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Thread: Syria in 2016 (July-September)

  1. #1021
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    Backstory on Wagner: Fontanka Investigates Russian Mercenaries Dying For Putin In Syria And Ukraine
    http://www.interpretermag.com/fontan...a-and-ukraine/

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    Syrian rebel "Levantine Front", attacking the cement factory base yesterday.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GMTtVQbBn44

    Footage from Kafr Da'el shortly ago.
    #Putin burns the country.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JW9mzoJZS0E
    http://wikimapia.org/#lang=de&lat=36...26243&z=15&m=b

    Also the western suburbs of #Aleppo are under #Russian attack right now.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sz3JihEMgGM

    Just another horrific day in #Assad-besieged and bombed #Daraya.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KOli81XOMis

    ProAssad media hard at work.......
    Assad media:#Russia jets are hunting rebel reinforcement convoys to #Aleppo in the triangle Saraqib-Taftanaz-Zerbah

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    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    Due to the landscape, #Assad forces have full fire control over the #Ramouseh corridor.
    Yup, in minds of Assad-fans.

    This is a build-up area, dominated only by the Artillery Base - which is in insurgent hands.

    No way to exercise 'fire control' over it (except this means simply saturating the area with any bomb and artillery shell they can get).

    That said: sure, the JAF is yet to establish a _safe_ corridor into Eastern Aleppo. The current one is over 2,000m wide, but not yet safe for civilian use.

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    Cluster bomb attack on northern rural #Aleppo this morning.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YsQsLS1QZzU

    Homs calling.
    Now also #Rastan joined the group of terrorised cities across #Syria.
    20 towns under Rus/reg attack. One school reportedly is hit as well.

    B]Anything special used vs. #Rastan here?
    [/B]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YsQsLS1QZzU

    5 dead in air strikes on Maarat al-Numan.
    Report of 17 air strikes alone on Ariha during the last half hour.

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    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    Pro-regime sources claimed Shia Iraqi militias sent reinforcements to Aleppo

    Imagine how much would be the uproar if these were "Sunni foreign Jihadis" arriving from Turkey to aid rebels
    ...but they are arriving - at a rate of about '100 a day', and increasing.

    I just don't understand why is nobody reporting about this...

    Anyway, this is absolutely no surprise: remember that back in September 2015, the JAN and several of its foreign supporters issued a number of calls for 'Jihad against Russians'.

    Now, we see something like cummulative effects of these.

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    Rus propagandist Solovyev tweets that "U.S could ignite war at Donbas as asymmetric response to Syrian defeat"

    He alleges that it is all about the Kerry Plan "B"

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    Great opposition @QASIOUN_NEWS agency mapped today's air strikes, distinguishes in Rus/reg.
    http://qasioun.net/ar/map/show/17/%D...B1%D9%8A%D8%A7

    Also 3 towns in #Hama and #Douma in Rif Dimashq under constant attack.
    Most air strikes target civilians.

    Heavy air strikes on Kafr Zita and Al-Lataminah since the morning.

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    Jaish al Fatah shells #Fuah & #Kefraya "in response to Russian massacres in Idlib".
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yvdOMnw6tUg

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    Quote Originally Posted by CrowBat View Post
    ...but they are arriving - at a rate of about '100 a day', and increasing.

    I just don't understand why is nobody reporting about this...

    Anyway, this is absolutely no surprise: remember that back in September 2015, the JAN and several of its foreign supporters issued a number of calls for 'Jihad against Russians'.

    Now, we see something like cummulative effects of these.
    CrowBat.......any ideas why western MSM is not reporting on this fighter flow?

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    Default Jabhat al-Nusra becomes Jabhat Fatah al-Sham

    A commentary by Professor Scott Walker, of Birmingham (UK) University, on and as a taster here are two passages:
    Less than 24 hours after Nusra released al-Joulani’s video, the power of the blended rebel forces was made clear when a rebel-JFS offensive turned the tide in the battle for Aleppo. On August 6, after only eight days, the rebel coalition group Jaish al-Fatah (which Nusra has joined in various offensives) not only broke the joint Russian-regime siege but also threatened to isolate the Syrian military in the areas of the city it controls. This makes it plain just how arbitrary the West’s categorisations are. For now, whatever label the US and analysts put on Nusra, the rebels need it as a battlefield ally, and any distinction between “moderate” and “extremist” is a political imposition.
    Link:https://theconversation.com/american-obsession-with-al-qaeda-in-syria-is-making-the-conflict-there-worse-63290?
    davidbfpo

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    Russia: "From now on we will attack Aleppo's hospitals, school and markets for only 21 hours per day."

