War against ISIS | Page 38 | World Defense

War against ISIS

Diane Lane

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I don't think it's possible to stick to rules of war when dealing with savages. It seems ISIS is growing, and we need to get a handle on the situation while we're still able. I don't think at this point, America, or any other country fighting ISIS should need to ask others to join in the fight. It is incumbent upon all rational nations that they recognize the threat ISIS represents, and they should join in, and help us eradicate this evil group.
 

Susimi

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I don't think it's possible to stick to rules of war when dealing with savages. It seems ISIS is growing, and we need to get a handle on the situation while we're still able. I don't think at this point, America, or any other country fighting ISIS should need to ask others to join in the fight. It is incumbent upon all rational nations that they recognize the threat ISIS represents, and they should join in, and help us eradicate this evil group.

This situation is getting quite bad all over the region and it is starting to slowly seem into Europe as it's been proven ISIS agents are mascarading as migrants so they can get into European countries so they can do who knows what. Something really needs to be done before something quite terrible happens.
 

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Saudi arrests ISIS-related terror cell in two cities
b45e62ad-31f1-421a-a035-af538a7ae2b1_16x9_788x442.jpg

Saudi security forces check a damaged mosque inside a police compound after a suicide bombing attack, in the city of Abha, Saudi Arabia. (File photo: AP)

By Staff writer | Al Arabiya News
Monday, 28 September 2015

The Saudi Interior Ministry announced Monday it has intercepted an ISIS cell during four simultaneous operations in the Saudi capital Riyadh and the eastern city of Dammam, Al Arabiya News Channel reported on Monday.

During the operations, two ISIS members were killed and three others were arrested.

The ministry confirmed that the cell was linked to the suicide bomber behind the Abha mosque attack that took place in August.

A suicide bomber killed 15 people at a mosque inside a special forces headquarters in the southern city.

It also said that Saudi forces have arrested Faysal Hamed al-Ghamdi, a wanted ISIS member in Riyadh who had threatened to kill his father.

The ministry said Aqeel Ameesh al-Mutairy, who was killed during heavy clashes with police in Riyadh, was one of the most 85 wanted by the Saudi authorities.


Aqeel Ameesh al-Mutairy (pictured) was killed during heavy clashes with Saudi police in Riyadh. (Photo: Al Arabiya)

Over the last few months, ISIS carried out several attacks on mosques in the kingdom which killed dozens of people.

ISIS controls swathes of neighboring Iraq and Syria, and has claimed widespread abuses including the beheading of foreign hostages.

Saudi Arabia and its Gulf neighbors last year joined a U.S.-led military coalition bombing ISIS in Syria, raising concerns about possible retaliation in the kingdom.

Last Update: Monday, 28 September 2015 KSA 16:01 - GMT 13:01
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2015/09/28/Saudi-breaking-story-.html
 

BLACKEAGLE

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CIA, Special Ops cooperate to kill extremists in Syria, Iraq
81b46938-ec34-4906-b128-75e74526597d_16x9_788x442.jpg

In this Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2014, file photo, Army Lt. Gen. William Mayville, Jr., Director of Operations J3, speaks about the operations in Syria during a news conference at the Pentagon. (AP)

By The Associated Press | Washington
Monday, 28 September 2015

With no regular American presence in the war theater, the U.S. has struggled to answer basic intelligence questions about the situation in Syria and Iraq, including the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group’s fighting strength. And the U.S.-led bombing campaign has failed to dislodge the group from its self-declared caliphate across both countries.

But one element is seen as a growing intelligence and military success: The combined effort by the CIA and the military’s Joint Special Operations Command to find and kill “high value” targets from both al-Qaeda and ISIS.

The drone strikes - separate from the large air campaign run by U.S. Central Command - have significantly diminished the threat from the Khorasan Group, an al-Qaeda cell in Syria that had planned attacks on American aviation, officials say. The group’s leader, Muhsin al-Fadhli, and its top bomb-maker, David Drugeon, were killed this summer. Other targeted strikes have taken out senior ISIS figures, including its second in command, known as Hajji Mutazz.

