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Syrian Civil War (Graphic Photos/Vid Not Allowed)

Do you notice that rebels in Daraa aren't making any real gains for almost ever now? That must mean their supplies are very limited. This is because Jordan has same interests as the Syrian regime in Syria. And they rather besiege the rebels. Yet dumb Arab governments still support Jordan.
36 ATGM launches in May so far:

29 - in Idlib
4 - in Aleppo
3 - in Hama
0 - Dar'a

@500
Since u are mostly well familiar with the latest, can u update us all
Well Mastuma camp fall is confirmed. So now chances for loyalists to break to encircled Shia towns of Fuah and Kafria are officially zero. Unlike Shia towns Nubl and Zahra in Aleppo which receive supplies through Kurds, Fuah and Kafria are totally encircled and can be supplied only from air. There are many civilians including women and children trapped there.

Fate of 200-400 soldiers encircled in hospital after fall of Kufair also grim, although it still can be breached.

Big question what Jeysh al Fateh guys will do after cleansing Idlib. Over 80% of Jeysh al Fateh are local Idlib guys, so I think majority wont be willing to fight in other areas.
 
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Joyce Karam ‏@Joyce_Karam 5m5 minutes ago
Joyce Karam retweeted LCCSY

#Syria rebels claim to have taken Mastoumi Camp in Idlib from regime & Hezbollah.Week long battle,strategic in north
........

Looks like Hezb/Iran/SAA/militias are losing morale. They need America/Israel to raise their morale otherwise they're done. If rebels had anti-aircraft weaponry this would end pretty quickly. But Turkey/Saudi Arabia refuse to supply them, for unknown reasons(Maybe US warned them). Either way, without them they are utilizing guerilla warfare and improving tunnel system for transport/fortification/attack.
Losing a battle is not losing a war..4 years...and the SAA is still very strong and Syria will come out as winner...That is probably the only country in the middle east that will escape GWBush greater middle east policy.

36 ATGM launches in May so far:

29 - in Idlib
4 - in Aleppo
3 - in Hama
0 - Dar'a


Well Mastuma camp fall is confirmed. So now chances for loyalists to break to encircled Shia towns of Fuah and Kafria are officially zero. Unlike Shia towns Nubl and Zahra in Aleppo which receive supplies through Kurds, Fuah and Kafria are totally encircled and can be supplied only from air. There are many civilians including women and children trapped there.

Fate of 200-400 soldiers encircled in hospital after fall of Kufair also grim, although it still can be breached.

Big question what Jeysh al Fateh guys will do after cleansing Idlib. Over 80% of Jeysh al Fateh are local Idlib guys, so I think majority wont be willing to fight in other areas.
Depends on the djihadist using their Air force, despite that Syrians are shouldering their government, these setbacks will be short lived...
 
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Syria Special Forces chief killed in fighting

syriaspecialfor.jpg


Muhyiddin Mansour died from wounds he suffered during fighting in Jisr al-Shughur.

Syrian ARA News described Mansour as “one of the top ranked and [most] experienced leading commanders” in the Syrian army.
 
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ISIS is the result of disbanding of the Iraqi Baath military and no one can deny the whole played by the Iranians in the invasion of Iraq in which Iranian backed Badr and SCIRI openly worked to over through the Baath regime with United States.
No, ISIS was created because the potential was there, the motivation was there and the ideology was there, it has always been there.
And regarding educating myself then you need to think about yourself about the situation inside Khuzestan province in the Iran-Iraq war.

I am fully aware of everything about Iran-Iraq war, you surely can't teach me anything on that. If you have something to say, just say it.

Looks like Hezb/Iran/SAA/militias are losing morale.

There is no Hezbollah in Idlib.
 
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No, ISIS was created because the potential was there, the motivation was there and the ideology was there, it has always been there.


I am fully aware of everything about Iran-Iraq war, you surely can't teach me anything on that. If you have something to say, just say it.


