Friday, October 9, 2015 7:40 AM EDT
The Obama administration has ended the Pentagon’s $500 million program to train and equip Syrian rebels, administration officials said on Friday, in an acknowledgment that the beleaguered program had failed to produce any kind of ground combat forces capable of taking on the Islamic State in Syria.
Pentagon officials were expected to officially announce the end of the program on Friday, as Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter leaves London after meetings with his British counterpart, Michael Fallon, about the continuing wars in Syria and Iraq.
Who is behind Syrian Observatory for Human Rights? Nimrod Kamer investigates for RT VIDEO
The organization has been one of the sources for the mainstream media to build their reports on Syria since the start of the civil war four years ago. The organization claims to have a wide network of contacts in the region who feed their information to the head office, where it is processed and later posted on the website, Facebook and Twitter accounts.
Since the start of the Moscow anti-ISIS campaign Russia has started featuring in its reports as well – and it was quickly picked up by major Western media outlets. One of the latest wires from the Observatory that “Russian warplanes [killed] 30 civilians in Homs including women and children” quickly made it into major news sources.
“To the degree people choose to believe social media, they can be my guest. But quite contrary to what [US Secretary of State John Kerry] has said, it is a notoriously unreliable tool upon which to base judgments,” former CIA officer, Ray McGovern told RT.
‘I am not a media organization’ – Rami Abdel Rahman
RT decided to investigate who the man behind the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights is and why the media outlet is so popular with MSM. Well-known journalist and prankster Nimrod Kamer took up the job.
The two-bedroom Coventry home of Syrian immigrant Rami Abdel Rahman has been the organization’s base and the source of information for major mainstream media on anything Syria-related from the past four years, including the death toll.
Nobody quite knows who Abdel Rahman has on the ground in Syria, but information just keeps flowing on and on, usually in a dramatic fashion and with little detail.
Kamer walked around the English city of Coventry, approaching people with questions on Abdel Rahman and how he could be located. No one seemed to have a clue they had the prime source of news from the Syrian frontline living right there in their quaint British neighborhood.
Kamer had no luck catching the director at home. Calling him on the phone, he found out Abdel Rahman went out to a shop. The journalist went about explaining that he had hoped to catch the organization’s director to quiz him on his “media organization” – but that term was met with hostility on the part of Abdel Rahman.
“I am not a media organization. I work from my home, my private home.”
The director of the Observatory seemed very distressed, talking about the dangers of meeting up for daytime interviews because “they are trying to kill me.” It was difficult to identify who “they” were, but Abdel Rahman clearly wasn’t in the mood. He asked Kamer to send him his name and details, which Abdel Rahman would then send to the police.
“When you run a media organization you should expect journalists to come and ask questions, especially if it’s such a shady and unsourced media organization… I had a great time.”
Armenia Camp for refugees created on the outskirts of Yerevan
YEREVAN. – A notional camp for refugees has been installed on the territory of Armenia’s Nubarashen military range within the framework of tactical military drills “Shant 2015”.
According to the scenario of the exercises, the camp is supposed for refugees from other country who have come to Armenia because of the threat to life and health in their country.
The Armenian legislation envisages providing temporal shelter to the refugees who crossed the border because of threat to their life in their country, migrations service representative Petros Aghababyan told reporters.
The camp has its own group of investigators, filtration point, tents for recreation, dining, medical center.
UNHCR Officer-in-Charge in Armenia, Ms. Kate Pochapsky commended Armenian government’s initiative to include deployment of refugees as an element of military exercises. She stressed that further cooperation with the government will continue.
Armenia to host more than 100 Syria refugees per week – UN envoy
A UN representative who was following the opening of a tentative refugee camp in Yerevan’s Nubarashen district on Saturday said she doesn’t expect an increased immigration flow into the country in the wake of the Syrian crisis.
Speaking to reporters at the event, which was being held as part of the military drills “Shant-2015”, UNHCR Officer-in-Charge in Armenia Kate Pochapsky said that they expect the current dynamics to be maintained (no more than about 3,000 migrants) despite the EU’s tougher rules on immigrants. She noted that migrants prefer mostly developed countries, where they are more likely to live in comfort.
Pochapsky added that migrants’ flow from Syria and Turkey will be no more than an estimated 100 people a week.
VIDEO: Syrian boy ask Europe Stop Syria war and we won’t come to Europe,
A 13-year old Syrian boy stranded at a train station in Hungary has spoken out, asking European leaders to stop the war in Syria. Suggesting that westerners do not like Syrians, the boy said Syrians would not come to Europe if there was no war pushing them there. “Just stop the war and we won’t come to Europe,” he said.
