in the north; and the area east of the Euphrates River up to the border with Iraq controlled by the US-backed and Kurdish-dominated Syrian Democratic Forces.

Torture, death and revenge attacks
According to Ahmed Aba Zeid, an Istanbul-based researcher, Deraa is a special case compared with other territories seized by the Syrian government over the past two years because of the reconciliation deal.

"Deraa, the cradle of the Syrian revolution, did not have mass evacuation after the regime takeover, which meant that supporters of the revolution remained and so did opposition fighters, many of whom refused to join government forces and fight in the north," he said.

In areas where there was the evacuation of both fighters and civilians, such as the Ghouta suburbs of Damascus and Al-Rastan area in Homs province, the government has managed to retain tighter control.

Aba Zeid said the attack on Al-Sanamayn, seen by locals as a violation of the 2018 deal, is likely to further escalate tensions in Deraa.

It came amid an intensifying campaign of attacks against government troops, allied militias and even opposition fighters who had joined the ranks of the Syrian army. Since the agreement, local rights groups have reported an increasing number of targeted assassinations and roadside bombings as well as attacks on checkpoints, offices of the intelligence and different militias, among others.

READ MORE
Turkish drones – a 'game changer' in Idlib
A January report by the Syrians for Truth and Justice rights organisation said that in the second half of 2019, Deraa experienced its "most violent [period] since the settlement agreement". The group documented at least 72 assassinations, most of which targeted individuals affiliated with Damascus, Iranian forces and members of the Lebanese armed group, Hezbollah.

Another local organisation, the Deraa Martyrs Documentation Office, which documents human rights violations in the province, reported 39 attacks and assassination attempts, which led to the death of 26 individuals in the month of February alone. Thirteen of the victims were former members of the opposition who had joined government units.

In November 2018, opposition Syrian media published reports of the formation of a "popular resistance" in Deraa which reportedly took responsibility for a number of attacks on government forces in the province in subsequent months. However, in most of the cases, there has been no claim of responsibility.

According to a former Free Syrian Army fighter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution, most of the attacks are individual acts and are not carried out in an organised fashion.

READ MORE
Battle for Idlib: Turkey's drones and a new way of war
"The regime just won't leave people alone. And people are armed. So when something happens to someone, his neighbour responds. For every infraction there is a reaction," he said.

The former fighter said many of the attacks on government forces and their allies have been motivated by the growing number of arrests, forced disappearances and killings faced by civilians in Deraa since 2018.

A 2019 report by Human Rights Watch said "Syrian intelligence branches are arbitrarily detaining, disappearing, and harassing people in areas retaken from anti-government groups" and that such measures have been taken even against people who have signed reconciliation agreements.

The Russian defence ministry, which helped broker the reconciliation deal in 2018, did not respond to a request for comment on these violations.

According to the Deraa Martyrs Documentation Office, 391 people were arrested or forcefully disappeared in the province in 2019, five of whom died under torture. The number does not include those arrested as part of forced conscription by the government, who, the organisation estimates, are in the thousands.

The arrests and killings have sparked sporadic protests across the province. In November, large demonstrations held in Deraa city and elsewhere pressured the government to release 33 detainees.

Apart from growing anger, there is also increasing fear among local residents, according to Abu Mahmoud al-Horani, spokesman of the Deraa-based citizen journalist group Tajamo Ahrar Horan. His organisation has estimated that some 2,500 have fled the province since the reconciliation with Damascus because of continuing oppression and the fear of arrest and torture.

"Members of our group have also received death threats and have had to flee Deraa by being smuggled outside the country," he said.

Uncertain future
Outside of Deraa, the protests and attacks have been perceived by some as an indication that there is "renewed momentum" in the anti-government uprising - but the former opposition fighter disagrees.

"We wish to say the revolution continues, but we are weak in organising," he told Al Jazeera.

READ MORE
Turkey shoots down third plane as Syrian forces retake town
Al-Horani was also sceptical.

