Занимљиво је да ни пет дана после почетка офанзиве Тигрова код Ресафе и пробоја фронта још увек није извесно на коју ће страну бити главни продор.
Остварно је напредовање на све три стране у околини. Могуће је напредовање на север, ка десној обали Еуфрата. На истоку су стигли до раскрснице, и одатле могу да напредују на југ ка Сукни, или на исток право ка Деир Еззору. Чудно је да се још нису одлучили за главни правац напада, већ напредују подједнако на три правца што није добро.
Са друге стране, јединице ИСИС су у претходном периоду имале неколико успешних напада на предстраже владиних снага, и још више напада који су одбијени. Таква активност није била примећена претходних месеци. Могуће је да су повукли део снага из џепа северно од Т4 да би олакшали позицију на битнијим местима и успорили напредовање владиних снага.
Damask I. Guta Ajan Tarma borbe. Na 0:56 mi se čini da baja tuče iz M60???
Израильские военные собираются открыть на границе с Сирией медицинский центр, где жителей соседней страны будут лечить врачи-добровольцы со всего мира, сообщил журналистам представитель командования северного округа Армии обороны Израиля.
Источник: http://rusvesna.su/news/1500502681
Ne mogu se nikako radovati sto neko dobija tako uzasnu bolest, makar i on, ali smem da kazem : Ako je neko zasluzio, on je (i Soros, Keri, Klintonovi, Olbrajtova i jos poneki).
Conventional wisdom holds that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad holds primary, if not sole, responsibility for the refugee crisis. Although the Islamic State (ISIS) may grab the headlines, the Western media presents the Alawite dictator as the real menace to the Syrian people and to the armed opposition that is protecting them. “Assad Regime Fans Refugee Crisis,” warned The Wall Street Journal in September 2015. The Washington Post similarly explained the “exodus” of Syrians from their country by noting that “Islamic State has killed many Syrians, but Assad’s forces have killed more.”
Yet does Assad really bear all the blame for the refugee crisis? Not according to Syrian refugees. Most refugees we spoke to said they felt endangered by all parties fighting in the war, not just the government. In our sample of Syrian refugees, only 16 percent lay the blame exclusively with the Assad regime, compared to 77 percent who said they were fleeing from both the regime and the armed opposition. This pattern was observed in every country along the Balkan route.
Only 16 percent of Syrian refugees lay the blame exclusively with the Assad regime, compared to 77 percent who said they were fleeing from both the regime and the armed opposition.
Take the example of Abdullah, a 40-year-old interviewed in the Serbian town of Horgos, along the border with Hungary, who asked that his real name not be used. Abdullah was initially kidnapped in Damascus by Jabhat al-Nusra (also known as Jabhat Fatah al-Sham), al Qaeda’s Syrian affiliate. After Nusra released him, the Assad government imprisoned him for suspected collusion with the rebels. Seeing threats from both sides, Abdullah fled the country with his wife and children. A 30-year-old refugee in the Fatih neighborhood of Istanbul shared a similar experience and said, “There was no one left to trust, which is why I left.” Fear of all sides was the norm. Another refugee, a 34-year-old man with whom we spoke in Dortmund, Germany, had also been kidnapped by Nusra and then arrested by the government. “Torture was more [severe]” under Nusra, he said. A 21-year-old student from Aleppo said that she felt unsafe only after the Free Syrian Army “took control of [her] area,” because she was then exposed to a dual hazard: harm from the rebels and the possibility of a bombing by the Syrian air force. Another refugee, a 31-year-old interviewed in Athens, told us of how grateful he and his brother were when the Syrian army chased ISIS from their neighborhood in Deir ez-Zor, but explained that the situation nonetheless remained too unstable for them to continue living there.
In sum, in-depth conversations with Syrian refugees along the Balkan route and within the EU suggest they are fleeing not only, or primarily, from Assad, but from a complex civil war with multiple belligerents who all pose a threat to the population. The “blame-Assad only” narrative may resonate, but most refugees count him as one of several culprits, alongside the rebels and ISIS
ISIS raiding troops combat Kurdish forces for control of Raqqa as US airstrikes flatten the cit
Evo kako ih ISIL rastura na granici u pitanju je SAA.
U vezi snimka kojeg je postavio pow sa zarobljenim vojnicima SAA zarobili su ih ISIL-ovci kod Wadi Waer-a jedan je sunit iz Homsa, drugi alavit iz Latakije i treći je sunit iz Alepa.