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Syrian Civil War (Graphic Photos/Vid Not Allowed)

Idlib: Syrian Army Land Mines Kill a Number of Al-Nusra Front Fighters

Well, anyone who can read farsi, immediately understands that you are another foul-mouth psychopath from mullahstan. Sorry, I cannot do much for you or send your medications. Don't waste my time. Go beg someone else ;)
well seyeed bache-akhund mulla-son pandick,
anybody reading your comments will soon understand you have a kind of illness related to mullas.
mulla can help you and send you your remedy. they showed very effective in healing the diseases like that of you.
do you like mulaa golestani?
hhahhhaaa

Violence Renews in the Yarmouk Camp; Rebel Factions are at War in the Qalamoun
 
happened in libya too... yet the present libyan "government" is ikhwaan/lifg/qaeda... infighting doesn't count.



technically, afghanistan is south asia... and central asia is uzbekistan, kyrgistan, kazakhstan etc.

how sure are you that those are afghani?? just by their looks??

you can at least post links... i don't think you will be banned for that. ;)
Found a video of a captured Afghani. He came to Syria to fight with Iranians. He was jailed in Iran 6 years, but they allowed him to be released if he fought with the Iranians.
 
Found a video of a captured Afghani. He came to Syria to fight with Iranians. He was jailed in Iran 6 years, but they allowed him to be released if he fought with the Iranians.
Very interesting video. They have been 150 drug dealer criminals from Afghan, Pakistani, Iranian nationalities in Iranian prisons and mullahs have paid them 2 million Toman(600-700$) per month to fight against Syrian people. Also, he says that their commander, whose name has been Khalili, and is killed, would shoot them if they wanted to flee from fighting.
 
Found a video of a captured Afghani. He came to Syria to fight with Iranians. He was jailed in Iran 6 years, but they allowed him to be released if he fought with the Iranians.

is the source "islamic front"... how very neutral of you...

and come on... one desperate man does not make "an army of assad's afghani fighters"... you spoke as if syrian army has vanished... it has not... ( Defense minister visits military sites in Damascus countryside | Syrian Arab News Agency ).

i understood a bit of the person being interrogated because arabi language is contributor to urdu language... this man, murad ali ( ?? ) seems to have been paid ( or promised?? ) two million irani money... and that he is from afghanistan... and somewhere the interrogator mentions pakistan, i don't know why... are they pakistani poor people who went to iran and then were sent to syria...

now is he really from afghanistan?? is he still alive or has he been tortured and beheaded?? why were his hands tied if he was outside of the reach of the iranis and the dictator assad??

@Syrian Lion what do you say about this video and the claims of @Dr.Thrax
 
is the source "islamic front"... how very neutral of you...

and come on... one desperate man does not make "an army of assad's afghani fighters"... you spoke as if syrian army has vanished... it has not... ( Defense minister visits military sites in Damascus countryside | Syrian Arab News Agency ).

i understood a bit of the person being interrogated because arabi language is contributor to urdu language... this man, murad ali ( ?? ) seems to have been paid ( or promised?? ) two million irani money... and that he is from afghanistan... and somewhere the interrogator mentions pakistan, i don't know why... are they pakistani poor people who went to iran and then were sent to syria...

now is he really from afghanistan?? is he still alive or has he been tortured and beheaded?? why were his hands tied if he was outside of the reach of the iranis and the dictator assad??

@Syrian Lion what do you say about this video and the claims of @Dr.Thrax
Well, how about you show me a video of the SAA detaining an Afghani Shiite fighting for them? Since you love to use pro-Assad sources so much.
I can translate the entire video. The guy is an Afghani who was imprisoned in Iran for drug trafficking. Iran offered him freedom if he fought in Syria with Iranian forces to "protect shiite shrines from Sunnis."
Islamic Front is an Islamic faction (duh), so they'll follow Islamic Law if they are righteous. Meaning the guy won't be tortured, and won't be beheaded unless he has killed innocents (which he most likely has.)
As I said, I have loads of pictures of foreigners fighting for Assad, most of whom are shiites. While a lot of Syrians still do fight for Assad, they are mostly Alawites, which as you know, are the ruling party.
 
Well, how about you show me a video of the SAA detaining an Afghani Shiite fighting for them? Since you love to use pro-Assad sources so much.

i use sources that appeal to common sense... have you seen me use bbc or al-arabiya??

I can translate the entire video. The guy is an Afghani who was imprisoned in Iran for drug trafficking. Iran offered him freedom if he fought in Syria with Iranian forces to "protect shiite shrines from Sunnis."

1. so a desperate man, also whose religious sentiment has been used.

2. doesn't mean that syrian army is now suddenly composed of iranis and afghanis.

Islamic Front is an Islamic faction (duh), so they'll follow Islamic Law if they are righteous. Meaning the guy won't be tortured, and won't be beheaded unless he has killed innocents (which he most likely has.)

i laughed at all those words...

