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Syrian Civil War (Graphic Photos/Vid Not Allowed)

What the fck are you tlaking about? KILLED 250.000 people? About 80% of those are combatants, split between takfiris and loyalistst. The rest is civilian. WTF? That's a CLEAN war. Look at Bush' Iraq war. 5000 dead Americans, about 20.000 dead Iraqi soldiers, about as many militants, and over 500.000 dead CIVILIANS. Why is nobody crying about that? In Iraq it was 90% civilians killed. In syria about 20%. This is a CLEAN war. Combatants vs combatants, aside from some collateral damage.

''Clean war''! Hama, 1982 - 40,000 civilians murdered by Assad Al-kalb Al-kabir, and now Al-kalb Al-saghir has topped him with 250,000. Barrels bombs, Chroline gas, seige of Al-Yarmouk, Aleppo,.....

they always use the same dishonesty
they prefer blame only Assad (they're right to do so) but don't blame the salafis , jihadi groups butchers
mostly because they support these butchers themselves

it is good there is a discussion of alternative (something different than Assad and something different than groups supported by extremists in the region/islamists)
hopefully they could find a solution... but sadly let me doubt about it ... like doubt about any good will of all countries around (in the all region)

Thakiya is in your fiqha, not mine! I don't go on sectarian lines. The world has seen the actions of the butcher! Who said anything that happened in Iraq invasion is justified?

Read my past posts, I've said from the begining, the Sunnah have sold out Palestine and the Shia are the only sincere ones and are being eliminated for this reason!
 
170 IS militants killed in the last 48 hours in al- Hasakah, and YPG could sieze about 20 villages
May 19, 2015 Comments Offon 170 IS militants killed in the last 48 hours in al- Hasakah, and YPG could sieze about 20 villages


Al- Hasakah Province: The clashes between YPG, backed by al- Khabour Guards Forces, al- Sanadid army and the Syriac Military Council, and IS militants are still taking place in villages in south of the town of Tal Tamer, information reported casualties on both sides.



Reliable sources reported to SOHR that 170 militants died in the last 48 hours during the intensive aerial bombardment carried out by the coalition warplanes on IS positions and its vehicles in the province, and that pave the way for YPG, backed by al- Khabour Guards Forces, al- Sanadid army and the Syriac Military Council, in order to comb the area. Meanwhile, YPG could take control over about 20 villages in west, southeast, south and northwest of the province of al- Hasakah in the last 48 hours too.



It is noted that YPG, backed by al- Sanadid army, could expel IS militants from the town of Tal Hamis in south of the city of al- Qameshli in February 17, 2015. In addition to they could seize the town of Tal Brak in the 28th of the same month.


From mountain
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''Clean war''! Hama, 1982 - 40,000 civilians murdered by Assad Al-kalb Al-kabir, and now Al-kalb Al-saghir has topped him with 250,000. Barrels bombs, Chroline gas, seige of Al-Yarmouk, Aleppo,.....



Thakiya is in your fiqha, not mine! I don't go on sectarian lines. The world has seen the actions of the butcher! Who said anything that happened in Iraq invasion is justified?

Read my past posts, I've said from the begining, the Sunnah have sold out Palestine and the Shia are the only sincere ones and are being eliminated for this reason!

Hama was then. Not Bashar.
 
Kurds advance against Islamic State in northeastern Syria

Kurdish forces backed by U.S.-led air strikes are pressing an attack on Islamic State in northeastern Syria that has killed at least 170 members of the jihadist group this week, a Kurdish official and a monitoring group said on Wednesday.

The official said Kurdish YPG fighters and allied militia have encircled Islamic State militants in a dozen villages near the town of Tel Tamr in Hasaka province. The region is important in the battle against Islamic State because it borders land controlled by the jihadists in Iraq.

The Kurdish YPG appear to be trying to drive Islamic State from a stronghold in the mountainous Jabal Abdul Aziz area to the southwest of Tel Tamr, said Rami Abdulrahman, who runs the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group.

The U.S.-led alliance bombing Islamic State in Syria has been coordinating its air strikes in Hasaka with the YPG, after successfully joining forces with the Kurds to drive the jihadists from Kobani, or Ayn al-Arab, in January.

The Kurdish official, Nasir Haj Mansour, said around 80 Islamic State fighters were killed in an ambush when they tried to flee the Tel Tamr area for Jabal Abdul Aziz earlier this week. Dozens more were killed in air strikes.