"As long as the violations of the regime and its militias continue, the situation will go towards escalation and increasing tension. There is a possibility that this could take the shape of another uprising, but I do not see this happening in the near future," he said.

Al-Horani said the attack on Al-Sanamayn was meant as a demonstration of power by the government at a time when the advance of its forces in Idlib was halted and its grip on Deraa appeared shaky.

According to Heiko Wimmen, a researcher at the New York-based International Crisis Group, the government has struggled to control not just Deraa but other territories as well.

"In many areas that the regime recaptured, it is not so clear who actually holds control," he said.

Given its limited capacity at the moment, the strategy of the government appears to be to cooperate with local actors to retain control in exchange of giving them "leeway" in local affairs, Wimmen said. Eventually, Damascus will seek to consolidate its power through "hierarchically controlled security services", which would require rebuilding planning and strategic capacity at the centre, he added.

Establishing full control, however, may be challenging for the government.

"The war in the northwest is not over," Wimmen said. "A 'victory' there may bring them a deadly insurgency, which already exists in the southeast. Then there is the problem of the Kurds and of course the deteriorating economic situation."

Last year, the Syrian lira collapsed, losing more than 100 percent of its value against the US dollar amid skyrocketing inflation that saw the prices of basic foodstuffs and fuel surge. In January, small protests were held across the country, including in the southern Druze-majority province of Sweida, which remained loyal to Damascus throughout the Syrian uprising.

According to Aba Zeid, the government will be unable to establish full control over territories it has taken over even if it manages to capture Idlib.

"The rejection of the regime and its lack of capacity to establish stability, along with its continuing crimes against civilians, will continue to feed resistance against its rule across Syria," he said.

Follow Mariya Petkova on Twitter: @mkpetkova

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...cradle-syrian-revolution-200304110051998.html
 
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Putin aka Khamenai murdered at least 18 displaced civilians in Marat Masrin this morning, mostly women and children.

ESVl35oXQAAwnMi


ESVXUL2XkAAdwat


ESVmKUCXQAElUH1


Apparently they cant survive without blood of children. There is no other way to explain this sadistic senseless slaughter.
 
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A senior member of Iran's Revolutionary Guards, Farhad Dabirian, was "martyred" in Syria on Friday, Fars news agency reported, without giving details of how he died.

The agency, which is close to the Revolutionary Guards, described Dabirian as a "defender of Sayida Zainab shrine," the holy Shi'ite Muslim site south of Damascus, and as a former commander of the Guards in Palmyra, the ancient city in central Syria.


The Guards and Shi'ite proxy groups from other countries including Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq and Lebanon are fighting alongside Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's military in the nine-year-old civil war.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based organization which reports on the war, said a senior Iranian Revolutionary Guards' commander was assassinated in the Sayeda Zeinab area south of Damascus.
 
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Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) said, "The Hour will not be established until you fight with the Turks; people with small eyes, red faces, and flat noses. Their faces will look like shields coated with leather.


https://sunnah.com/bukhari/56/141



Erdogan must check these hadiths and stop founding Jihadi terrorists.
 
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check Mongol invasion, some turkic clans were also acted and stop it anymore you make us sick!
 
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Turkey says no ceasefire violations in Syria's Idlib
Residents pessimistic about truce, hours after Russia and Turkey announce ceasefire agreement in northwest Syria.

7 Mar 2020

b93d6d985ffd43c59eec711e8b8eb832_18.jpg

The ceasefire came into effect at midnight on Friday [File: Ghaith Alsayed/AP]
MORE ON BATTLE FOR IDLIB
Turkey's defence minister says there have been no violations of a ceasefire deal in Syria's war-battered Idlib province, where residents and opposition forces described a lull in air raids that have pounded the country's last rebel-held enclave.

Russia and Turkey struck the agreement on Thursday evening, after six hours of talks in Moscow, to contain a conflict that has displaced nearly a million people in three months in northwest Syria.

"We will continue to be a deterrent force to prevent any violation to the ceasefire. None occurred since ceasefire entered into force," Turkish Defence Minister Hulusi Akar said on Saturday.