Intelligence analysts and special operators have harnessed an array of satellites, sensors, drones and other technology to find and kill elusive militants across a vast, rugged area of Syria and Iraq, despite the lack of a ground presence and steps taken by U.S. targets to disguise their use of electronic devices.

The strikes won’t defeat ISIS, but they are keeping its leadership off-balance, a senior defense official involved in planning them said. “They are constantly having to adjust, which means they don’t have a lot of time to sit there and plan large and effective attacks,” the official said.

Like others interviewed for this story, the official was not authorized to discuss intelligence matters publicly and would not be quoted by name.

As in Pakistan and Yemen, missiles fired from unmanned drones have been used to kill high-value targets in Syria and Iraq. But unlike in Pakistan and Yemen, JSOC, not the CIA, has been pulling the trigger in Syria and Iraq, officials say. JSOC’s armed drones operate separately from, but in concert with, a conventional bombing campaign run by U.S. Central Command, which has overall responsibility for the war.

The CIA’s Counter Terrorism Center brought its collection and analytical expertise to the hunt for senior militants in close cooperation with JSOC, officials say, with a new focus on achieving a hybrid model that has long been the Obama administration’s goal. Although the CIA has carried out the vast majority of drone strikes during the Obama administration, the president has said he wants the military to become the chief instrument of targeted lethal force.

In the latest strike on Sept. 10, the U.S. killed Abu Bakr al-Turkmani, an ISIS administrative officer, near Tal Afar, Iraq, Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said. Abu Rahin Aziz, a British national, was killed in a drone strike in July.

The successful strikes against militant leadership targets in Iraq and Syria show how the U.S. has upped its man-hunting capabilities in areas without an American embassy or troop presence, said Rep. Adam Schiff of California, senior Democrat on the Intelligence Committee. “In Syria it’s taken a long time to build up our intelligence capabilities, but they are improving every day,” he said.

The effort is the product of years of honing techniques and technology. Since the attacks on New York’s World Trade Center in 2001, so-called targeting analysts have become increasingly important within both intelligence agencies and the military. Their job is to sift through every fragment of intelligence using “unique datasets, specialized tools and network analysis,” as a CIA job description puts it, to assemble a targeting package.

The CIA began stepping up efforts to target militants in Syria in early 2013, even before ISIS had seized significant territory. But over the last year, its tracking capacity has improved as the Pentagon has deployed 24-hour overhead coverage allowing the National Security Agency (NSA) to soak up electronic signals while the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) conducts visual surveillance, officials say. The CIA and Defense Intelligence Agency have stepped up efforts to recruit human sources.

When the goal is to kill the target, the analysts try to establish his “pattern of life,” so they will know where and when he will be away from innocents. In recent years, a former CIA counterterrorism targeter said, the agency has developed “a better understanding of what a modern extremist group looks like and how it behaves.”

Detailed “human terrain” mapping of Syrian and Iraqi tribal leadership and village structure also helps, said a military targeting analyst with long experience hunting militants in the Middle East.

Although the CIA doesn’t routinely insert American officers on the ground, it sends in foreign agents recruited in border countries and cooperates closely with Jordanian, Saudi and Kurdish spy services. There is no shortage of informants who are angry about militants’ brutal tactics, officials say.

But the most important factor in locating senior militants has been electronic eavesdropping by the NSA, coupled with overhead imagery, social media analysis and other work by the NGA, officials say. Both agencies are adept at finding people based on signals from communication devices.

The technology deployed to collect intelligence on Syria and Iraq is part of what Kimberly Arsenault, a Defense Intelligence Agency official, calls “the largest armada of intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) assets in the history of the intelligence community.”

Though electronic spying is widely understood, al-Qaeda and ISIS operatives in Syria can’t avoid using electronics to communicate, officials say.

“They have to be more visible and more accessible because they have a battlefield role,” Schiff said. “They have to interact and communicate in some fashion - they can’t just go hide in a cave somewhere.”

