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Turkey claims Syrian airstrike killed 3 Turkish soldiers and wounded 10

November 24, 2016 By administrator

3-killed-by-syriaTurkey claims a Syrian airstrike killed three Turkish soldiers and wounded 10 others overnight, raising the ante in its military invasion of the Arab country.  

A military statement on Thursday said the attack occurred at around 3:30 am (0030 GMT) in the course of a Turkish operation in northern Syria.

It is the first time Turkey accuses Syrian government forces of killing its soldiers since Ankara launched its incursion, dubbed Euphrates Shield, into the Syrian territory on Aug. 24.

The military did not provide an exact location for the strike. It said one of the wounded soldiers was said to be in critical condition.

Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency said the airstrike took place near the town of al-Bab, located some 30 kilometers from the Turkish border.

However, the so-called Syrian Observatory for Human Rights blamed the Takfiri Daesh terrorist group for the attack.

Rami Abdulrahman, who runs the Britain-based group, dismissed reports that it was an airstrike, saying that the soldiers were killed during the Daesh attack in the rural area of al-Bab, near a village called Waqqah on Wednesday.

There was no comment from Damascus but Amaq, a news outlet affiliated to Daesh, reported an attack against Turkish troops in a village in rural al-Bab on Wednesday.

The leader of Turkey’s main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) urged the government to act “with common sense” and not escalate tensions.

“This (issue) could drag Turkey toward a very dangerous process,” Kemal Kilicdaroglu said on Thursday.

Citing national security considerations, Turkish authorities imposed a temporary media ban on the coverage of the attack, barring media outlets from reports that “foster fear, panic and chaos.”

In its invasion of Syria, the Turkish military is supporting militants, including the so-called Free Syrian Army (FSA), and Takfiri terrorists who are fighting to topple the government of President Bashar al-Assad.

Hundreds of Turkish troops are taking part in the operation, which President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said this week was pushing forward with the aim of capturing the Syrian city of al-Bab.

On Thursday, Syrian sources were quoted as saying that Turkey was building a military base in the Syrian town of Akhtarin in the northern Aleppo province.

Damascus has condemned Turkey’s incursion into northern Syria, denouncing it as a “flagrant breach” of its sovereignty.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: killes, soldiers, Syria, Turkey

Donald Trump met with Bernie Sanders supporter Tulsi Gabbard to discuss Syria

November 22, 2016 By administrator

Tulsi Gabbard

Tulsi Gabbard

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-HI., nominates Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT., for President of the United States during the second day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia , Tuesday, July 26, 2016. Gabbard is meeting with President-elect Donald Trump on Monday, Nov. 21, 2016. J. Scott Applewhite AP
By Alex Daugherty,

The Democratic U.S. congresswoman from Hawaii was one of the first Democrats to support Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, and now she is one of the first Democrats to meet with President-elect Donald Trump.

Gabbard met with Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence on Monday morning, but Trump spokesman Jason Miller said it was “premature” to discuss Gabbard’s potential role in the Trump administration.

Instead, Gabbard and Trump talked foreign policy.

Gabbard is a noted critic of intervention in Syria, and does not support a no-fly zone or using U.S. resources to topple Syrian president Bashir al-Assad’s regime. She argues that fighting Assad makes it harder to resist ISIS and al-Qaeda.

“Where I disagree with President-elect Trump on issues, I will not hesitate to express that disagreement. However, I believe we can disagree, even strongly, but still come together on issues that matter to the American people and affect their daily lives,” Gabbard said in a statement after the meeting.

“President-elect Trump and I had a frank and positive conversation in which we discussed a variety of foreign policy issues in depth. I shared with him my grave concerns that escalating the war in Syria by implementing a so-called no fly/safe zone would be disastrous for the Syrian people, our country, and the world.”

Gabbard is a noted opponent of the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal, and was part of a rally on Capitol Hill on Saturday to protest the deal that is supported by Barack Obama.

Trump also opposes the TPP.

“I think they both understood the country very well,” Trump senior adviser and former campaign manager Kellyanne Conway said to pool reporters Monday afternoon. “Rep. Gabbard went against her party quite boldly early on. I think you are hearing people like Rep. Tim Ryan also raising concerns. So I think there’s a recognition that there’s a big country, a massive amount of voters that feel disaffected from their party, the Democrats.”

Stephen Bannon, Trump’s chief strategist, reportedly likes Gabbard because of her stance on guns, refugees and Islamic extremism along with her ability to invoke strong anti-establishment populist sentiment on the left.