As I said, I have loads of pictures of foreigners fighting for Assad, most of whom are shiites. While a lot of Syrians still do fight for Assad, they are mostly Alawites, which as you know, are the ruling party.

and we go back to square one... :hitwall:
 
i use sources that appeal to common sense... have you seen me use bbc or al-arabiya??



1. so a desperate man, also whose religious sentiment has been used.

2. doesn't mean that syrian army is now suddenly composed of iranis and afghanis.



i laughed at all those words...



and we go back to square one... :hitwall:
You seem really intent on getting me banned.
Found a picture of them not dead, since they don't like to pose alive:
afghan-assad-fighters.jpg
 
This civil war had nothing to do with shiites, but mullah animals tried to drag shiites into the war with such excuses in which it has nothing to do with shiites. Alawites are not even shiites, but, Khomeyni (RIH) was the first one who said that Alawite are related to shiites, since he was ally with Bashar's father regime :disagree:
That's what the Afghani was told by the Iranians. That's why I put it in quotes.

 
Syria Analysis: How Regime’s Hackers Exposed Assad’s Fear — Not Enough Men for the War

On the surface, the Syrian Electronic Army won a cyber-victory for the Assad regime on Wednesday when it hacked the website of the International Business Times, defacing sections and removing a story to which it objected.
But all it takes is a glance at the headline of the deleted story — “The Syrian Army Is Shrinking, And Assad Is Running Out Of Soldiers” — to realize that the Army’s victory from Pyrrhic: far from vanquishing the enemy on the Internet, it only drew attention to a growing fear of the Assad regime in the 45-month conflict.

The episode started on Monday, when the Institute for the Study of War posted a brief study, “The Assad Regime Under Stress: Conscription and Protest among Alawite and Minority Populations in Syria”.

After three years of grueling warfare against armed opposition fighters, the Syrian regime faces a dire internal crisis not witnessed since the initial months of the conflict. Defections, desertions, and over 44,000 combat fatalities have reduced the Syrian Arab Army from a pre-war high of 325,000 soldiers to an estimated 150,000 battle-tested yet war-weary troops. Despite reinforcement from tens of thousands of foreign volunteers, Lebanese Hezbollah militants, and pro-government militias, regime forces have proven unable to decisively overcome rebel brigades on the battlefield. These pressures were only exacerbated by the withdrawal of thousands of Iraqi Shi’a militiamen from Syria in June 2014 redeployed to counter the ongoing ISIS [Islamic State] offensive in Iraq.

At the same time, key demographics within the President Bashar al-Assad’s support base – including the Alawite population – have exhibited growing signs of dissatisfaction with the Syrian regime. Pre-existing grievances related to repression and social inequities have merged with high casualty counts and rising economic stress to fuel a sense of exhaustion among regime supporters. Faced with both a war-weary populace and a burgeoning manpower deficit that threatens its survival, the Syrian regime has resorted to a nation-wide forced conscription campaign – threatening to further split the regime from its base
.

The report highlighted a series of recent regime measures to find men for the war. There was an “unprecedented” activation in October of army reservists, including all reservists born in or after 1984 in Hama. Checkpoints and raids detained men accused of avoiding military service, with reports of arrests of more than 1,500 in Hama and about 1,200 in Homs, although the regime refrained from large-scale reserve mobilization among its core support in Damascus and the Alawite coast.

As the list of 70,000 names of “reservists to be mobilized” was circulated, regime forces reportedly extended raids to buses, cafes, and other venues frequented by young men. House-by-house searches were conducted in entire neighborhoods. Decrees restricted the ability of military-aged males to leave the country, with authorized travellers paying a deposit of more than $250, returnable upon re-entry to Syria. Government employees face five-year prison sentences, fines, and immediate dismissal if they refuse to enroll in compulsory military service, and proof of enrollment is needed to collect salaries.

Despite the significance of the study, it was missed by mainstream media except for the International Business Times. Alexandra Masi summarized the key points and quoted the author, Christopher Kozak:

The war has reached a sort of dynamic stalemate where it is unlikely it will be ended by any short-term outlook. The regime cannot defeat the rebels and the rebels have not been able to decisively defeat the regime….
at some point the population will reach a tipping point where the cost of war has been too great to bear for the community.


That’s when the Syrian Electronic Army took notice of the damaging claims. Within hours, the International Business Times had been hacked, with the story replaced with the message:

This time we only deleted the article that contained false information about Syria and the Syrian army.
Next time we will delete all your website.


However, the outcome of the operation may not be what the Assad regime wanted. The International Business Times has restored its article, with the link to the original study from the Institute for the Study of War.
So far more people now are likely to know about the extent of the manpower crisis in the Syrian military, and — amid recent victories by insurgents and challenges by the Islamic State — hints of desperation from the Assad regime.
As the ISW study concludes, despite the regime’s measures, “sustaining combat operations in the context of a war-weary populace is a mission doomed to failure”.

Syria Analysis: How Regime’s Hackers Exposed Assad’s Fear — Not Enough Men for the War | EA WorldView

Exclusive: Iran's support for Syria tested by oil price drop| Reuters
 

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