abonnement Unibet Coolblue Bitvavo
pi_133110553
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:26 schreef zwaaien het volgende:

[..]

De zionisten hebben al veel meer gedaan voor de Koerden (en zullen nog veel meer doen voor de Koerden) dan jullie eigen moslimbroeders al gedaan hebben
Ze beloven hun al jarenlang een koerdistan, maar waar is die koerdistan op de kaart als ik vragen mag? De zionisten gebruiken de Koerdische rebellen/terroristen. Iedereen gebruikt ze.
  zondag 10 november 2013 @ 15:30:52 #77
411871 Baklava95
@Stormfrontpagee
pi_133110566
quote:
1s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:21 schreef Peunage het volgende:

[..]

Wat de Koerden van Israël vinden is niet belangrijk en ongeschikt aan de belangen van een eventueel Koerdistan. En een bondgenootschap met Israël is zeker zo'n belang.

[..]

Waarom? Heeft de bevolking hiervoor gekozen? Vergeet niet dat de golflanden gewoon dictaturen zijn.
Oké mar die dictaturen worden boos op ons Koerden als wij banden met Israël hebben.
pi_133110638
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:30 schreef peace2014 het volgende:

[..]

Ze beloven hun al jarenlang een koerdistan, maar waar is die koerdistan op de kaart als ik vragen mag? De zionisten gebruiken de Koerdische rebellen/terroristen. Iedereen gebruikt ze.
Stapje voor stapje

Momenteel zijn we bezig met Syrisch Koerdistan

Jullie zullen niet kunnen blijven de Koerden onderdrukken. Ook zij hebben recht op hun eigen land
  zondag 10 november 2013 @ 15:34:22 #79
411871 Baklava95
@Stormfrontpagee
pi_133110675
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:30 schreef peace2014 het volgende:

[..]

Ze beloven hun al jarenlang een koerdistan, maar waar is die koerdistan op de kaart als ik vragen mag? De zionisten gebruiken de Koerdische rebellen/terroristen. Iedereen gebruikt ze.
Koerdistan is een gebied(regio) verdeeld over 5 landen. Koerdistan is een federale autonome regio in het noorden van Irak.

Dat het geen landsgrenzen op de wereldkaart heeft betekent niet dat het niet bestaat.
Jij bent zeker een MHP'er.

Trouwens Turkistan en Oost-Turkustan bestaan ook niet maar over die gebieden beweren jullie wel dat ze bestaan.
  zondag 10 november 2013 @ 15:36:07 #80
411871 Baklava95
@Stormfrontpagee
pi_133110724
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:32 schreef zwaaien het volgende:

[..]

Stapje voor stapje

Momenteel zijn we bezig met Syrisch Koerdistan

Jullie zullen niet kunnen blijven de Koerden onderdrukken. Ook zij hebben recht op hun eigen land
Jij bent ook niet 100% een Koerdenliefhebber.
Jij zegt Syrisch-Koerdistan in plaats van West-Koerdistan.
pi_133110727
USA - Israël - Koerdistan - Iran (na revolutie) - India

Deze landen moeten bondgenootschap aangaan. _O_
pi_133110742
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:36 schreef Baklava95 het volgende:

[..]

Jij bent ook niet 100% een Koerdenliefhebber.
Jij zegt Syrisch-Koerdistan in plaats van West-Koerdistan.
ik bedoel gewoon het stukje koerdistan dat momenteel binnen de grenzen van Syrië ligt
  zondag 10 november 2013 @ 15:37:21 #83
411871 Baklava95
@Stormfrontpagee
pi_133110757
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:36 schreef zwaaien het volgende:
USA - Israël - Koerdistan - Iran (na revolutie) - India

Deze landen moeten bondgenootschap aangaan. _O_
Koerdistan-China-Rusland-Brazilie-Iran.

Deze landen moeten een bondgenootschap aangaan.
  zondag 10 november 2013 @ 15:37:52 #84
411871 Baklava95
@Stormfrontpagee
pi_133110772
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:36 schreef zwaaien het volgende:

[..]

ik bedoel gewoon het stukje koerdistan dat momenteel binnen de grenzen van Syrië ligt
Echte Koerdische nationalisten en pan-Koerdisten zeggen West-Koerdistan.
pi_133110778
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:37 schreef Baklava95 het volgende:

[..]