"The confirmed number of (Islamic State) dead is between 170 and 200," said Mansour, speaking by telephone from Syria.

Around 100 Islamic State fighters were still encircled in the villages near Tel Tamr, he added.

Abdulrahman confirmed the YPG had effectively encircled Islamic State fighters in the villages near Tel Tamr. "The YPG are getting ready to launch attack on Jabal Abdul Aziz," he said.

Islamic State is still believed to be holding some 200 Assyrian Christians abducted in February from villages near Tel Tamr.

The U.S.-led Combined Joint Task Force said on Tuesday it had carried out seven air strikes since early Monday in Hasaka that had destroyed vehicles, fighting positions and a shipping container.


Kurds advance against Islamic State in northeastern Syria| Reuters

(Writing by Tom Perry; Editing by Larry King)
 
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Russia and America hold talks to prepare for Assad’s defeat
  • 7ffb49f2-f805-11e4-_904411c.jpg

    President Assad is looking more vulnerable than at any point since 2011GettSANA/y Images
Michael Evans, Deborah Haynes and Tom Coghlan
Last updated at 12:01AM, May 16 2015


Russia and the United States have begun discussing the fall of President Assad amid signs that Syria’s four-year civil war is turning decisively against him.

Intelligence reports suggest that recent battlefield gains by rebel groups have left the Syria dictator looking more vulnerable than at any point since 2011.

When John Kerry, the US secretary of state, met his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov this week, Moscow was not ready to drop its long-standing support for Mr Assad.

However, it is understood that both sides recognised the fighting had reached a turning point and that a post-Assad transition would need to be discussed. US sources suggested it would mean Mr Assad taking refuge in Tehran or Moscow.

Britain is also involved in increasing diplomatic efforts to forge a peaceful transition of power in Damascus if and when he falls.

Syria has been torn apart by the three-way fight between forces of the regime, the moderate opposition and extremist fighters loyal to Islamic State, although the rebel forces have spent much of the past four years divided and lined up against each other.

A series of setbacks suffered by “exhausted” government forces in recent weeks and the dramatically improved cohesiveness of moderate rebel groups have increased the prospect that Mr Assad may be ousted.

One US intelligence official said that battlefield losses and the depletion of the Syrian armed forces meant the country was approaching “a turning point for Assad”.

They said: “If Assad’s position was to deteriorate significantly, Moscow and Tehran [his main backers] would have to decide whether to continue to prop him up.”

Mr Kerry and Mr Lavrov met in Sochi this week and discussed how the US and Russia could work together on Syria.

“It was agreed that Secretary Kerry and Minister Lavrov would continue their conversation in the coming weeks with increased focus and purpose regarding a genuine political transition in Syria,” a State Department official said.

However, even if he were to quit Damascus and his regime were to fall, the State Department and America’s intelligence community remain wary of what form of government could be developed to build stability in Syria. “The alternative to Assad is not Isil [Islamic State], and the alternative to Isil is not Assad,” the State Department official said.

British officials are similarly concerned. “Whatever fragile alliance has been formed between the various factions, almost inevitably there would be some monster power struggle to try and establish their own fiefdoms or control over various areas or the whole area,” a Whitehall source said.

The change in Mr Assad’s fortunes has come about as a result of significant advances by the extremist al-Nusra, affiliated to al-Qaeda, in the north, the rise of another extremist Sunni group called Ahrar al-Sham and the continuing strength of Isis, despite US-led coalition aistrikes. Another key factor is the greater cohesion among moderate opposition in the south.

Mr Assad was being forced to rely increasingly on proxy forces such as Iran-backed Hezbollah, to protect his regime.

So far neither Russia nor Iran have signalled any public intent to lessen their support for Mr Assad. But the State Department is hopeful that in the next few weeks as Mr Kerry and Mr Lavrov continue their discussions, some change of view might develop.

However, the intelligence official warned: “The regime’s allies have previously surged support to help avoid the Assad government’s collapse, and their interest in maintaining the viability of a long-term ally leaves little doubt they would do so again.”

There is also concern that Assad, if backed into a corner, could resort to using chemical weapons following reports that inspectors found traces of sarin and VX nerve agents at a military research site in Syria in violation of an agreement with the West to remove all such material following deadly chemical weapons attacks in a Damascus suburb in 2013.