Gabbard did not join the majority of her Democratic colleagues in the House by co-sponsoring gun control legislation this summer. She was one of 47 Democrats who voted in favor of a Republican-sponsored bill that requires refugees from Iraq and Syria to receive background checks from the FBI.

Her district is geographically diverse and rural, it includes all of Hawaii except for Honolulu and some of its suburbs.

Last week, 169 Democrats signed a letter condemning Bannon’s appointment by Trump – but Gabbard was not among the signers.

Gabbard, who voted for Hillary Clinton, was a write-in candidate for vice president among dissenting backers of Sanders who refused to vote for Clinton or Trump.

The Democrat was elected to the Hawaii legislature at age 21 and stepped down from her post to serve two tours of duty in Iraq. Gabbard worked in local politics after leaving active duty and is in her second term in Congress. She is one of two female veterans to serve in Congress and is the first Hindu member.

Gabbard resigned from the Democratic National Committee in protest of Clinton’s foreign policy stance to support Sanders.

A request for comment from Gabbard’s Washington office was not immediately returned.

Trump also met with former Texas governor Rick Perry on Monday, among others. His transition team is not expected to name any new Cabinet picks today.

Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/politics-government/election/article116162588.html#storylink=cpy

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Syria, Trump, Tulsi Gabbard

Why Are State Sponsors of Terrorism Receiving U.S. Taxpayer Dollars?

November 22, 2016 By administrator

terrorist-spocerBy Christopher A. Preble,

How a President Trump will approach relations with Russia — and especially what that means for U.S. policy in the Syrian civil war — has become one of the most discussed issues during a tumultuous transition. But we should be paying at least as much attention to what America’s putative partners — including those groups currently receiving U.S. taxpayer funding — are doing to prolong a brutal conflict that has claimed nearly 500 thousand lives, and driven more than ten million from their homes.

During the campaign, Trump even tangled with his running mate Mike Pence over Syria. When Pence suggested during the vice presidential debate that the United States institute a no-fly zone over Syria, Trump promptly swatted the idea away. “He and I haven’t spoken, and I disagree.” Late last week, Trump admitted that he “had an opposite view of many people regarding Syria,” and suggested that he would withdraw support for anti-Assad rebels, and focus on fighting ISIS.

Members of the GOP foreign policy establishment, however, are doubling down on the status quo.

On Tuesday, in one of the first post-election warning shots fired across Team Trump’s bow, Senator John McCain warned the president-elect not to trust “a former KGB agent who has plunged his country into tyranny, murdered his political opponents, invaded his neighbors, threatened America’s allies and attempted to undermine America’s elections.”

“At the very least, the price of another ‘reset’ would be complicity in Putin and Assad’s butchery of the Syrian people.

“That is an unacceptable price for a great nation. When America has been at its greatest, it is when we have stood on the side [of] those fighting tyranny,” McCain added. “That is where we must stand again.”

Alas, finding those who are “fighting tyranny” but not secretly committed to imposing it once they prevail is the tricky part. The abundant evidence from Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya — not to mention the Cold War — shows that legitimate freedom fighters are often indistinguishable from charlatans and thugs. Despite this unhappy track record, McCain retains his childlike optimism in the United States’ ability to find the “good guys” and help them to reshape fractured foreign polities.

Few Americans are so inclined. President Obama was caught between wanting to see Bashar al-Assad’s regime overthrown, but not wanting to see violent extremists take its place, for example, Jabhat Fatah al-Sham (Conquest of Syria Front), the one-time Al Qaeda affiliate formerly known as Jabhat al-Nusra. Unsurprisingly, the president’s efforts to arm the few factions that cleared the vetting process were an abject failure, in part because the tools available to protect the U.S.-approved anti-Assad factions are deeply problematic.

A no-fly zone, for example, may forestall the complete annihilation of certain groups, but only at the risk of widening the war. Since Assad’s Russian ally is also operating from time-to-time in Syrian airspace, a no-fly zone would necessarily threaten Russian planes and pilots. And U.S. planes and pilots would also be at risk. At a meeting of the Council on Foreign Relations last month, National Intelligence Director James Clapper told CBS’s Charlie Rose, “I wouldn’t put it past them to shoot down an American aircraft.”

Some in Congress have pushed back against the executive branch’s occasional zeal for intervention in Syria. In the late summer and fall of 2013, members of Congress were flooded with phone calls urging them to block U.S. military action there. Obama got the message too, and backed away from his ill-advised red line that would have entailed direct U.S. military action in the civil war.