161 Syrian Armenians in Yerevan refugee students received school bags and supplies offered by the city of Yerevan
On the eve of the new school year, the Municipality of Yerevan has done a nice gesture to Armenians refugees from Syria. The city of Yerevan has offered 161 Syrian refugee students from 1st to 4th grade school bags and school supplies. The head of public relations of the municipality of Yerevan, Gayane Soghomonian gave these gifts in the company responsible for the education of the city of Yerevan, Samvel Mertandjian. The delivery took place at a ceremony in the town hall of Yerevan. The students were accompanied by their parents. Samvel Mertandjian assured them that the municipal authorities in Yerevan in support of aid projects Armenian families Syrian refugees.
Krikor Amirzayan (Գրիգոր Ամիրզայեան)
Armenian from Syrian who came to Armenia without money regains back in Business
YEREVAN. – Hovhannes Ashjian, 47, Syrian Armenian who arrived in Armenia with his family without any means, today speaks with pride about how he regained his feet in Armenia thanks to his craft, jewelry. Now he is able to take care of his family with dignity.
Hovhannes told Armenian News – NEWS.am he thanks God every day for his gift.
“When I had just arrived in Yerevan, I was working as a waiter for several months, since we had come from Aleppo without any means. Then I was able to collect some money and buy the necessary tools for jewelry. I already have my customers and live here on rent. My wife also works and helps me,” he said.
Hovhannes Ashjian was well-off in Aleppo; he lived with his wife and daughter in their own house, had a jewelry shop and workshop, where he spent most of his day. He also taught his skills to 25 pupils. Now Hovhannes remembers with nostalgia his house and workshop in Aleppo, which were destroyed as a result of bombings.
“The war came as a surprise to all of us, since we lived in a peaceful and powerful state for quite a long time,” he said.
After losing their house, Hovhannes moved with his family into his wife’s paternal house. The situation in Aleppo gradually exacerbated and Hovhannes decided to move to Armenia. He still remembers with horror the 30-minute road from their house to the airport, which took them 3 hours to pass, since they were going round troops, blasts and ruins.
“We arrived in Armenia, and after a week the Aleppo airports was closed. My brother is still in Aleppo. But he doesn’t even want to come here; he can’t leave what he has [there],” Hovhannes said.
According to Ashjian, other Syrian Armenians should also try to work and get used to Armenia’s conditions, since this is another country; it has its own laws and is quite different from Syria.
“The best thing here is that this is our homeland, everyone speaks Armenian. The Syrian war caused Syrian Armenians to return to their homeland. Our country is only 22 years old, it’s still a child. And nobody has a right to demand anything without doing anything; we should all work together and develop it. If the situation in Syria normalizes, I won’t return there. I’ll stay here and continue my work,” Hovhannes said.
How Erdogan humiliated Syrian people Turn them into refugees in the street of 10 Turkish cities
ISTANBUL
The number of Syrian refugees in 10 cities across Turkey now rivals the population of local residents and even outnumbers it in one city, a senior Turkish official has told the Hürriyet Daily News.
“In at least 10 cities, the number of Syrian refugees now constitutes a sizable portion of the city,” the official said during a meeting with a small group of journalists on Aug. 15.
The official specifically referred to the town of Kilis in the southeast near Turkey’s border with Syria, which he described as a “Syrian city” in terms of population. “The local population is 108,000 and the number of refugees is 110,000,” he said.
A relatively small portion of the Syrian refugees in Turkey are in 25 camps across 10 cities. The remainder tries to make a living in cities, many in very harsh conditions.
State Dept. ‘frankly doesn’t know’ legal authority behind US airstrikes supporting Syrian rebels
Since the US-backed rebel groups in Syria are operating in the “lawless area” of the country, they are under the pressure from “a lot of different forces,” US State Department deputy spokesperson Mark Toner told RT’s Gayane Chichakyan while trying to explain the legal basis for the change in US policy.
“I frankly don’t know what the legal authority is,” Toner said, adding that the situation in Syria remains “complex and fluid.”
He clarified that Washington did not authorize itself to “go after Assad government forces,” insisting that such bombings would take place only in the “hypothetical” case that the US-backed militants would come under fire from Syrian forces
“We’ve been carrying out airstrikes in that region for many months now, almost a year – and the same – in defense of these groups, but also to help them gain territory back from ISIL,” the spokesman stated, referring to Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) by the administration’s standard acronym for the militants.
“Any type of effort to protect them from Syrian forces would be defensive in nature,” he claimed. “But I’m not going to talk about the legal framework for it.”
When pressed to admit that the latest announcement is a major change in US policy in Syria, Toner said he would “respectfully disagree.”
“There’s no change in the legal framework,” he said. “Our main goal is to take the fight against ISIL. Nothing’s changed in that regard.”