Koerdistan-China-Rusland-Brazilie-Iran.

Deze landen moeten een bondgenootschap aangaan.
Dan wil ik dat Israël erbij komt
  zondag 10 november 2013 @ 15:38:47 #86
411871 Baklava95
@Stormfrontpagee
pi_133110800
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:38 schreef zwaaien het volgende:

[..]

Dan wil ik dat Israël erbij komt
Dacht het niet.
Deze landen moeten samen een anti-Amerikaanse en anti-Zionistische blok vormen.
  Moderator zondag 10 november 2013 @ 15:40:21 #87
14679 crew  sp3c
Geef me die goud!!!
pi_133110839
gaat dit nog ergens over of wat?
Op zondag 8 december 2013 00:01 schreef Karina het volgende:
Dat gaat me te diep sp3c, daar is het te laat voor.
pi_133110852
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:38 schreef Baklava95 het volgende:

[..]

Dacht het niet.
Deze landen moeten samen een anti-Amerikaanse en anti-Zionistische blok vormen.
Jij droomt... zonder de zionisten zullen jullie nooit onafhankelijk worden

Israel lobbyt vaak in Amerika voor een Koerdische staat, heeft goede banden met Iraaks Koerdistan en het zou me niet verbazen dat Koerdische strijders getraind worden door de Mossad om in Syrië te vechten
  zondag 10 november 2013 @ 15:42:45 #89
411871 Baklava95
@Stormfrontpagee
pi_133110905
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:40 schreef zwaaien het volgende:

[..]

Jij droomt... zonder de zionisten zullen jullie nooit onafhankelijk worden

Israel lobbyt vaak in Amerika voor een Koerdische staat, heeft goede banden met Iraaks Koerdistan en het zou me niet verbazen dat Koerdische strijders getraind worden door de Mossad om in Syrië te vechten
Dat jullie ons steunen is juist de reden dat de Arabieren, Turken en Perzen ons haten.

Sorry maar wij Koerden zijn beter af zonder jullie.

China en Rusland kunnen ons helpen om onafhankelijk te worden.
  Moderator zondag 10 november 2013 @ 15:42:51 #90
14679 crew  sp3c
Geef me die goud!!!
pi_133110907
is er niet ergens een topic over een eventuele Koerdische staat en gedroomde bondgenootschappen enzo?

kunnen we het hier weer over de Syrische burgeroorlog hebben
Op zondag 8 december 2013 00:01 schreef Karina het volgende:
Dat gaat me te diep sp3c, daar is het te laat voor.
  zondag 10 november 2013 @ 15:43:23 #91
411871 Baklava95
@Stormfrontpagee
pi_133110920
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:42 schreef sp3c het volgende:
is er niet ergens een topic over een eventuele Koerdische staat en gedroomde bondgenootschappen enzo?

kunnen we het hier weer over de Syrische burgeroorlog hebben
Oke sorry moderator.
Ja die topic was er wel, maar die kunnen we niet vinden.
  zondag 10 november 2013 @ 15:43:47 #92
411871 Baklava95
@Stormfrontpagee
pi_133110929
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 15:40 schreef zwaaien het volgende:

[..]

Jij droomt... zonder de zionisten zullen jullie nooit onafhankelijk worden

Israel lobbyt vaak in Amerika voor een Koerdische staat, heeft goede banden met Iraaks Koerdistan en het zou me niet verbazen dat Koerdische strijders getraind worden door de Mossad om in Syrië te vechten
Zwaaien zullen we verder praten in jouw topic over een Koerdische staat.
pi_133112588
Tering wat een puinhoop in Raqqa....halverwege dit artikel snapte ik er niets meer van met al die brigades die elkaar in de haren vliegen, bondgenootschappen sluiten en weet ik wat nog meer 8)7

quote:
The Mysterious Fall of Raqqa, Syria’s Kandahar

The Euphrates overflows with blood, and the crows caw over the corpses that the Syrian city of Raqqa sacrifices every day to the princes of death in the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria and al-Nusra Front, ever since the two al-Qaeda affiliates turned the city into the first official province of their Islamic emirate. The tyranny that people rose up against has now returned, more morbid than before. Today, Raqqa is Syria’s answer to Kandahar – the birthplace of the Taliban.