    UPDATE: U.N. aid chief says willing to consider Russia's proposed Aleppo truce, but 48-hour pause needed to meet humanitarian need

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    Aleppo/#Idlib: #Russia|n and #Assad airstrikes killed 250+ #Syria|n civilians and injured 550+ more in the last seven days.

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    Kyle W. Orton @KyleWOrton
    This is an incredible piece of work by @ryanmofarrell and @badly_xeroxed on the Syrian insurgency as it now stands.
    http://bit.ly/2aGkWWJ

    The life of a US Humvee - as visualised by @LlamameIshmael and most recent transfer noticed by @RaoKumar747.

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    Russian Ministry of Defence: 1000 killed and 2000 injured are the losses of the armed groups during the recent battles in #Aleppo #Syria

    Also the rebels lost 200 tanks, 3K rifles, and 120 commanders. 7 Afghans were martyed.


    JFS's #Konkurs strike vs tank near Cement Factory in S. #Aleppo.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-eFGdgfWxE

    Rebels thwarted another attempt by pro-Regime forces to advance on Cement Factory Front in #Aleppo. http://wikimapia.org/#lang=en&lat=36....142115&z=14&m

    4 Afghans of #IRGC's Fatemiun brigade killed in Aleppo,Syria, buried today in Qom, Iran.

    First Regiment shelling #Nayrab Airbase with Katyusha rockets, #Aleppo.
    http://wikimapia.org/#lang=en&lat=36....222023&z=13&m

    Ahrar Al-Sham fired more Grad rockets towards #Hama Airbase.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kVsFLsroEBg

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    Very interesting TASS article claims that alleged Wagner employees in recent Sky News piece were paid actors
    http://tass.ru/mezhdunarodnaya-panorama/3525965
    Reference Russian mercenaries working for a Russian PMC

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    Schools & markets were attacked in air strikes on 10 towns in #Idlib province.
    Dozens of dead civilians.

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    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    Russia: "From now on we will attack Aleppo's hospitals, school and markets for only 21 hours per day."

    UPDATE: U.N. aid chief says willing to consider Russia's proposed Aleppo truce, but 48-hour pause needed to meet humanitarian need
    There is a ceasefire for #Aleppo & the rest of #Syria since almost 6 months.
    Russia just acknowledges it ignores it.


    BREAKING: Russian Defense Ministry says three-hour per day Aleppo ceasefire for aid convoys will start Aug. 11

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    Entire #Damascus can see how #Assad bombs the #Jobar quarter.
    How can they sleep at night?
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EA4pQePGqZE

    Also in #Ariha, the Russian jet targeted a roundabout and the #market around it.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkaRtKqYJU4

    Syrian rebel ATGM hits pro-#Assad tank,trying to close the corridor S of #Ramouseh.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-eFGdgfWxE

    MASSACRES!
    #Assad & #Putin let their killers fly dozens of attacks on civilians in #Idlib.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=osVIl5lbeTg

    Markets, #mosques and residential areas targeted by #Russia ind #Idlib city.
    https://www.facebook.com/ShaamNetwor...type=2&theater
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 08-10-2016 at 06:11 PM.

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    Default Russia’s Futuristic Military Plagued by Old Problems

    http://www.jamestown.org/single/?tx_...5#.V6t7WLsrKUk

    Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 13 Issue: 138
    July 29, 2016 04:51 PM Age: 12 days
    By: Roger McDermott

    As Russia’s military operations continue unabated in Syria, despite an earlier order to commence withdrawing deployed forces, the conflict has certainly succeeded in changing how the Russian Armed Forces are perceived both at home and abroad. Indeed, the intervention in Syria, marking Moscow’s first experience of expeditionary warfare beyond the former Soviet space since its withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989, permitted the top brass to test and showcase some of the advances in modern military hardware and weapons systems. This has been by no means a cheap exercise in the use of hard power. And yet, Russia’s operation in Syria has promulgated a one-sided view of the transformation of its Armed Forces: that of Moscow making significant progress toward developing 21st century warfare capabilities. However, this oversimplified assertion is challenged by ongoing problems linked to military manpower (Voyennya Mysl, No. 1, 2016).