More:
He added that Ankara would use self-defence rights if its forces or bases in the region were to come under attack.

NATO-member Turkey and Russia back opposing sides in Syria's nine-year-old war - Moscow supports President Bashar al-Assad and Ankara backs some opposition groups - while the two sides edged closer to direct confrontation in recent weeks.

The deal reached in Moscow during talks between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, also establishes a security corridor on each side of Idlib's key east-west M4 highway, along which joint Russian-Turkish patrols will begin on March 15.

The corridor stretches 6km (3.7 miles) to the north and 6km to the south of the M4 - effectively advancing Russia's presence further north into Idlib.

Akar on Saturday said Turkey had started to work on the procedures and principles of the safety corridor around the strategic road, adding that a Russian military delegation will visit Ankara next week to discuss steps to take.

'Very tense calm'
Meanwhile, residents and fighters in the region on Friday said the main frontlines - which have seen heavy air raids by Russian and Syrian jets, and intense Turkish artillery and drone strikes on al-Assad's forces - were quiet hours after the ceasefire came into effect at midnight.

There was only sporadic fire from machine guns, mortars and artillery by Syrian government forces and Iranian militias on some frontlines in the south of Idlib and also in the adjacent Aleppo province, they said.

"In the first hours, we are witnessing a very tense calm from all warring parties," said Ibrahim al-Idlibi, an opposition figure in touch with rebel groups on the ground.

Russia and Turkey agree Idlib ceasefire


"Everyone is aware that violations by any side would be met with a response. But this a very fragile truce."

Mohammed al-Ali, an activist from Idlib, told Al Jazeera the ceasefire was violated overnight by the Syrian government forces shortly after it went into effect.

"The Joreen military camp belonging to the regime targeted with artillery shelling the town of Zyara in Idlib's countryside," he said, speaking from the town of Salqeen.

"From Maarat al-Numan in the south, regime forces targeted the outskirts of al-Bara in the Jabal al-Zawiya area. And in Saraqeb, the regime targeted Sarmin with artillery. There has been no aerial bombardment so far but the situation is very tense, with all sides wary of how long the ceasefire will last."

Ahmad Qaddour, a 29-year-old who lives in a displacement camp with his wife and two children, said he had learned to always expect the worst.

"We do not have any confidence in the regime and Russia regarding this ceasefire," he said.

Humanitarian crisis
Several previous deals to end the fighting in Idlib have collapsed. Analysts and residents said they feared the latest ceasefire would also fizzle out as it did not address the humanitarian crisis or air protection in any detail.

"This deal isn't designed to last. Rather, it is designed to fail, and I am afraid, in the not-too-distant future," said Galip Dalay, IPC-Mercator fellow at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs.

"Any ceasefire arrangement in Idlib, unless it has a no-fly zone dimension, is bound to fail. Deals in the past never de-escalated. They merely froze the crisis until the next escalation."

The latest Russia-backed offensive in Idlib by al-Assad's forces sparked what the United Nations says may be the worst humanitarian crisis yet in a war that has driven millions from their homes and killed hundreds of thousands.

Russia had repeatedly played down any talk of a refugee crisis and accused Turkey of violating international law by pouring troops and equipment into Idlib since early last month.

About 60 Turkish troops have been killed in that time.

Turkey, which has the second-largest army in the transatlantic NATO alliance, has tried to resist the Syrian government advance and prevent a wave of refugees from entering its southern border. It already hosts 3.6 million Syrian refugees.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...ia-idlib-ceasefire-holds-200306100457396.html
 
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Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) said, "The Hour will not be established until you fight with the Turks; people with small eyes, red faces, and flat noses. Their faces will look like shields coated with leather.


https://sunnah.com/bukhari/56/141



Erdogan must check these hadiths and stop founding Jihadi terrorists.

Quote the full Hadith the last line states who’s shoes are made of hair. This Hadith was referring to the Mongol invasion.

Their is also another Hadith after this telling the Arabs not to fight the Turks, as long they don’t do anything to you. They did the opposite against Ottoman Empire and now being screwed over.
 
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