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  1. #1
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    Foreign Policy
    ✔ ‎@ForeignPolicy Turkey to U.S. troops: You clearly support terrorists, so maybe you should start wearing ISIS and Boko Haram flags.

    http://atfp.co/1WpZBpA .

    Turkish officials are so furious that American special forces troops accompanying Kurdish militants in Syria are wearing their partners’ insignia on their uniforms that Ankara’s top diplomat suggested Friday that U.S. soldiers add Islamic State flags to their sleeves next.

    Speaking at a press conference in Antalya, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Cavusoglu said that “wearing an insignia of a terrorist organization by U.S. soldiers, who are our ally and are assertive about fighting against terrorism, is unacceptable.”

    "Our suggestion to them is that they should also wear Daesh, al-Nusra and al-Qaeda insignias during their operations in other regions of Syria,” Cavusoglu said, using an alternative name for the Islamic State. “They can also wear the Boko Haram insignia when they go to Africa.”

    Turkey believes the U.S.-backed Kurdish People’s Protection Unit, or the YPG, is an armed wing of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, which both Ankara and Washington have labeled as a terrorist organization. But the United States supports the YPG, claiming it is Washington’s best chance of beating back Islamic State militants in Syria. The photos that emerged Thursday show U.S. commandos on patrol in the village of Fatisah, near the Islamic State’s stronghold in Raqqa, wearing YPG insignia on their sleeves. Cavusoglu said Friday that the YPG is responsible for two recently bombings in Ankara that left dozens dead.

    After the photos were released, Maj. Tiffany Bowens, spokesperson for U.S. Special Forces Command in the Middle East, told Foreign Policy in an e-mail that “this practice is officially against uniform regulations,” but “U.S. Special Operations Forces and their counterparts typically swap unit patches as a method to build trust.” The patch swap is intended to signal cooperation, and has been “employed in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Jordan,” she said. “This is a tactical decision and not a reflection of U.S. government policy.”

    She would not specifically elaborate on what the American forces are doing on the ground.
    JUST IN: The Pentagon has banned troops in Syria from wearing these Kurdish militia patches
    http://militari.ly/1VlZXwg

    "We realize our President has asked you to defeat an enemy by helping our allies enemy, but we don't need to brag"
    https://twitter.com/adegrandpre/stat...71626795405312

    “Wearing those YPG patches was unauthorized, and it was inappropriate and corrective action has been taken,” Army Col. Steve Warren, a Baghdad-based spokesman, told reporters Friday. “And we have communicated as much to our military partners and our military allies in the region.”

    Warren’s condemnation of the patch Friday ran counter to Pentagon statements Thursday, when Defense Department spokesman Peter Cook said it was normal for special operations troops to try to “blend in with the community to enhance their own protection.”
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 05-27-2016 at 07:46 PM.

  2. #2
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    FSA recaptures Niyara from #ISIS -

    After "liberation" of Tel Rifaat by #SDF/#YPG from #FSA the former residents still live in tents near #Azaz

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    What an Islamic State Offensive in Aleppo near Azaz means for US Policy
    http://bit.ly/1qPxCSl

    On May 26 the Islamic State (ISIS or ISIL) launched a successful westward offensive in Syria’s northern Aleppo countryside. ISIS effectively encircled thousands of insurgent fighters in the town of Marea and is now less than 2 miles from the critical opposition-held city of Azaz. Although ISIS only seized six villages and may yet lose them, that does not reveal the full extent of the danger this attack poses. Aleppo province is where multiple axes of the Syrian war intersect: the regime-opposition conflict; Kurdish-insurgent competition; Russia’s military role; US policy toward the rebellion (and therefore the regime); Turkey’s critical geopolitical interests; and of course, the multi-front war on ISIS. The real significance of military developments in Aleppo usually goes beyond territorial changes. For the insurgency and its Turkish patron in particular, the margin for error in a critical part of Syria is now vanishingly thin. The implications for the US war on ISIS are alarming.

    In recent weeks, US and Turkish-backed rebel groups have repeatedly fought ISIS, in an attempt to drive the group out of Aleppo province. The insurgents captured territory but were unable to hold it against ISIS counterattacks. Over the weeks, Russian-backed regime operations, ISIS attacks, and Kurdish PYD offensives further squeezed the insurgency in Aleppo, eventually confining it to the narrow “Azaz corridor” and a single critical but vulnerable supply line running through it from Turkey. Surrounded by hostile PYD forces to the west, ISIS to the east, and the regime to the south, the insurgents in the corridor were already in danger before the recent ISIS offensive. With all these actors positioned to make land grabs in the area, and rebels exhausted by months of fighting, the corridor is now on the verge of collapse.

    A number of scenarios could destroy the corridor and, with it, the rebel presence in Aleppo province (with the exception of soon-to-be-encircled Aleppo city). First, the PYD could move on opposition territory, under the pretext of defending it from ISIS. The PYD could grant these insurgents safe passage through Kurdish-dominated territory instead of attacking them, but that seems unlikely given mutual hostility. ISIS may also continue its westward offensive in a race with the PYD for the corridor, and would likely execute any rebel prisoners. Regime and Russian air strikes on the insurgents would facilitate either ISIS or PYD movement. That would be consistent with a regime policy of prioritizing the war on the insurgency.