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ISIS are the soldiers of the disbanded Iraqi Baath military. Saddam Fedayeens and Republican Guards all were operating from inside Syria.

I dont write to teach anything to anyone , I just try to put more points.



Last Updated: Tuesday, May 19, 2015 - 19:25
Rebels take largest remaining army base in Syria`s Idlib: Monitor | Zee News

359228-al-qaeda700.gif

Beirut: A rebel coalition including al Qaeda`s local affiliate seized the Syrian regime`s largest remaining military base in northwest Idlib province on Tuesday, after an explosion and heavy clashes, a monitor said.


"All regime forces have withdrawn from Al-Mastumah, the largest regime base in Idlib, leaving it completely in the hands of opposition fighters," Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, told AFP.

The rebel alliance that seized the camp calls itself the "Army of Conquest" and includes al Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front and other Islamist factions.

"With the help of God, Al-Mastumah was completely liberated after Al-Nusra Front stormed it from the south," the affiliate wrote on its official Twitter account.

The loss of Al-Mastumah is the latest setback in Idlib province for the regime, which lost control of the provincial capital in March and the regime stronghold of Jisr al-Shughur in April.

Regime forces withdrew to the town of Ariha further south, which, along with the Abu Duhur military airport and a few small government positions, make up the last remaining regime military presence in Idlib province.

A Syrian military source told AFP that clashes were ongoing in Al-Mastumah camp and the nearby town of the same name.

Syrian state television said the army was "taking defensive positions" outside of Ariha, implying that army units had withdrawn from Al-Mastumah itself.
 
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Rebel fighters walk in Mastouma village, after they said they had advanced on the area, in Idlib city, May 19, 2015.
Reuters/Ammar Abdullah
r



Rebel fighters walk in Mastouma village in Idlib city, after what they said they are advancing in the area May 19, 2015.
Reuters/Ammar Abdullah
r
 
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Why Saudi Arabia has lost faith in the US
By Kim Ghattas BBC News, Washington
One key sentence in President Barack Obama's press conference at Camp David last week clearly illustrates the gulf between Washington and its allies on the Arabian Peninsula when it comes to Iran.

"We gave [our allies] our best analysis of the enormous needs that Iran has internally and the commitment that Iran has made to its people in terms of shoring up its economy and improving economic growth," said President Obama, when asked about concerns that Iran would use the money from sanctions relief for nefarious aims in the region.

He added that "most of the destabilising activity that Iran engages in is low-tech, low-cost activity".

It was just as well that Mr Obama gave the press conference on his own. The Gulf leaders had just departed after a full day of talks at the Maryland retreat or they would have had a hard time resisting a collective eye roll at what they perceive to be American naivety about Tehran.

As it pursues a nuclear deal with Iran, Washington has been trying hard not to adhere to the positions and fears of Arab countries vis-a-vis Iran.

At Camp David, the six countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council received assurances that Washington had their backs, with pledges about more military cooperation and hardware. But on the key issue it was hoping Washington would engage on - a regional strategy to contain Iran - it got little more than a suggestion that Gulf countries should ramp up on their own asymmetric challenge to Tehran's influence. Nothing can bridge what are essentially opposing world views.

Gulf Cooperation Council
  • Six members: Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, Qatar and Bahrain
  • Formed in May 1981 against the backdrop of the Islamic revolution in Iran and the Iraq-Iran war
  • Security is a major issue for the GCC, but finding a collective formula that satisfies all member states is a challenge
Profile: Gulf Cooperation Council

Gulf leaders perceive the Americans to be naive when it comes to Iran
Riyadh has accepted that there is little it can do about stopping a nuclear deal, but it's gearing up to push back more forcefully against its arch-nemesis, as Tehran boasts of a new Persian empire with influence over four capitals: Beirut, Baghdad, Damascus and Sanaa.

Lebanon's former Prime Minister Saad Hariri was scathing on a recent visit to Washington about the administration's assertion that the money from the sanctions relief would go to "building bridges and roads".

It's estimated that after a deal is reached and Iran is verifiably in compliance, Tehran would get access to at least $100bn (£64bn).