Even if senior figures take steps to avoid detection, all it takes is for a known associate to slip up, officials say.

Some ISIS targets have been active on social media, making it far easier to find them.

Such was the case with Junaid Hussain, a British hacker and ISIS militant killed in a U.S. drone strike in August, officials say

Last Update: Monday, 28 September 2015 KSA 16:49 - GMT 13:49
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2015/09/28/CIA-special-ops-cooperate-to-kill-extremists-in-Syria-Iraq.html
 

Diane Lane

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CIA, Special Ops cooperate to kill extremists in Syria, Iraq
81b46938-ec34-4906-b128-75e74526597d_16x9_788x442.jpg

In this Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2014, file photo, Army Lt. Gen. William Mayville, Jr., Director of Operations J3, speaks about the operations in Syria during a news conference at the Pentagon. (AP)

By The Associated Press | Washington
Monday, 28 September 2015

With no regular American presence in the war theater, the U.S. has struggled to answer basic intelligence questions about the situation in Syria and Iraq, including the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group’s fighting strength. And the U.S.-led bombing campaign has failed to dislodge the group from its self-declared caliphate across both countries.

But one element is seen as a growing intelligence and military success: The combined effort by the CIA and the military’s Joint Special Operations Command to find and kill “high value” targets from both al-Qaeda and ISIS.

The drone strikes - separate from the large air campaign run by U.S. Central Command - have significantly diminished the threat from the Khorasan Group, an al-Qaeda cell in Syria that had planned attacks on American aviation, officials say. The group’s leader, Muhsin al-Fadhli, and its top bomb-maker, David Drugeon, were killed this summer. Other targeted strikes have taken out senior ISIS figures, including its second in command, known as Hajji Mutazz.

Intelligence analysts and special operators have harnessed an array of satellites, sensors, drones and other technology to find and kill elusive militants across a vast, rugged area of Syria and Iraq, despite the lack of a ground presence and steps taken by U.S. targets to disguise their use of electronic devices.

The strikes won’t defeat ISIS, but they are keeping its leadership off-balance, a senior defense official involved in planning them said. “They are constantly having to adjust, which means they don’t have a lot of time to sit there and plan large and effective attacks,” the official said.

Like others interviewed for this story, the official was not authorized to discuss intelligence matters publicly and would not be quoted by name.

As in Pakistan and Yemen, missiles fired from unmanned drones have been used to kill high-value targets in Syria and Iraq. But unlike in Pakistan and Yemen, JSOC, not the CIA, has been pulling the trigger in Syria and Iraq, officials say. JSOC’s armed drones operate separately from, but in concert with, a conventional bombing campaign run by U.S. Central Command, which has overall responsibility for the war.

The CIA’s Counter Terrorism Center brought its collection and analytical expertise to the hunt for senior militants in close cooperation with JSOC, officials say, with a new focus on achieving a hybrid model that has long been the Obama administration’s goal. Although the CIA has carried out the vast majority of drone strikes during the Obama administration, the president has said he wants the military to become the chief instrument of targeted lethal force.

In the latest strike on Sept. 10, the U.S. killed Abu Bakr al-Turkmani, an ISIS administrative officer, near Tal Afar, Iraq, Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said. Abu Rahin Aziz, a British national, was killed in a drone strike in July.

The successful strikes against militant leadership targets in Iraq and Syria show how the U.S. has upped its man-hunting capabilities in areas without an American embassy or troop presence, said Rep. Adam Schiff of California, senior Democrat on the Intelligence Committee. “In Syria it’s taken a long time to build up our intelligence capabilities, but they are improving every day,” he said.

The effort is the product of years of honing techniques and technology. Since the attacks on New York’s World Trade Center in 2001, so-called targeting analysts have become increasingly important within both intelligence agencies and the military. Their job is to sift through every fragment of intelligence using “unique datasets, specialized tools and network analysis,” as a CIA job description puts it, to assemble a targeting package.