The opposition Syrian National Coalition has no presence in Raqqa. All mainstream opposition forces left the city months ago because of clashes between the various brigades of the armed opposition. Raqqa is today without a state, and its people grapple with death every day, with no hope in sight for a normal life.

Though activists called for peaceful protests to reject violence, their efforts did not pan out, especially as many activists were arrested. Now, revolutionary action has returned to secrecy and false names, operating mainly through social media. Eight months have passed since the armed opposition brigades and al-Nusra Front entered Raqqa, at dawn on 2 March 2013. Since the armed opposition offensive, only three Syrian army bases in the entire governorate have survived: the 17th division, stationed around 1 km north of Raqqa; Tabaqa military airport, 50 km west of the city, along the Raqqa-Aleppo expressway; and the 93rd brigade, stationed 55 km from Raqqa near the town of Ain Issa.
Mystery has shrouded the manner in which Raqqa fell, as there have been indications the city did not fall militarily. While there was no formidable Syrian army deployment in the city, which had been surrounded on four sides by checkpoints, it is not logical that the city fell in a matter of hours.

The Syrian regime force manning the eastern checkpoint pulled out on the morning of the attack, handing over the city’s eastern entrance – and the entire eastern district – to the fighters of the Muntasir Billah Brigade and al-Nusra. The officers of the Syrian military police and the Hajana – the border guard – were even seen moving their equipment, without any harassment from the opposition fighters, from the center of the city to the headquarters of the 17th division, before the opposition brigades advanced and took over the Hajana’s vacated barracks.

To many, what happened was suspicious. The truth about what happened is known only to a handful, including Raqqa Governor Major General Hassan Jalali and local Baath chapter Secretary General Suleiman Suleiman, who were both captured by al-Nusra two days after the offensive. Their location remains unknown, but it is rumored that they are being held inside the Euphrates Dam that al-Nusra now uses as a base.

The head of the state security branch in the area, Brigadier General Khaled al-Halabi, also reportedly holds important information about Raqqa’s fall. Halabi disappeared without a trace, save for rumors that he is currently lying low in Mount Lebanon.

All local branches of the state’s security services withdrew from their headquarters in the city into the 17th division base, with the exception of officers from the military and political security agencies, who reportedly fought to the end. Some of them were killed and mutilated, with their corpses paraded around the city, while others surrendered with tribal-brokered guarantees of protection. However, they were subsequently taken to detention camps run by al-Nusra and Liwaa al-Tawhid after an ambush. They are currently being detained in the city of Tabaqa, awaiting a prisoner swap deal with the regime.

Aqaba, an activist, recounted to Al-Akhbar how the corpses were mutilated. He said, “What I saw was horrific. They killed Abu Jassem, a military security officer. He refused to surrender and killed many of the jihadis before they overran his position. They threw his body from the roof of the building, and his head was completely smashed. They then put him in a car and paraded his corpse in the city before they threw it with his comrades’ bodies near a dumpster, preventing anyone from burying them. A few days later, the bodies were buried in secret.”

A Protracted Siege
Many long months passed with the opposition brigades besieging the 17th division base north of Raqqa, which is now supplied by airdrops. The brigades participating in the siege include the Raqaa Rebels Brigade; Ahrar al-Sham; Muntasir Billah Brigade; and the Islamic Front for Unity and Liberation. Recently, some battalions from the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) also joined the siege.

Hassan Issa, a high school student, had joined one of the armed battalions. He gave an account of how he took part in the raid against the 17th division base. He said, “It was not easy. I joined the battalion led by my cousin. We stormed the defenses of the 17th division and initially made substantial progress. It was like a dream. I did not realize what happened until the shells started raining down on us. The rifle I was carrying was useless. Many of the fighters in the vanguard were killed.”

Issa continued, “There have been arguments over the spoils, starting with the small cars and heavy government vehicles, and ending with influence over neighborhoods.” Hassan did not want to die fighting, so he left the “jihad” and returned to school.

The residents of Raqqa believe that the 17th division, with all its soldiers and hardware, should not need all this time to fall. Some reckon that the siege is not serious and that it is only meant to save the militants’ face. The latter claim that their new fight with Kurdish forces in northern Raqqa (in Tal Abiyad and surrounding villages) has delayed their bid to defeat the 17th division, but they do not deny that disputes among their various brigades has not helped either.