    President Vladimir Putin has revamped the assertion that Russia retains “one million” men under arms, despite evidence of undermanning in the Armed Forces. In December 2015, the Ministry of Defense confirmed that it is on schedule to achieve its aim to recruit sufficient numbers of contract personnel (kontraktniki) based on annual targets and boasted that it passed the milestone of possessing more contract personnel than conscripts. The defense ministry’s official figure for the number of kontraktniki serving in the Armed Forces was 352,000, noting that the target for 2016 was set at recruiting an additional 31,000 and proclaiming that its units were 92 percent manned (RIA Novosti, December 24, 2015).

    While the kontraktniki numbers in the military consistently increased in recent years, there is stony silence from the defense ministry on the thorny issue of the number of contract personnel annually leaving the Armed Forces—thus, removing any reliable way to measure overall retention levels. Moreover, there is even less information released on the issue of the quality of recruits and progress in combat training. One worrying indicator that all is not as well as officially presented came from the Main Military Investigation Directorate (Glavnoye Voyennoye Sledstvennoye Upravleniye—GVSU). According to the GVSU, the number of crimes in the Armed Forces increased by 20.9 percent in the first six months of 2016. By itself, the statistic should cause concern for the top brass. But to make matters worse, the GVSU also reported that the crime figures increased by 40 percent based on the same period in 2015; corruption-linked crimes increased by 1.5 times, and crimes perpetrated by individuals while intoxicated or using narcotic substances grew by 1.4 times (Arms-expo.ru, July 22).

    The role of Russia’s Armed Forces in operations in Syria, meanwhile, received closer scrutiny recently with the publication of a book by Colonel (retired) Anatoliy Tsyganok, the director of the Center for Military Forecasting. Voyna v Sirii i yeye posledstviya dlya Blizhnego Vostoka, Kavkaza i Tsentral'noy Azii: russkiy vzglyad (The War in Syria, and its Implications for the Middle East, Caucasus and Central Asia: a Russian Opinion) examines a broad range of factors related to Moscow’s involvement in the conflict. Tsyganok argues that Russia’s military operations constitute a new form of warfare, but he also suggests that the military requires further force integration in terms of communication systems and a fundamental review of the theory of using aviation, naval power and special forces (Voyenno Promyshlennyy Kuryer, July 19).

    Vladimir Gundarov noted in Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye that the Russian defense ministry recently confirmed the acceptance of 47 Kalibr cruise missiles for the Navy. Referring to the combat use of this missile type by the Russian Navy to support operations in Syria, Gundarov attempted to estimate the costs involved. In October 2015, the Caspian Flotilla fired 26 Kalibr missiles, striking 11 targets in Syria, while the following month an additional 18 were launched against seven targets. Based on sales of the export version of this missile to India, Gundarov suggests each Kalibr cost $6.5 million; but he concludes that the 44 missiles sold domestically to the Russian defense ministry and fired off last October amounted to 2.7 billion rubles ($41 million—approximately $980,000 per missile) (Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye, July 22). Other than testing or advertising the missile capability, some of which landed in Iran, there was no real underlying military purpose for using Kalibr missiles in Syria. Either way, the process was certainly expensive.

    If there is, in fact, an underlying need to display these weapons, then it perhaps lies in promoting an image of the Russian Armed Forces as more advanced than they are in reality. Moscow’s interest in using such opportunities to showcase its most advanced systems was repeated in its efforts to strengthen air defenses following the November 2015 Turkish Air Force downing of an Su-24M after the latter breached Turkish airspace. But with the recent improvement in Moscow’s relations with Ankara, some commentators expressed surprise at the extent of Turkish top brass involvement in the attempted military coup on July 15 (Voyenno Promyshlennyy Kuryer, July 19).