But the Obama administration continued to funnel money to some anti-Assad rebels. Since then, a few in Congress have tried to cut off funds for the so-called “Syrian Train and Equip” program. An amendment to the Defense Appropriations Bill sponsored by Reps. Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI) and Austin Scott (R-GA) garnered 135 votes from both Republicans and Democrats, despite opposition from party leaders and the White House. It is reasonable to believe that a similar effort would fare even better in the post-election environment.

Read More: http://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-skeptics/why-are-state-sponsors-terrorism-receiving-us-taxpayer-18452

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: john-mccain, Syria, Trump

Lavrov: Russian jets striking Idlib & Homs to prevent ISIS exodus from Mosul to Syria

November 18, 2016 By administrator

bombing-syria(RT) Russian bombers are striking terrorist targets in Syria’s Idlib and Homs provinces so that Islamic State militants retreating from Iraq’s Mosul do not cross into Syria, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said after “constructive” talks with his US counterpart, John Kerry.

“Our aviation and the aviation of Syria work only in the provinces of Idlib and Homs in order to prevent the IS from crossing into Syria from Mosul,” Lavrov explained after meeting Secretary of State Kerry on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Economic Leaders week in Peru’s Lima.

While both diplomats regarded the talks, which touched on Syria, Yemen and Ukraine, as “productive” and “constructive,” Lavrov also alluded to the allegations made by US State Department that Russian jets were behind the reported bombings of 5 hospitals in Aleppo and Idlib. The Russian Defense Ministry repeatedly said that Russian jets have not been flying sorties in Aleppo during the last 30 days, while targets in Idlib and Homs, said to be terrorist arms factories and warehouses, are carefully selected.

Lavrov also commented on the incident at Wednesday’s State Department briefing, in which spokesman John Kirby dismissed RT’s Gayane Chichakyan request to provide details on the allegedly bombed hospitals on the grounds that RT was a “state-owned outlet,” saying it was “unacceptable.” However, Lavrov said he did not want to discuss the conduct of Kirby, who was not in Lima.

“We believe it is unacceptable, not reflecting the American proclaimed values and I hope that this was not the position of the State Department and this is certainly not the position of the Secretary of State … We are not going to start every day by condemning Mr. John Kirby but I believe he must be disciplined by his own superiors for what he is doing and how he is doing his job,” Lavrov said.

For his part, Kerry said special attention was paid during the meeting to the situation in Aleppo, saying that he “discussed every aspect of Aleppo” with his Russian counterpart.

“We had a constructive, important conversation about a number of topics ranging from Yemen to Libya and to Syria, obviously, as well as Ukraine and bilateral concerns. So we had a very broad discussion,” Kerry told journalists after the talks.

‘Russia-US relations can’t continue along negative path’

The Lima talks were also the first meeting of Lavrov and Kerry since Donald Trump won the US presidential elections.

Ahead of the meeting, Lavrov said US-Russia relations can no longer continue to follow a negative trajectory. He criticized the farewell message by the outgoing US President Barack Obama in which he cautioned his successor Trump to not engage in “realpolitik” with Russia and “stand up” to Moscow.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: 1915 Turkish government deportation and massacre of Armenian to Syria was no enough, Russia, Syria, U.S

Giant Russian aircraft carrier with SU-33 Flanker jets, “Massive strikes in Syria

November 15, 2016 By administrator

aircraft-carrierMoscow’s defence minister confirmed that the huge aircraft carrier is beginning to launch “massive strikes” against the war torn city.

ByAnthony BondJessica Haworth

A huge Russian warship has launched “massive strikes” aimed at Aleppo, Moscow has confirmed.

Aircraft carrier Admiral Kuznetsov has begun combat operations towards the war torn city after reaching Syrian shores last week.

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu confirmed that they had begun strikes they claim will wipeout ISIS.

“Today, we started a major operation to launch massive strikes on Daesh and al-Nusra Front targets in the Idlib and Homs provinces [in Syria],” Shoigu said at a meeting with the ministry’s leadership and defense enterprises.

He added: “For the first time in the history of participation of the Russian Navy in operations, the Admiral Kuznetsov aircraft carrying cruiser began taking part. The Admiral Grigorovich frigate fires a Kalibr cruise missile against Islamic State.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: aircraft carrier, Russia, Syria

NATO Sponsored Terrorist Mercenaries in Northern Aleppo Equipped with Turkish M60 Tanks

November 14, 2016 By administrator

trukey-natosyriaBy Fars News Agency
Global Research, November 13, 2016

The Turkish army in al-Shahba region of Northern Aleppo has equipped the terrorists with heavy weapons, including M60 tanks.