But one activist, who declined to be named, believes the delay is deliberate. He said, “If the 17th division falls into the hands of the armed opposition, the latter would be forced to move on to another governorate and open a new front, which is something they do not want. The luxury they found in combat in Raqqa may not be possible elsewhere.”

In this climate, the majority of the residents have to live with fear, hunger, thirst, and poverty. The one thing everyone agrees on is that Raqqa, and everything in it, has been lost. The city, which for decades suffered from marginalization and neglect, is in ruins, having become, almost overnight, a “new Kandahar.”

The Opposition’s 11th Division
A month after taking control of the city, the militants began scattering. Al-Nusra’s fighters left Raqqa in April, after ISIS’ commander Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, along with many of his supporters, defected from al-Nusra and its leader Abu Mohammed al-Golani. Al-Nusra repositioned itself inside the Euphrates Dam and the Jaabar citadel 53 km west of the city.

In turn, after coming to control the city for just a few days, Ahrar al-Sham moved the bulk of its forces towards the city of Tal Abiyad north of Raqqa, along the border with Turkey, where it went on to decimate al-Farouk Brigades and seize the border crossing. Ahrar al-Sham still maintains a strong presence alongside other factions in the city.

ISIS came to dominate Raqqa, after executing three citizens at the Clock Square in the city center on May 14 for “spying for the regime.” After that, the secular peaceful protest movement began to gradually wither, at least in the public sphere. Though activists called for peaceful protests to reject violence, their efforts did not pan out, especially as many activists were arrested. Now, revolutionary action has returned to secrecy and false names, operating mainly through social media.

Raqqa residents soon appealed for help from the brigades of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) in the city, and leaflets were distributed attacking ISIS and attempting to rally the FSA to act. The battalions and brigades of the FSA in the city, which mainly consisted of Raqqa residents, came together to form the 11th division in July, comprising brigades like the Raqqa Rebels, Muntasir Billah, and Nasser Salahuddin.

Officially, FSA presence in Raqqa all but ended on September 15. Large signs were erected at the entrances of the governorate declaring: “The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria – Raqqa Province.”These units represented about 80 percent of armed opposition groups in Raqqa. Their goals were, according to a statement, liberating the 17th division’s headquarters, Tabaqa military airport, and the 93rd battalion, and then carrying on with “jihad” outside the governorate. In addition, the statement said the unit would seek to coordinate with other opposition brigades in other governorates to prevent the establishment of any military group except under the command of the 11th division, organize day-to-day affairs of the civilians, activate the local council, and expand the Islamic Law Council.
But none of these goals materialized. A battle took place between ISIS and the Descendants of the Prophet Brigade lasting for days, in which many civilians were killed. Then, on August 13, ISIS targeted a train station used as the headquarters of the brigade in question with a car bomb, turning the entire building into rubble. Civilians were barred from tending to the wounded or even removing the bodies, which by some accounts exceeded 25.

Subsequently, the brigade disappeared from Raqqa, and ISIS detained all its surviving members. Meanwhile, the brigade’s general command in Syria declared it would not respond out of its keenness on maintaining “unity in the ranks” of the opposition.

Al-Nusra Returns
Al-Nusra fighters returned to Raqqa on September 12. In a statement, the group declared that it built a Sharia-compliant camp to rehabilitate the “mujahideen,” after noticing that some exhibited “deviations in their behavior.” Al-Nusra also pledged to work to serve Islam and fight the “Nusairi” regime – a derogatory term for Alawis. The statement claimed some people had used the name of al-Nusra to engage in kidnapping, assassination, and robbery, “which is something we do not accept.”

Al-Nusra’s return split the 11th division. The Muntasir Billah Brigade rushed to pledge allegiance to the al-Qaeda affiliate, followed by the Raqqa Rebels Brigade, while Nasser Salahuddin declared its loyalty to ISIS, and Liwaa Umanaa Raqqa joined the Ahrar al-Sham Brigade.

Only a few days after al-Nusra returned, its top commander Abu Saad al-Hadramai was kidnapped. Several days later, his car was found with the explosive belt that he usually wears inside, in the town of Deir Hafer in the governorate of Aleppo. According to activists, ISIS kidnapped him.

Officially, FSA presence in Raqqa all but ended on September 15. Large signs were erected at the entrances of the governorate declaring: “The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria – Raqqa Province.” The city was the first to officially fall out of regime control.

