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Syrian Civil War (Graphic Photos/Vid Not Allowed)

Yeah someone tells the truth, that someone must be Rudaw, a retard source coming with a bullshit number of $330 billion.


Do you even know what this is about, different subject.

People were buying the dinar and waiting for 3 zero's being removed so they become rich, don't ask me for a detailed answer since I don't care about that stuff.

I wouldn't be surprised if the actual number was even higher then that giving the fact that Baghdad was home to Maliki and his 40 thieves . All you replied was bull s*it with no substance because the level of education in turbandated lands is not the same in hewler. thats why a whole lot of you are pouring in the city even before ISIS.
 
I wouldn't be surprised if the actual number was even higher then that giving the fact that Baghdad was home to Maliki and his 40 thieves . All you replied was bull s*it with no substance because the level of education in turbandated lands is not the same in hewler. thats why a whole lot of you are pouring in the city even before ISIS.

Looks like this dumb camel from the desert knows more than you after all, it's not me that falls for a cheap article with a unrealistic number of $330 billion larger than the state's GDP making it impossible. Even if you spread it over years it can't happen, once again shows the quality of Rudaw @Al-Kurdi here you go.

Also you were pretending to be Pakistani, now you're Kurdi, ashamed or what ? @Alshawi1234 must remember.
 
The Sectarian wars started when some people were made to believe that Hazrat Ali (RA) was appointed by Allah to lead the Muslim Ummah after the Prophet SAW and the first one to make this claim was none other than Abdullah Bin Saba , the jew.
Opsss

There is no such thing as abdullah bin Saba it was created by some lier historian who is name was al-Tamimi

Every body knows the ways and tactics which used by the enemies of shias
like we were created by persian majoosi nationalists who hated islam

The other lie that we were created by the jews

Infact you who were created by the ummyads and Jew like kaab al ahbar

Majority of your so called sholars were persian majoos converts
 


Kurds from the Kurdish region that is occupied by Iran fighting in Kobane.
B7k50EPIEAAoK3I.jpg
 

lol, i wonder how many times YPG will capture Mishtanur hill...This has been the 4th or 5th time...
And it's not a strategic hill.. fighting takes place in the town and the hill is located northwest of the city...

Kurds from the Kurdish region that is occupied by Iran fighting in Kobane.
B7k50EPIEAAoK3I.jpg

Iran might arrange a welcome party for them. :D
 
16 shells land on the city of Kobani, while clashes are still taking place in al- Hasakah
January 19, 2015 Comments Off



SOHR knew that 16 shells landed on the city of Kobani, coincided on sporadic clashes and mutual firing between YPG and IS in several battlefronts in the city.

@Serpentine


Al- Hasakah Province: A man killed by a sniper shot in the roundabout of Marsho in the city of al- Hasakah, while other people were wounded due to the regime bombardment on YPG- held neighborhoods in the city.


Violent clashes took place between the regime forces supported by NDF against YPG and al- Asayish fighters near the neighborhood of al- Nasereyyah on the outskirts of al- Talaei area and Marsho area near the neighborhood of al- Sena’ah. Other clashes took place between the same parties in the neighborhood of al- Aziziyyi in the city of al- Hasakah.


2 regime members died in clashes with YPG on the outskirts of al- Nasera neighborhood in the city of al- Hasakah.


no sadly it seems like there is a truce between. positions haven't really changed in favor of anyone.

@Sinan

it's to the south east.

After 3 months of losing control on it, YPG takes full control on Mashta Nour hill
January 19, 2015 Comments Off


SOHR was informed that the YPG took control on Mashta Nour Hill and raised its flag on the tower in the top of the hill, after a military operation after yesterday’s midnight against the IS, what killed 11 ISIS in addition to seizing large amount of weapons, what makes the YPG take control on ISIS supply roads in Aleppo and al-Raqqa and taking full control on Kobane, but not the eastern and southern parts which are still under control by ISIS and they are about 15% of the city area.

actually I should correct syriahr, only northern portion liberated, northern is unknown, likely still in ISIS


it seems like IS is giving up in Kobane. so many of them have been butchered from all ranks. most recent ones


I personally belive that US intel has been the most crucial part, giving Peshmerga information who later on transmits it to YPG who knows where and how to strike.
 
Seems like i missed a lot LOL
so now Assad is fighting its former allies YPG/PKK too :D
Seems like opportunist and two-faced ypg/pkk are getting pushed in a corner, slowly but steadily. Made my day.
 
Western Politics Of High-octane Emotion

By Finian Cunningham

January 19, 2015 "ICH" - "Press TV" - So America's top diplomat John Kerry wants to give France "a big hug" to condole over the recent spate of alleged terror attacks in that country. Speaking in Paris while laying a wreath for the 17 victims of violence, Kerry said that "America feels the pain of our oldest ally."