According to Kurdish-affiliated Hawar news, several footage and images have been released by the terrorist groups in different websites which show that they are using the Turkish army’s armored vehicles in Tal Jorji village in al-Bab region.

The images show that the terrorists are using M60 tanks.

Turkey has deployed a large number of its tanks and armored vehicles in Northern Syria after the start of the Euphrates Shield operation by Ankara.

The Turkish forces, backed by US-led coalition aircraft, started the Euphrates Shield military operation in August, claiming that they intend to purge terrorists from Syria’s Northern territories and create security zones for accommodation of refugees.

Media activists said earlier this month that the Turkey-backed militants operating in Northern Syria within the framework of the Euphrates Shield operation retreated from 13 strategic villages near al-Bab in Aleppo to open way for the ISIL’s operations.

According to the Lebanese al-Safir newspaper, the ISIL occupied Bor’an, al-Wash, Tanouza, Salsana, Job al-Asi, Dawir al-Hawa, Houmad, Salasina, al-Barouza and a number of other villages in a surprise attack on Tuesday following a rapid withdrawal of the Euphrates Shield operation forces.

A large number of media activists reported that no real clashes happened between the ISIL and the Turkey-backed militants, and the Euphrates Shield operation forces fled the scene en masse.

Hawar news agency accused Turkey of ordering his forces to retreat from the villages in the South of Akhtarin region near al-Bab.

The agency said the move by Turkey was part of a joint operational plan with the ISIL against the Kurdish troops in the regions under their control.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Aleppo, NATO, Syria, tank, Turkey

Trump’s presidency blow to US regime change policy in Syria, says Analyst

November 13, 2016 By administrator

trump-syriaWith the election of Donald Trump as the 45th US president, many are waiting to see him take serious steps towards implementing his most outstanding foreign policy promise which is to form a coalition with Russia’s President Putin to defeat terrorism in Syria. Trump has told The Wall Street Journal that he intends to replace the Obama administration’s policy of supporting Syrian opposition groups against President Assad with a possible rapprochement with Russia to resolve the conflict.

In an interview with Press TV, Alfred Lambremont Webre, a war crimes lawyer, noted that Trump’s presidency would deal a heavy blow to the regime change policy followed by the previous US administration, especially Hillary Clinton.

“I think the recent American election has dealt a below to the Atlanticists which have come in and were the originators of the irrational regime change policy and now both President-elect Donald Trump and [President] Vladimir Putin of Russia have both made declarations that their foreign policies are essentially the same, especially with regard to Syria,” Webre said.

He further reiterated that “we all have to hold incoming president Donald Trump’s feet to the fire and really this is one of the most outspoken policies on which he was elected president and that is to join forces with Vladimir Putin. He has said that on his first date in office, he is going to call together his military commanders and ask them to bring him a plan within 30 days to bring to defeat Daesh and all of these terrorists in Syria in conjunction with Russia.”

Webre also highlighted the United Nations’ role in providing a platform for the US and Russia to reach a unified stance regarding Syria and the fight against terrorism.

In the context of the UN following an early meeting between Trump and Putin, Webre said, it seems that they could begin to have a consensus and arrive at a joint strategy.

“I think that the United Nations is going to play a central role. We know that within the last several weeks Syria’s permanent representative to the UN Bashar al-Jaafari has specified that terrorists are taking civilians in eastern Aleppo as human shields to prevent them from leaving the city and also they are using snipers and launching shells to prevent civilians from leaving the city. The UN provides a platform for the world community really to begin to arrive at consensus.”

Since March 2011, Syria has been hit by militancy it blames on some Western states and their regional allies. Backed by Russian air cover, the Syrian military is engaged in an operation to rid the country of Daesh and other terrorist groups.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: crisis in Kessab, ISIS, policy, Syria, Trump

Syria conflict: Food rations run out in rebel-held Aleppo

November 10, 2016 By administrator

food-shortageThe last remaining food rations are being distributed in besieged rebel-held eastern districts of the Syrian city of Aleppo, the BBC reports, quoting the UN as saying.

Humanitarian adviser Jan Egeland warned that without a resupply there would be no food left to hand out next week to the 275,000 people living there.

Mr Egeland ruled out airdrops of food, explaining that they were not possible in densely-populated urban areas.