The Coming Battle
Al-Nusra’s return to Raqqa also upset ISIS. Tension has mounted to such an extent that it now threatens to erupt into a full-blown war at any moment between the two al-Qaeda affiliates.

After dignitaries interceded on his behalf, the corporal was released, but only after he converted to Islam and changed his name to Mohammed Nour al-Mallouhi. Everyone is watching the events unfold in silence. The “spray-painters” have returned to the city too. Previously, they would spray anti-regime graffiti on walls across the city. Now, they are writing anti-ISIS slogans, demanding freedom, democracy, and a secular state.
A prominent activist who goes by the name “Syrian Fidel” said, “Our civil movement is on the verge of dying out. ISIS left no room for any peaceful civilian activism. They kidnap any activist caught speaking out or participating in protests. Currently, the movement is progressing very slowly and has returned to secrecy, just like things had been under the regime.”

Fidel, who wears an explosive belt in anticipation of any ambush he fight fall into, added, “There is no solution except by having a counter revolution that restores life in Raqqa. Death is better than falling into their hands,” meaning the jihadis.

ISIS has regularly executed by firing line unidentified people they claimed were “infidel Nusairis” in the Naim Roundabout, with large crowds present. Field executions were also carried out in the cities of Tal Abiyad, Tabaqa, and Maadan.

Exodus of Christians

Christians in the area have not been spared. The first anti-Christian attack occurred in May when members of al-Nusra confiscated crops owned by Agha Agob Sagltian in the city of Tal Abiyad. A few days ago, the body of a young Christian man who had been kidnapped from Tabaqa was found on the Tabaqa-Safsafa road. The incident was met with wide outrage among the people of Raqqa, who consider Christians an inseparable part of their social fabric.

A number of Christians in the city have participated in peaceful anti-regime protests. For instance, dissident Corporal Toni al-Mallouhi, former mayor of Mansoura, handed over the town to the FSA in February, before the militants entered Raqqa. But when fighters from the Nasser Salahuddin Brigade entered the city, they captured Mallouhi and handed him over later to ISIS.

ISIS declared that it would execute Mallouhi. After dignitaries interceded on his behalf, the corporal was released, but only after he converted to Islam and changed his name to Mohammed Nour al-Mallouhi.

Shortly after this incident, unknown assailants vandalized a cross outside the Church of Our Lady of the Annunciation in downtown Raqqa. Activists decried the attack and called for protests demanding churches be protected. In response, masked militants took the bells and the crosses from the Church of the Martyrs and vandalized the place, burning its library, before replacing the crosses with the ISIS flag.

Youssef, another activist, said, “It was a tough situation. We could not defend our brethren with whom we have been living for years. We were deeply hurt and felt helpless and ashamed. Christians have been part of our history for decades. They lived among us and we could do nothing more than weep as we saw the flames and columns of smoke rising.”

Christians, who came to Raqqa many decades ago, most recently following the mass Armenian exodus as a result of the Armenian genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Turks, have nearly all left the city.

Fear paralyzes the residents of Raqqa, and no one dares criticize the jihadis. Even grumbling has to be done in secret, with the new “state” deploying spies and informants in nearly every neighborhood and alleyway. Fear paralyzes the residents of Raqqa, and no one dares criticize the jihadis. Even grumbling has to be done in secret, with the new “state” deploying spies and informants in nearly every neighborhood and alleyway.
Stories are rife about people who disappeared for criticizing a decision or expressing resentment toward a particular act. The Islamic Law Council, which was supposedly established to protect the people, cannot even protect itself. Its presiding judge, Abdullah Assad, was kidnapped on the third day of Eid al-Adha. The commission has not been able to protect anyone or run the affairs of the city, just like the local council, whose members have been arrested repeatedly by some brigades.

The City Worries
People in Raqqa have to live with sporadic shelling, as warplanes carry out strikes from time to time against militant positions. Troops from the 17th division also shell the city with mortars, but they often miss their targets and hit civilian homes.

People are outraged by these mistakes that have claimed dozens of lives. On September 29, the shelling hit a school killing 17 students and a school employee. Then, on October 26, the Syrian air force struck a residential neighborhood near the vegetable market in Raqqa, missing its target and destroying two homes with their inhabitants inside, killing seven, mostly children.