    However, Moscow’s concerns about Turkey, or its efforts to rebuild damaged bilateral relations with Ankara pale in comparison to growing attention to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s (NATO) military exercises. As always, these are presented in the Russian media as potentially threatening to Russia. One analysis in the military media tried to assess the NATO strategy underpinning the Poland-based exercise Anaconda 2016. The author makes the following claims:

    • it emphasized indirect action, using economic, financial, technological and informational tools against the enemy;

    • military actions were rehearsed in pursuit of economic interests with a widespread use of information and communication technologies;

    • it practiced avoiding a decisive clash with the main factions of the armed forces of the enemy, using detachments of insurgents from the local population and mercenaries and supplying them to attract allies and partners;

    • it exercised targeted destabilization of administrative-political, socio-economic, cultural and ideological spheres of the enemy state.

    The author alleges that NATO strategy is to rehearse a form of “hybrid warfare” against Russia (Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye, July 24).

    Moscow’s military response to these perceived developments is to strengthen units and reorganize the disposition of forces in the Western and Southern Military districts. It also places great emphasis on the role of stand-off weapons systems, including Kalibr, to help build a response to US/NATO missile defense (Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye, July 22). These response measures are by no means complete, but what is clear from some of the reporting in the military media and supported by the GVSU is that Moscow has not yet resolved deep and systemic issues within its military. And these serve as a long-term barrier to building a modern network-enabled military.

  20. #1040
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    Quote Originally Posted by Azor View Post
    http://www.jamestown.org/single/?tx_...5#.V6t7WLsrKUk

    Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 13 Issue: 138
    July 29, 2016 04:51 PM Age: 12 days
    By: Roger McDermott

    As Russia’s military operations continue unabated in Syria, despite an earlier order to commence withdrawing deployed forces, the conflict has certainly succeeded in changing how the Russian Armed Forces are perceived both at home and abroad. Indeed, the intervention in Syria, marking Moscow’s first experience of expeditionary warfare beyond the former Soviet space since its withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989, permitted the top brass to test and showcase some of the advances in modern military hardware and weapons systems. This has been by no means a cheap exercise in the use of hard power. And yet, Russia’s operation in Syria has promulgated a one-sided view of the transformation of its Armed Forces: that of Moscow making significant progress toward developing 21st century warfare capabilities. However, this oversimplified assertion is challenged by ongoing problems linked to military manpower (Voyennya Mysl, No. 1, 2016).

    President Vladimir Putin has revamped the assertion that Russia retains “one million” men under arms, despite evidence of undermanning in the Armed Forces. In December 2015, the Ministry of Defense confirmed that it is on schedule to achieve its aim to recruit sufficient numbers of contract personnel (kontraktniki) based on annual targets and boasted that it passed the milestone of possessing more contract personnel than conscripts. The defense ministry’s official figure for the number of kontraktniki serving in the Armed Forces was 352,000, noting that the target for 2016 was set at recruiting an additional 31,000 and proclaiming that its units were 92 percent manned (RIA Novosti, December 24, 2015).

    While the kontraktniki numbers in the military consistently increased in recent years, there is stony silence from the defense ministry on the thorny issue of the number of contract personnel annually leaving the Armed Forces—thus, removing any reliable way to measure overall retention levels. Moreover, there is even less information released on the issue of the quality of recruits and progress in combat training. One worrying indicator that all is not as well as officially presented came from the Main Military Investigation Directorate (Glavnoye Voyennoye Sledstvennoye Upravleniye—GVSU). According to the GVSU, the number of crimes in the Armed Forces increased by 20.9 percent in the first six months of 2016. By itself, the statistic should cause concern for the top brass. But to make matters worse, the GVSU also reported that the crime figures increased by 40 percent based on the same period in 2015; corruption-linked crimes increased by 1.5 times, and crimes perpetrated by individuals while intoxicated or using narcotic substances grew by 1.4 times (Arms-expo.ru, July 22).

    The role of Russia’s Armed Forces in operations in Syria, meanwhile, received closer scrutiny recently with the publication of a book by Colonel (retired) Anatoliy Tsyganok, the director of the Center for Military Forecasting. Voyna v Sirii i yeye posledstviya dlya Blizhnego Vostoka, Kavkaza i Tsentral'noy Azii: russkiy vzglyad (The War in Syria, and its Implications for the Middle East, Caucasus and Central Asia: a Russian Opinion) examines a broad range of factors related to Moscow’s involvement in the conflict. Tsyganok argues that Russia’s military operations constitute a new form of warfare, but he also suggests that the military requires further force integration in terms of communication systems and a fundamental review of the theory of using aviation, naval power and special forces (Voyenno Promyshlennyy Kuryer, July 19).