A Turkish buffer zone in Syria? Neither the generals nor the U.S. want it
ISIS is the problem, but of course Ankara and Erdogan are obsessed with the Kurds.
By Zvi Bar’el
The Bab al-Hawa border crossing between Turkey and Syria gained a new status this week. Customs officers will now man the Syrian side, checking the contents of trucks entering and leaving Turkey. “Interior Ministry” officials will stamp passports and laissez-passer documents.
The iron gate was restored after being damaged in the fighting; it now looks like any other crossing between the two countries, except that the officials on the Syrian side aren’t from the government. They’re rebels who’ve captured Idlib Province. Report haaretz
But that’s not the whole picture. There’s also the Ahrar al-Sham militia, which constitutes part of the Al-Fatah Army, which in turn includes radical Islamist militias, some of them on the list of terror groups.
These, by the way, are the same “moderate militias” the Western countries, particularly the United States, are willing to cooperate with. The Bab al-Hawa crossing serves as a test case for formal ties between Turkey and Idlib, where the people have started using the Turkish lira as legal tender. If this model works, the sides hope to expand to other crossings in rebel hands.
In contrast to this normalization, Turkey is widening its military campaign against the Kurds in Syria, whom it views as a graver threat than the Islamic State. The Turks fear a Kurdish state on their border.
The zone, declared autonomous by the Kurds, is run by the Kurdish Democratic Union Party, which supports the PKK — declared a terror group by Turkey. Reports of Kurds expelling Arabs and replacing them with Kurds feed this fear. Kurdish denials of these reports hardly impress Turkey.
“We won’t allow the establishment of a Kurdish state on our border,” declared Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who’s in the middle of coalition talks. If not a Kurdish state, what about an ISIS state?
The political battle inside Turkey has been affected by what happens on the Syrian border, culminating last week with leaks in the Turkish opposition press about Ankara’s intention to invade Syria, set up a security zone for refugees and thereby prevent Kurdish control of the border zones.
The Turkish opposition made clear the interim Turkish government has no authority to go to war in Syria. Davutoglu countered that in matters of defense the government has full authority to take steps it deems necessary.
He was convinced that as on previous occasions, national security would suffice for the government to do as it wished. Turkey was planning to send 18,000 troops 30 kilometers deep and 90 to 110 kilometers wide to set up refugee camps, but the plan was actually designed to set up a buffer zone between the two Kurdish-controlled areas.
But Erdogan realized that not only did the opposition — some of them potential coalition partners — object, but the army wasn’t rushing to battle. The high command demanded clearly written directives from the politicians for fear of violating international law. It also demanded that the government consult with Russia and Iran to ensure that Turkish military involvement wouldn’t spur direct involvement by those countries.
It’s a weighty argument, though the army didn’t hesitate a few months ago to enter Syria to capture the ancient tomb of Suleyman Shah and rescue Turkish soldiers guarding it. The main reason for the army’s objection this time was the understanding that any invasion of Syria to establish a buffer zone meant long-term involvement in the Syrian war.
The public dispute between the army and government laid bare something in the wake of Erdogan’s expulsion of the army from politics: The army still has widespread support and can challenge the president, even after Erdogan made changes to the high command.
Erdogan held an urgent meeting of the National Security Council, resulting in the decision not to invade Syria. At the same time, Turkey deployed tanks and other armor along the border near the cities of Sanliurfa and Gaziantep, a few kilometers from the Syrian border where the Syrian Kurds are in control.
Despite Erdogan’s efforts, these Kurdish militias, which have recruited a few hundred volunteers from abroad, are winning. The fighters have driven Islamic State forces out of dozens of villages along the border, helped from the air by Western, particularly American, planes.
American praise for the Kurds showed Erdogan that the Kurdish threat isn’t only on the border. The Kurds have become Washington’s ally, and Erdogan’s plan to block their control of the border region is doomed to failure. Special U.S. envoy John Allen visited Turkey to express Washington’s objections to a Turkish operation in Syria.
Officially, Allen discussed possible military cooperation with Turkey, but in practice Washington clarified its opposition to a buffer zone and warned against Turkey’s continued cooperation with radical forces in Syria, based on reports that the Islamic State continues to use Turkish border crossings to reach Syria.
The United States is struggling to establish rebel ground forces to operate in tandem with airstrikes. The effort to recruit rebels for this grandiose plan in the war against the Islamic State, for which Congress has allocated $500 million to train 3,000 fighters, is facing intense difficulties. According to Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter, only 60 of 7,000 volunteers have been trained so far.
While the air campaign has stung some of the Islamic State’s income sources and halted its progress at least in Iraq, it’s far from turning things around. The control territory between the militias and the government is becoming permanent, without any side capable of making a decisive blow.
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 12
- Next Page »