For ISIS, Christians Not Entitled to Safety
There are four churches in the Raqqa governorate, two in the city – Lady of the Annunciation and Lady of the Martyrs – in addition to the Church of Martyred Saints Sergius and Bacchus in Tabaqa, and a church in the city of Tal Abiyad.

Those who burned the churches justified their action by claiming, “When Islam emerged, the prophet and the Caliphs ordered existing churches not to be destroyed. But churches built after Islam emerged were built on falsehood, and therefore, they must be destroyed and removed.”

An ISIS official, who is incidentally not a Syrian national, said during a Friday sermon that burning churches is “an action based on fatwas from Abdullah ibn Abbas, holding that churches in conquered cities must be burned and their crosses removed. As for cities taken peaceably, with its inhabitants paying the jizya (tax payable by non-Muslims), their churches and their temples must not be harmed, and can continue practicing their rituals, albeit not publicly.”

But the latter classification, according to the ISIS preacher, “does not apply to Raqqa which was conquered through violence, and where Christians did not pay the jizya.” Therefore, he concluded, “They are not entitled to safety, but nevertheless, those among them who did not deal with Bashar al-Assad shall be spared.”

http://english.al-akhbar.com
Afgelopen zaterdag 4 Hizbullah-leden omgekomen volgens dit bericht: https://now.mmedia.me/lb/(...)ters-killed-in-syria
Oorlog is de verderzetting van de politiek maar met andere middelen - Clausewitz
  Moderator zondag 10 november 2013 @ 16:49:03 #94
14679 crew  sp3c
Geef me die goud!!!
pi_133113622
heel die riedel verwijderd

nogmaals, dat Koerden verhaal kan ergens anders tenzij het echt ontopic is zoals bijvoorbeeld wanneer Koerden en rebellen en/of regeringstroepen met elkaar slaags zijn geraakt ofzo
Op zondag 8 december 2013 00:01 schreef Karina het volgende:
Dat gaat me te diep sp3c, daar is het te laat voor.
pi_133117833
quote:
BEIRUT, Nov 10 (Reuters) - Syrian forces backed by Lebanese Hezbollah militants recaptured an army base in northern Syria from rebels on Sunday, the third day of heavy fighting for the strategic military target which has changed hands three times since Friday.

State media and activists said President Bashar al-Assad's forces were in full control of the 80th Brigade base, which lies just a few hundred metres (yards) north of Aleppo airport on the eastern edge of the disputed city.

They also made gains to the south of the airport, advancing in the town of Tel Arn after a succession of victories over the mainly Islamist rebels holding the south-eastern approaches to Syria's former commercial hub.

Rebels have held roughly half of Aleppo since storming into the city in July last year, holding off a government counter-offensive and consolidating their control over rural areas and the northern border with Turkey.

Assad has focused his fight-back this year on trying to secure the areas around Damascus, the Lebanese border and central Homs region which links the capital with the heartland of his minority Alawite faith in Syria's Mediterranean provinces.

But in recent weeks his forces have also recaptured the town of Safira, southeast of Aleppo, and on Sunday state television said they were in full control of formerly rebel-controlled Tel Arn about 2 miles (3 km) closer to Aleppo.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the violence through a network of sources, said fighting was continuing in Tel Arn but the army was in almost full control.

In the fighting for the military base, it said at least 63 rebels had been killed since Friday including more than 20 from the al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front and the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, as well 32 soldiers and pro-Assad militia.

It was not clear how many Shi'ite Hezbollah fighters - who have played a central role in regaining ground for Assad - were killed in the fighting with the Sunni Muslim rebels who had held the 80th Brigade base since February.

If the army is able to strengthen its hold in the area it could lead to the reopening of Aleppo airport to commercial flights, most of which were halted after rebels fired at an airliner there last December.

After 2-1/2 years of war, which started when Assad's forces fired on pro-democracy protests, fighting has settled into a broad stalemate in which more than 100 people are killed every day.

More than 100,000 have died since the start of the conflict, the United Nations says, and millions more fled the country or have been displaced inside Syria.

In some rebel-held districts around Damascus, activists say the army has used siege tactics to starve the population into submission, although there have been local initiatives to ease blockades in some areas.

In the Damascus suburb of Qudsayya, which residents say has been under siege since last month, some food was allowed through army checkpoints on Saturday.

The Observatory said bread, vegetables and flour were taken into Qudsayya, a 15-minute drive north from central Damascus into the Qasioun mountain range, although a local activist group said its members had not seen any shipment of flour.