“It does look as if a number of strands are potentially conflating… that may begin to really ramp up the pressure and force him [Assad] either voluntarily to cut a deal and get out or whatever,” a Whitehall source said.

“Underpinning that is there does seem to be some kind of stockpiles of chemical weapons.”
Please, don't take your dreams for reality...Assad will have Putin at his side and it is not going to change soon...
 
Assad is falling and Kurds have killed 200 isis figthers:-)...


good propaganda on the way...

female kurdish fighters on the main page...
 
#YPG statement: Mountains Kizwanan has been fully liberated, 31 IS members killed, 2 YPG/YPJ fighters martyred (ANHA?

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this is a huge tactical achievment.
 
@Al-Kurdi

With all due respect the Kurdish sources that post those numbers of killed ISIS are as usual heavily inflated and likely not to be true at all. There is no way that YPG would have such a kill ratio versus ISIS compared to past confrontations between those two.

Without Western/Arab aid (read air bombardments) ISIS would run all over the tiny Kurdish areas of Northern Syria.

Simply speaking ISIS is the most effective group in Syria based on pure numbers alone (pound for pound) and equipment and that's simply due to their motivation and fanaticism. Their fighters are simply put not afraid of dying. They would love to die. All others, not so much.
 
IS group seizes part of ancient town of Palmyra in Syria
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BEIRUT (AP) — Islamic State militants seized parts of the ancient town of Palmyra in central Syria on Wednesday after fierce clashes with government troops, renewing fears the extremist group would destroy the priceless archaeological site if it reaches the ruins.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the militants gained control of as much as a third of the town in heavy clashes during the day. Palmyra is home to a UNESCO World Heritage Site and is famous for its 2,000-year-old majestic Roman colonnades.

The majority of the ruins are located in Palmyra's south, and the militants entered Wednesday from the north after seizing the state security building from government forces. But their presence has sparked concerns they would destroy the ruins as they have done with major archaeological sites in neighboring Iraq.

Following setbacks in both Syria and Iraq, Islamic State fighters appear to have gotten a second wind in recent days, capturing Ramadi, capital of Iraq's largest Sunni province, and advancing in central Syria to the outskirts of Palmyra.

In Iraq, thousands of displaced people fleeing from Ramadi and the violence in the western Anbar province poured into Baghdad Wednesday after the central government waived restrictions and granted them conditional entry, a provincial official said.

The exodus is the latest in the aftermath of the fall of the city of Ramadi — the Anbar provincial capital — to the Islamic State over the weekend. The Shiite-led government in Baghdad is struggling to come up with a plan to reverse the stunning loss of the city, pledging a counter-offensive and relying on Iranian-backed Shiite militiamen to join the battle for Ramadi.

Athal al-Fahdawi, an Anbar councilman, said that thousands of civilians from Ramadi who were stranded on open land for days, are now being allowed to cross a bridge spanning the Euphrates River and enter Baghdad province.

On Tuesday, Anbar local officials said five of the displaced residents died from exhaustion in Bzebiz area, where the displaced had been forced to stay as they were kept away from Baghdad.

According to the International Organization for Migration, more than 40,000 people have been displaced from Anbar province since Friday, when IS conquered Ramadi. In the past, people fleeing Anbar have been prevented from entering Baghdad due to fear that militants might mingle in with the crowds and sneak into the Iraqi capital.

Meanwhile, residents still left in Ramadi told The Associated Press over the phone on Wednesday that Islamic State militants were urging them over loudspeakers not to be afraid and to stay in the city, already suffering from acute shortages of food and medicines. However, IS fighters were not preventing those wanting to leave the city to go, the residents said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear for their own safety.

It is still unknown when the expected wide-scale operation to recapture Ramadi and other cities will start.

Baghdad officials and leaders of the so-called Popular Mobilization Units, which consists of a number of Shiite militias who are fighting on the side of the Iraqi military and security forces, have repeatedly said they need time for a military buildup and reconnaissance.

When the Islamic State launched its blitz last year and entire cities and towns fell into the hands of the militants, the Iraqi government at first took only defensive measures and in many cases, soldiers and Iraqi forces abandoned their posts and fled in the face of the IS assault.

Military operations to retake entire swaths of Iraq that had fallen to IS began only months later. The U.S. launched its airstrikes campaign in August.