Kerry's words, accompanied by James Taylor's mawkish song 'You've Got a Friend', is typical of the new politics of high-octane emotion that is inducing people to take leave of their senses.

Since the violent attacks that hit Paris last week, the French authorities have orchestrated full-court national and international mourning. Massive marches for "unity" and "free speech", candlelit vigils, medal-of-honor ceremonies, and somber eulogies and paeans to "French values" - all such events and media coverage have sought to bolster the support for state authorities.

The trouble with this "high-octane emotional politics" is that it stupefies the public from asking some very necessary hard questions of the authorities. By buying into weeping and self-indulgence, the public are at risk of being manipulated like never before.

Just as John Kerry was offering a big hug "to all of France", the US government this week announced a significant step-up in its military involvement in Syria. The Pentagon unveiled plans to send 500 military personnel to train "moderate rebels" to fight against the elected government forces of President Bashar al Assad.

Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey are to provide the US with training grounds on their territories to furnish a "new rebel army" of 15,000 fighters. The previous "moderate rebels" became subsumed into the ranks of the extremist Al Nusra and ISIS, taking their American weapons with them.

It is widely acknowledged, even in the Western mainstream media, that the conflict in Syria has fuelled extremism across the Middle East, which is finding its way into Europe. As troops go on high-alert counter-terror operations in France and Belgium this weekend, there is an unequivocal correlation between the conflicts in Syria, Libya and Iraq - and new threats of terrorism in Europe.

The latest troop dispatch by the US to train "rebels" in Syria will inevitably lead to more conflict and terrorism. So much for John Kerry's big hug and emotive pleas of "you've got a friend". Kerry is like an arsonist paying his respects to families of charred victims.

That conclusion should be a no-brainer. But as the masses are swooning with emotion - and a lot of that crocodile tears too - some basic facts become blinded, conveniently for the authorities.

One basic fact is that the Western states' covert war for regime change in Syria is criminal and in violation of several international laws. Western political leaders crying over victims in Paris should be prosecuted for war crimes from their four-year-long military adventurism in Syria involving proxy extremist networks. These terror networks are feeding directly back into European societies. American and Western media deception of "training moderate rebels" should be dismissed with the contempt that it deserves. Washington and its European allies are up their necks with terror networks.

Days after the apparent terror killings in Paris, French President Francois Hollande made one of many emotive speeches that week proclaiming the supposed virtues of Western values - while on board the aircraft carrier Charles De Gaulle. The largest vessel in the French fleet was then deployed to join NATO forces in the Persian Gulf to step up bombing campaigns in Syria and Iraq "to defeat terrorism".

With tears running down the nation's cheeks, the French authorities are thus stoking more violence in the Middle East than they have already done along with their Western allies. How crass can it get? But in the new lachrymose politics of emotions, the public surrenders to the crassness.

However, it is precisely at this juncture that we need to avoid emotional over-reaction and instead to pursue rational, critical questions. As several respected commentators have already noted there are gaping doubts in the official French version of what took place in Paris last week.

Michel Chossudovsky has pointed out that the French police chief, Elric Fredou, who was looking into the attack on the Paris magazine Charlie Hebdo, in which 12 people were killed, was himself found dead in an apparent suicide on the night following that incident. The timing is highly suspicious, but the wider public, misled by the non-inquiring media, appear to be disinterested in the circumstances of the police commissioner's untimely death. Was it really suicide? Was he being shut-up over damaging revelations about who were the real perpetrators of the attack on Charlie Hebdo?

Paul Craig Roberts has also pointed out several incongruities in the official narrative, including the way that the French state security forces executed the Kouachi brothers and the kosher supermarket gunman Amedy Coulibaly, instead of capturing them, thus removing any possibility for the public to hear their accounts. Were they set up by French military intelligence to take the rap for the earlier terror attacks? Roberts notes that the professional behaviour of the masked gunmen in the Paris attacks does not match the bumbling behavior of the Kouachis at the later, fatal shoot-out.

Also, as Peter Koenig recently argued, the spate of French alleged terror attacks, as well as the recent fatal incident in Belgium this weekend, is being used as a "shock and awe" device to manufacture public opinion into accepting more coercive state police powers and foreign military interventions - the very policies that are fueling terrorism.

Western governments and their pliable news media are audaciously playing politics with public emotions. Proven Western state involvement in Middle East conflicts and false flag terrorism needs to be rigorously interrogated and exposed more than ever.

But the public seems too occupied shedding tears, singing the Marseilles, and accepting big hugs from the likes of John Kerry, to otherwise be able to think straight and to hold the authorities to account. Ironically, in the political climate of high-octane emotions, the people are turning for protection from the very authorities who are placing them in increasing danger.

  : Information Clearing House - ICH

 
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