"I want to know how much of this money is going to Hezbollah," said Mr Hariri, whose political camp is staunchly opposed to Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shia militant group backed by Iran, which has been fighting in Syria to help prop up President Bashar al-Assad.

American officials say the US cannot impose conditions on how Iran spends its own money.

Military edge
A UN official also recently estimated that Iran had been channelling as much as $35bn a year into Syria since the conflict started.

Earlier this month, Syria and Iran were discussing a $1bn credit line to help Mr Assad's government, the second credit line since 2013.

Arab countries don't see Iran's efforts to expand its regional influence as a low-cost operation, though it could perhaps be characterised as low-tech.

When it comes to a military edge, Saudi Arabia is billions of dollars ahead of Iran.

Riyadh is now trying to deploy its hardware in the face of Iran's asymmetric warfare and is looking beyond Yemen.

A senior Saudi Arabian official told me they were deeply concerned about the cash injection Iran would get after a nuclear deal.

When I asked him whether they were planning to make a move on Syria before a deal is reached, his response was a surprisingly forceful "Yes".

Former Lebanon Prime Minister Saad Hariri fears money from sanctions relief may go to Hezbollah
Losing patience
Channelling his Saudi Arabian allies, Mr Hariri indicated that while replicating the Saudi military operation in Yemen was not an option in Syria, the kingdom had come to accept that the only way to get Washington more involved in the effort to push President Assad out was to take the initiative and hope the US followed.

After years of disconnected policies, Saudi Arabia is now working with Qatar, Turkey and Jordan to better coordinate their support for the rebels opposing President Assad, and this has quickly translated into significant gains on the ground in recent weeks.

The strategy is likely to tip the balance of power on the battlefield enough that Iran will agree to a political negotiation and push Mr Assad out.

Exerting real leverage on Damascus would require further action, and Washington has made clear it is opposed to an outright win by the Syrian rebels.

But it's unlikely anyone can micromanage advances on the ground - or that the Saudi Arabia has much patience left for Mr Obama's approach.

Just as the American president's pursuit of a deal with Iran upset the status quo that has prevailed in the region for the past three decades, Saudi Arabia's decision to go to war caused a further tectonic shift.

Saudi Arabia has never really gone to war in this way, and the jury is still out on how it is managing.

Former CIA analyst Bruce Riedel described it as bordering on drink-driving.

But it's clear that Riyadh is test driving its ability to lead military coalitions and wants to be the new military power of the region.

Share this story About sharing
More on this story
 
.
Why Saudi Arabia has lost faith in the US
By Kim Ghattas BBC News, Washington
One key sentence in President Barack Obama's press conference at Camp David last week clearly illustrates the gulf between Washington and its allies on the Arabian Peninsula when it comes to Iran.

"We gave [our allies] our best analysis of the enormous needs that Iran has internally and the commitment that Iran has made to its people in terms of shoring up its economy and improving economic growth," said President Obama, when asked about concerns that Iran would use the money from sanctions relief for nefarious aims in the region.

He added that "most of the destabilising activity that Iran engages in is low-tech, low-cost activity".

It was just as well that Mr Obama gave the press conference on his own. The Gulf leaders had just departed after a full day of talks at the Maryland retreat or they would have had a hard time resisting a collective eye roll at what they perceive to be American naivety about Tehran.

As it pursues a nuclear deal with Iran, Washington has been trying hard not to adhere to the positions and fears of Arab countries vis-a-vis Iran.

At Camp David, the six countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council received assurances that Washington had their backs, with pledges about more military cooperation and hardware. But on the key issue it was hoping Washington would engage on - a regional strategy to contain Iran - it got little more than a suggestion that Gulf countries should ramp up on their own asymmetric challenge to Tehran's influence. Nothing can bridge what are essentially opposing world views.