IS group seizes part of ancient town of Palmyra in Syria

@Al-Kurdi

With all due respect the Kurdish sources that post those numbers of killed ISIS are as usual heavily inflated and likely not to be true at all. There is no way that YPG would have such a kill ratio versus ISIS compared to past confrontations between those two.

Without Western/Arab aid (read air bombardments) ISIS would run all over the tiny Kurdish areas of Northern Syria.

Simply speaking ISIS is the most effective group in Syria based on pure numbers alone (pound for pound) and equipment and that's simply due to their motivation and fanaticism. Their fighters are simply put not afraid of dying. They would love to die. All others, not so much.

Most of the IS forces are located in Homs and Aleppo, meanwhile leading an offensive in Anbar, Iraq.

Kurds try to relieve Assad troops by provoking IS in the north. After Palmyra, and Deir ez-Zor, Kurds have to face Arab tribesmen alone in the north and northeast.

Just hours ago, a suicide bomber blew up several members of YPG in the Hasaka City, btw.
 
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It took nearly 2 years from the time I joined the Canadian Forces until I stepped off on my first combat patrol in Afghanistan but less than 10 days from the time I volunteered in the YPG to reach the front line facing ISIS. In that time we bounced back and forth -

...we liberated 7 villages with minimum resistance. On a YPG assault you load up in the back of a pick up truck and you and 7 or 8 others wrap yourselves around the 12.7 or 25 mm Dhska mounted in the box. 4 fit in the back seat and 3 in the front, for a total personnel capacity of -

...ISIS put up a fight in only one position, where they were destroyed after a 5 hour Dhska battle while the dismounts enjoyed the show with cigarettes and seeds a few kilometres away. In the rest of the villages we found nothing but bodies and ISIS propaganda still taped to the walls, most of it dictating how women were to dress under hard line Sharia law. The YPJ commander was this attractive, mid thirties woman with a masters degree in genetic biology that spoke four languages and was widely respected by the YPG men, the YPJ woman and the western volunteers alike. We showed her one of the Sharia law posters and she laughed and tossed it aside and carried on commanding her troops...


Brandon's Blog
 
blogger-image--462826759.jpg

It took nearly 2 years from the time I joined the Canadian Forces until I stepped off on my first combat patrol in Afghanistan but less than 10 days from the time I volunteered in the YPG to reach the front line facing ISIS. In that time we bounced back and forth -

...we liberated 7 villages with minimum resistance. On a YPG assault you load up in the back of a pick up truck and you and 7 or 8 others wrap yourselves around the 12.7 or 25 mm Dhska mounted in the box. 4 fit in the back seat and 3 in the front, for a total personnel capacity of -

...ISIS put up a fight in only one position, where they were destroyed after a 5 hour Dhska battle while the dismounts enjoyed the show with cigarettes and seeds a few kilometres away. In the rest of the villages we found nothing but bodies and ISIS propaganda still taped to the walls, most of it dictating how women were to dress under hard line Sharia law. The YPJ commander was this attractive, mid thirties woman with a masters degree in genetic biology that spoke four languages and was widely respected by the YPG men, the YPJ woman and the western volunteers alike. We showed her one of the Sharia law posters and she laughed and tossed it aside and carried on commanding her troops...


Brandon's Blog

Just a poser. US airforce does all the work. These are posterboys and girls.
 
Most of the IS forces are located in Homs and Aleppo, meanwhile leading an offensive in Anbar, Iraq.

Kurds try to relieve Assad troops by provoking IS in the north. After Palmyra, and Deir ez-Zor, Kurds have to face Arab tribesmen alone in the north and northeast.

Just hours ago, a suicide bomber blew up several members of YPG in the Hasaka City, btw.

The Kurds should just know that their place is the tiny Kurdish majority areas of Northern Syria and nowhere else. The Arab tribes will deal with them if they try anything unnecessary.

Or FSA, or ISIS or even the Syrian regime.
 
The Kurds should just know that their place is the tiny Kurdish majority areas of Northern Syria and nowhere else. The Arab tribes will deal with them if they try anything unnecessary.

Or FSA, or ISIS or even the Syrian regime.

Kurds take support from jews and westerners. Every kind of support whether Weapons, mercenaries, or air cover goes to Kurds.

Westerners and Jews will leave Middleast, but we will be staying.

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