Government forces launched a major assault on eastern Aleppo in September.

Since then, troops have pushed into several outlying areas with the help of Iranian-backed Shia militias and Russian air strikes.

Rebels launched a counter-attack in an attempt to break the siege in late October. But their progress slowed after early gains.

The UN says weeks of air strikes and shelling have killed more than 700 civilians in the east, while rocket-fire has left scores dead in the government-controlled west.

Humanitarian agencies have been unable to get into rebel-held Aleppo since the government siege resumed in September, and the last time significant aid supplies were delivered was in July.

On Thursday, Mr Egeland told journalists in Geneva that the UN’s humanitarian taskforce had received a report that the last remaining food rations were being handed out.

“[Food] prices are now skyrocketing on the market. We have reports of desperation for families and within communities,” he said.

He warned that the “terrible” situation in eastern Aleppo might be about to get “much, much worse”, with Russia saying it would soon resume air strikes after a three-week pause intended to allow civilians and rebels to be evacuated – an offer very few people took up.

Mr Egeland revealed that the UN had presented all the warring parties and their backers last week with a four-point initiative for getting aid to eastern Aleppo.

The plan would involve medical evacuations for about 300 patients in urgent need, delivery of food and medical supplies, and permission for medical personnel to enter the city.

Mr Egeland said he was confident that access would be granted because “the consequences of no help and no supplies will be so catastrophic I cannot even see that scenario”.

But he admitted that he had never seen such “politicisation and manipulation” of aid as was taking place in Syria, adding that the constant preconditions being imposed on aid operations were making successful deliveries of supplies impossible.

Reacting to the result of the US presidential election, Mr Egeland said the UN needed “uninterrupted, full engagement” from the US over Syria, pointing out that the only progress made at all had taken place when the US and Russia were involved and using their influence.

The Obama administration has backed the opposition to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad since the uprising against him erupted in 2011 and also condemned Russia’s air campaign. But President-elect Donald Trump has said he wants to mend ties with Moscow and is against regime change in the Middle East.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: food shortage, Syria, UN

Will President Trump Reverse Obama/Erdogan Plan For “Seizing, Holding, And Occupying” Syrian Territory In Raqqa

November 9, 2016 By administrator

erdogan-terroristBy Brandon Turbeville

As the U.S. Presidential selection draws to a close, the United States and Turkey have announced a new plan to defeat ISIS, the same terrorist organization both countries have created, funded, armed, and facilitated, in Syria. The plan revolves around the conquering, occupation, and governing of sovereign Syrian territory in the East, most notably Raqqa.

According to the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Joseph Dunford, after meeting with his Turkish counterpart, that “The coalition and Turkey will work together on the long-term plan for seizing, holding and governing Raqqa.”

The statement by Dunford seems to confirm the fact that the United States will not move forward in its campaign for Raqqa without working closely with the Turks, who are themselves concerned about the makeup of the proxy forces destined to hold power once the campaign is over. The Syrian Democratic Forces, the proxies of choice in this battle, are made up of many Kurdish militias and fighters, an issue that provides much worry on the part of the Turkish government.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Obama, Syria, terrorist, war

Aid to Syrian-Armenians key task for Diaspora Ministry

November 2, 2016 By administrator

syrian-rafugeesThe government program highlights seven major fields for Armenia’s Ministry of Diaspora, Stepan Petrosyan, Advisor to Armenia’s Minister of Diaspora, told reporters on Wednesday.

Attraction of investments, Syrian Armenians’ integration and cooperation with all-Armenian funds throughout the world, retraining courses for teachers from the Armenian Diaspora, expanding relations with professional associations, aid to Armenians in Javakhk are the seven priorities for the Ministry of Diaspora.

Elaborating on the investment attraction program, Mr Petrosyan said that the ministry has done tremendous work, and the figures are evidence thereof. And current cooperation with the relevant government agency is aimed at attracting more investment as well.
Serjik Srapionyan, a deputy minister of diaspora also attending the news conference, said the Ministry has to date offered its best assistance to the Armenians of Syria, dealing with their housing- and employment-related problems.
“We greet planes from the East practically every day, no matter whether we have precise information about a Syrian-Armenian family’s arrival by a specific flight. What we can do is first of all providing shelter. We then go on to search for comfortable apartments, at time also covering the monthly fees. Their food, clothing and employment too, are our responsibility,” the official added.

Arthur Hovhannisyan

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, rafugees, Syria

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