    Vladimir Gundarov noted in Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye that the Russian defense ministry recently confirmed the acceptance of 47 Kalibr cruise missiles for the Navy. Referring to the combat use of this missile type by the Russian Navy to support operations in Syria, Gundarov attempted to estimate the costs involved. In October 2015, the Caspian Flotilla fired 26 Kalibr missiles, striking 11 targets in Syria, while the following month an additional 18 were launched against seven targets. Based on sales of the export version of this missile to India, Gundarov suggests each Kalibr cost $6.5 million; but he concludes that the 44 missiles sold domestically to the Russian defense ministry and fired off last October amounted to 2.7 billion rubles ($41 million—approximately $980,000 per missile) (Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye, July 22). Other than testing or advertising the missile capability, some of which landed in Iran, there was no real underlying military purpose for using Kalibr missiles in Syria. Either way, the process was certainly expensive.

    If there is, in fact, an underlying need to display these weapons, then it perhaps lies in promoting an image of the Russian Armed Forces as more advanced than they are in reality. Moscow’s interest in using such opportunities to showcase its most advanced systems was repeated in its efforts to strengthen air defenses following the November 2015 Turkish Air Force downing of an Su-24M after the latter breached Turkish airspace. But with the recent improvement in Moscow’s relations with Ankara, some commentators expressed surprise at the extent of Turkish top brass involvement in the attempted military coup on July 15 (Voyenno Promyshlennyy Kuryer, July 19).

    However, Moscow’s concerns about Turkey, or its efforts to rebuild damaged bilateral relations with Ankara pale in comparison to growing attention to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s (NATO) military exercises. As always, these are presented in the Russian media as potentially threatening to Russia. One analysis in the military media tried to assess the NATO strategy underpinning the Poland-based exercise Anaconda 2016. The author makes the following claims:

    • it emphasized indirect action, using economic, financial, technological and informational tools against the enemy;

    • military actions were rehearsed in pursuit of economic interests with a widespread use of information and communication technologies;

    • it practiced avoiding a decisive clash with the main factions of the armed forces of the enemy, using detachments of insurgents from the local population and mercenaries and supplying them to attract allies and partners;

    • it exercised targeted destabilization of administrative-political, socio-economic, cultural and ideological spheres of the enemy state.

    The author alleges that NATO strategy is to rehearse a form of “hybrid warfare” against Russia (Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye, July 24).

    Moscow’s military response to these perceived developments is to strengthen units and reorganize the disposition of forces in the Western and Southern Military districts. It also places great emphasis on the role of stand-off weapons systems, including Kalibr, to help build a response to US/NATO missile defense (Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye, July 22). These response measures are by no means complete, but what is clear from some of the reporting in the military media and supported by the GVSU is that Moscow has not yet resolved deep and systemic issues within its military. And these serve as a long-term barrier to building a modern network-enabled military.
    Azor...there is a theme that has been ongoing since the Russian military annexation of Crimea and eastern Ukraine....due to their own heavy, heavy and even more heavy info warfare ie their own propaganda they have created a "fiend bild" (enemy image) meaning they have literally inhaled their very own propaganda and no longer have a true sense of the reality around them.

    They fully believe,
    1. NATO wants to destroy Russia
    2. the US wants to destroy the Russian leadership
    3. the US wants Russian regime change

    Everything they now write spins around these three ideas....I tend to call this "an altered state of reality"....and that is seriously dangerous in that if one does not have a clear and concise understanding of the opponent then he will make a fatal mistake at some point...and Putin in on that path...

    BTW...why I use the term "altered state of reality".....the Russian MoD had almost unlimited exposure to the Polish NATO 2016 exercise via their observer team so the assessments made above do not match reality...it should be noted that the Russian military has had 10 snap exercises since 2014 that should have been registered with OSCE thus allowing foreign observers.....which Russia did not allow....

    AND surprise surprise the exercise was very similar to those run by NATO in the 70/80s....defensive in nature, moving into denied areas and a breakout.....the Russia officers doing the observations should have seen that as it was fully explained to them by NATO.
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 08-11-2016 at 06:21 AM.

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