In the eastern province of Deir al-Zor rebels killed parliamentary member Mejham al-Saho, state news agency SANA said on Sunday. Saho was kidnapped by rebels earlier this year. (Editing by Peter Graff)

http://www.trust.org/item/20131110163841-tte83

Die bullshit over Hezbollah moet je maar omheen lezen.


quote:
DO NOT BELIEVE ANYTHING AL-JAZEERA SAYS. BATTALION 80 IS TOTALLY AND INCONTROVERTIBLY IN THE HANDS OF OUR ARMY. Yesterday, Wael writes that over 67 rats were killed in fighting as they tried to reenter the base. The SAA is now heavily reinforced here with Ba'ath Militia and NDF, not to mention security forces. The SAA, yesterday, also secured the FM Radio Station, the Rodco Company, Al-Manaar Fuel Station and the Falaahaa Industries buildings. The SAA also completely took control of the road and cloverleafs between Al-Layramoon and Sheehaan. This is in the direction of 'Anadaan which is coming soon to a theater near you.

We can now report that Shilkas have been brought into the Battalion 80 base and that the number of casualties among the Saudi and Libyan rats now exceeds 550 after the J.N. tried twice to recapture the base. It is a massacre. There are burning bodies of Saudi rodents all over the perimeter as incendiary grenades used by these apes detonated, burning some alive. T-72 tanks are also pouring in to the base to finish off the rest of the vermin. Great news.

SAA has taken over 80% control over Bani Zayd Neighborhood in Aleppo. The SAA has also liberated many blocks of buildings in the Industrial Layramoon. It should be obvious that the SAA is heading for the north of Aleppo.

-------------

Deep in the East Ghouta, the SAA has been able to secure the entire Damascus-Homs International Highway. The SAA has now cut all supply lines between 'Arbeen and Harastaa. Only 10% of this area is populated by vermin snipers of the J.N. During fighting yesterday, MI overheard screams for help, for ambulances to take the injured to hospital in Jordan. The EMS never arrived. According to Monzer's note to me, the number of dead rats may exceed 100 although nobody is concentrating yet on counting. The SAA now controls all junctions at Mudayra-'Arbeen-Harastaa toward the rear positions.

http://www.syrianperspect(...)013-idlib-scene.html
"But the age of chivalry is gone; that of sophisters, economists, and calculators has succeeded, and the glory of Europe is extinguished forever."- Edmund Burke
pi_133119657
Ik word echt misselijk van die haat. Rats, rodents... -O-
Is definitief vertrokken na een ban voor het opstaan tegen slechteriken
pi_133120201
quote:
15s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 19:41 schreef Karrs het volgende:
Ik word echt misselijk van die haat. Rats, rodents... -O-
Wat zijn het dan?

Baardapen? _O-
"But the age of chivalry is gone; that of sophisters, economists, and calculators has succeeded, and the glory of Europe is extinguished forever."- Edmund Burke
pi_133120374
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 19:52 schreef IPA35 het volgende:

[..]

Wat zijn het dan?

Baardapen? _O-
Mensen?

Of ben jij al te ver heen?
Is definitief vertrokken na een ban voor het opstaan tegen slechteriken
pi_133120401
quote:
18s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 19:56 schreef Karrs het volgende:

[..]

Mensen?

Of ben jij al te ver heen?
Ik ben bang van wel.
"But the age of chivalry is gone; that of sophisters, economists, and calculators has succeeded, and the glory of Europe is extinguished forever."- Edmund Burke
  zondag 10 november 2013 @ 20:06:09 #100
348078 Veldkamp
Gerechtigheid en vrede
pi_133120887
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 10 november 2013 16:26 schreef Aloulou het volgende:
Tering wat een puinhoop in Raqqa....halverwege dit artikel snapte ik er niets meer van met al die brigades die elkaar in de haren vliegen, bondgenootschappen sluiten en weet ik wat nog meer 8)7

[..]

Afgelopen zaterdag 4 Hizbullah-leden omgekomen volgens dit bericht: https://now.mmedia.me/lb/(...)ters-killed-in-syria
Dank voor dit artikel. Het is wel duidelijk: totale islamistische chaos en doodslag, of het autoritaire bewind van het Syrische Arabische Leger en Syrië's president Assad Jr.... Ik weet de keuze wel!
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