Gulf Cooperation Council
  • Six members: Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, Qatar and Bahrain
  • Formed in May 1981 against the backdrop of the Islamic revolution in Iran and the Iraq-Iran war
  • Security is a major issue for the GCC, but finding a collective formula that satisfies all member states is a challenge
Profile: Gulf Cooperation Council

Gulf leaders perceive the Americans to be naive when it comes to Iran
Riyadh has accepted that there is little it can do about stopping a nuclear deal, but it's gearing up to push back more forcefully against its arch-nemesis, as Tehran boasts of a new Persian empire with influence over four capitals: Beirut, Baghdad, Damascus and Sanaa.

Lebanon's former Prime Minister Saad Hariri was scathing on a recent visit to Washington about the administration's assertion that the money from the sanctions relief would go to "building bridges and roads".

It's estimated that after a deal is reached and Iran is verifiably in compliance, Tehran would get access to at least $100bn (£64bn).

"I want to know how much of this money is going to Hezbollah," said Mr Hariri, whose political camp is staunchly opposed to Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shia militant group backed by Iran, which has been fighting in Syria to help prop up President Bashar al-Assad.

American officials say the US cannot impose conditions on how Iran spends its own money.

Military edge
A UN official also recently estimated that Iran had been channelling as much as $35bn a year into Syria since the conflict started.

Earlier this month, Syria and Iran were discussing a $1bn credit line to help Mr Assad's government, the second credit line since 2013.

Arab countries don't see Iran's efforts to expand its regional influence as a low-cost operation, though it could perhaps be characterised as low-tech.

When it comes to a military edge, Saudi Arabia is billions of dollars ahead of Iran.

Riyadh is now trying to deploy its hardware in the face of Iran's asymmetric warfare and is looking beyond Yemen.

A senior Saudi Arabian official told me they were deeply concerned about the cash injection Iran would get after a nuclear deal.

When I asked him whether they were planning to make a move on Syria before a deal is reached, his response was a surprisingly forceful "Yes".

Former Lebanon Prime Minister Saad Hariri fears money from sanctions relief may go to Hezbollah
Losing patience
Channelling his Saudi Arabian allies, Mr Hariri indicated that while replicating the Saudi military operation in Yemen was not an option in Syria, the kingdom had come to accept that the only way to get Washington more involved in the effort to push President Assad out was to take the initiative and hope the US followed.

After years of disconnected policies, Saudi Arabia is now working with Qatar, Turkey and Jordan to better coordinate their support for the rebels opposing President Assad, and this has quickly translated into significant gains on the ground in recent weeks.

The strategy is likely to tip the balance of power on the battlefield enough that Iran will agree to a political negotiation and push Mr Assad out.

Exerting real leverage on Damascus would require further action, and Washington has made clear it is opposed to an outright win by the Syrian rebels.

But it's unlikely anyone can micromanage advances on the ground - or that the Saudi Arabia has much patience left for Mr Obama's approach.

Just as the American president's pursuit of a deal with Iran upset the status quo that has prevailed in the region for the past three decades, Saudi Arabia's decision to go to war caused a further tectonic shift.

Saudi Arabia has never really gone to war in this way, and the jury is still out on how it is managing.

Former CIA analyst Bruce Riedel described it as bordering on drink-driving.

But it's clear that Riyadh is test driving its ability to lead military coalitions and wants to be the new military power of the region.

Share this story About sharing
More on this story

Saudi Arabia and United States are allies and in reality GCC is becoming more united and will have an unifed military.

King emphasizes GCC-US pledge to defend region | Arab News
Published — Tuesday 19 May 2015

RIYADH: Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman has thanked US President Barack Obama and leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries for committing to the region’s defense and security at their meeting in Camp David last week.
 
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Saudi Arabia and United States are allies and in reality GCC is becoming more united and will have an unifed military.

King emphasizes GCC-US pledge to defend region | Arab News
Published — Tuesday 19 May 2015

RIYADH: Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman has thanked US President Barack Obama and leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries for committing to the region’s defense and security at their meeting in Camp David last week.

If they form a united military will be a game changer without too much relying on US support .
 
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