    If the Azaz corridor collapses, the most obvious loser (apart from the opposition of course) will be Turkey. It would no longer have proxy capability in northern Syria’s most strategic province, in a war where critical national security interests are at stake. These interests include, but are not limited to, containing expansion by the PYD - a group closely linked to Turkey’s historical enemy the PKK - in part through Turkey’s rebel allies in Aleppo. With Kurdish-led forces, ISIS, the Al Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra, and the regime controlling most of northern Syria, Turkey would be nearly out of allies in Syria.

    US policy in Syria is more narrowly defined and largely focused on defeating ISIS, and the collapse of the Azaz corridor would significantly complicate that fight. Presently, the United States and Turkey have a two-pronged approach to fighting ISIS. East of the Euphrates river, the United States supports a largely-Kurdish military effort against ISIS, the PYD-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). This ethnic imbalance has strained Kurdish-Arab relations in areas liberated from the group, amid reports of ethnic cleansing of Arabs by the PYD. The United States however, unwilling to get more deeply involved in the Syrian conflict, calculates that this is a risk worth taking. West of the Euphrates however, and under strong Turkish insistence, there is an Arab opposition-led anti-ISIS effort. The so-called Hiwar Kilis Operations Room includes Turkish-backed Islamists and US-backed nationalist insurgents and has enjoyed Turkish artillery and US aerial support.

    The United States needs local Arab partners against ISIS, such as the Hiwar Kilis Operations Room. It also needs Turkish cooperation against ISIS which is essentially contingent on keeping Kurdish forces east of the Euphrates. Without a significant Arab force in northern Aleppo, and in the absence of a broader more ambitious policy to end the civil war, the United States will be tempted if not compelled to rely completely on the PYD and allow it to expand westward into Arab territory. That would be catastrophic for US-Turkish relations and the related anti-ISIS effort. An exclusively Kurdish war on ISIS would deepen Sunni extremism among an aggrieved Arab population, deprive the United States and its allies of Arab partners in a crucial geography, and eliminate the moderate opposition in northern Syria.

    US military planners recognize the tension between beating ISIS and the limited local tools available to them. Much of the Arab population in Raqqa and Deir al Zour is disorganized, disoriented and, understandably, fearful of ISIS and resentful of the PYD. The United States is trying to address that by augmenting the Arab component of the PYD-led SDF. This same logic ought to apply doubly in Aleppo, where local fighters with experience and commitment have fought ISIS for years. At the moment, overwhelming Turkish artillery and US airpower are needed to help them push ISIS back, and expand the eastern boundaries of the Azaz corridor. In the longer run, if the corridor survives, this crisis only highlights how much the United States needs a well-armed, well-trained Arab insurgent partner in Aleppo.
    Some how many seem to be not seeing the FSA as a fighting force that can deal with IS......why is that......
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 05-27-2016 at 07:54 PM.

  4. #4
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    Michael Weiss
    ✔ ‎@michaeldweiss How the Kurds’ neighbors play games to block the expansion of ‘Greater Kurdistan’:
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...dish-factions/

    Lebanese Hezbollah ministers, MPs could be hit by U.S. law: U.S. official http://reut.rs/27WaIdV

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    From battle btw #Assad-forces & #IslamicState at
    Panorama roundabout in #DeirEzzor

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J4rZk_Rsggg
    http://wikimapia.org/#lang=de&lat=35...85056&z=16&m=b
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 05-28-2016 at 08:07 AM.

  6. #6
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    IS were able to reach the field hospital in #Mare town but were overwhelmed by #FSA

    ISIS assaulting force is composed mainly of children from northern and eastern Aleppo towns

    15 dead #IS-fighters & several captured- tried to storm #Mare town in northern #Aleppo

    IS VBIED blown up near Mare3 before reaching target

    Intense clashes are taking place on the periphery of Marea, where ISIS detonated 5 vehicle bombs in the early morning

    Syria'n regime airstrikes hit several neighborhoods of #Aleppo city now

    Rebels seized BMP from #IS during their assault on #Mare town in northern #Aleppo

    #FSA continues battle against #IslamicState-offshoots in western #Daraa province
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=drGH92I4flk

    Footage from yesterday shows battle btw #FSA & #IslamicState at highway to #Turkey border crossing

    Rebels have retaken the village of Nada near Azaz in north rural #Aleppo from #ISIS
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 05-28-2016 at 08:51 AM.

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    Aleppo Halab Ops Room commander Major Yasser Abdulrahim in anticipation of a major regime offensive declares general mobilization

    Kurds are desperately trying to "walk back" their previous statements on Raqqa becoming part and parcel of a Kurdish federation after the capture of it....THAT after a number of blustering statements from them on the offensive against Raqqa....Raqqa is Arab Sunni and never has been Kurdish.

    Salih Muslim denying Raqaa will be part of PYD federalism

    Obama WH now has a "loose cannon proxy" in Syria that wants to create their own nation state with Obama supporting them....and he is actually going along with it.
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 05-28-2016 at 08:57 AM.

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