The CIA began stepping up efforts to target militants in Syria in early 2013, even before ISIS had seized significant territory. But over the last year, its tracking capacity has improved as the Pentagon has deployed 24-hour overhead coverage allowing the National Security Agency (NSA) to soak up electronic signals while the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) conducts visual surveillance, officials say. The CIA and Defense Intelligence Agency have stepped up efforts to recruit human sources.

When the goal is to kill the target, the analysts try to establish his “pattern of life,” so they will know where and when he will be away from innocents. In recent years, a former CIA counterterrorism targeter said, the agency has developed “a better understanding of what a modern extremist group looks like and how it behaves.”

Detailed “human terrain” mapping of Syrian and Iraqi tribal leadership and village structure also helps, said a military targeting analyst with long experience hunting militants in the Middle East.

Although the CIA doesn’t routinely insert American officers on the ground, it sends in foreign agents recruited in border countries and cooperates closely with Jordanian, Saudi and Kurdish spy services. There is no shortage of informants who are angry about militants’ brutal tactics, officials say.

But the most important factor in locating senior militants has been electronic eavesdropping by the NSA, coupled with overhead imagery, social media analysis and other work by the NGA, officials say. Both agencies are adept at finding people based on signals from communication devices.

The technology deployed to collect intelligence on Syria and Iraq is part of what Kimberly Arsenault, a Defense Intelligence Agency official, calls “the largest armada of intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) assets in the history of the intelligence community.”

Though electronic spying is widely understood, al-Qaeda and ISIS operatives in Syria can’t avoid using electronics to communicate, officials say.

“They have to be more visible and more accessible because they have a battlefield role,” Schiff said. “They have to interact and communicate in some fashion - they can’t just go hide in a cave somewhere.”

Even if senior figures take steps to avoid detection, all it takes is for a known associate to slip up, officials say.

Some ISIS targets have been active on social media, making it far easier to find them.

Such was the case with Junaid Hussain, a British hacker and ISIS militant killed in a U.S. drone strike in August, officials say

Last Update: Monday, 28 September 2015 KSA 16:49 - GMT 13:49
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2015/09/28/CIA-special-ops-cooperate-to-kill-extremists-in-Syria-Iraq.html

If only they were all stupid enough to broadcast their positions and intentions via social media. That would help us significantly, but at least they are able to be intercepted and monitored using electronic spying, which gives us a leg up on the past wars. I don't have a problem with targeting and eliminating the heads of the group, and I agree, it will keep them scrambling, which should hamper their ability to cause harm and destruction.
 

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Russia launches first airstrikes in Syria - CNNPolitics.com


According to the Russian Defense Ministry, warplanes targeted eight ISIS positions, including arms, transportation, communications and control positions.

But U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter countered that claim.

"I want to be careful about confirming information, but it does appear that they (Russian airstrikes) were in areas where there probably were not ISIL forces," he told reporters. ISIL is an acronym for ISIS.

"The result of this kind of action will inevitably, simply be to inflame the civil war in Syria," Carter said.

A senior U.S. administration official told CNN's Elise Labott that a Russian airstrike near the Syrian city of Homs "has no strategic purpose" in terms of combating ISIS, which "shows they are not there to go after ISIL."

Syrian state-run news agency SANA reported that Russian warplanes had targeted "ISIS dens" in al-Rastan, Talbiseh and Zafaraniya in Homs province; Al-Tilol al-Hmer, in Qunaitra province; Aydoun, a village on the outskirts of the town of Salamiya; Deer Foul, between Hama and Homs; and the outskirts of Salmiya.

According to the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, 28 people were killed in the strikes, including women and children. The Syrian National Coalition reported that 36 people were killed, all civilians.

The U.S. official said the United States had no intention of preventing the strikes, but that Russian planes didn't seem to be flying in areas where the United States is operating.

"They are not stupid," the official said.
 

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Russia launches first airstrikes in Syria - CNNPolitics.com


According to the Russian Defense Ministry, warplanes targeted eight ISIS positions, including arms, transportation, communications and control positions.

But U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter countered that claim.

"I want to be careful about confirming information, but it does appear that they (Russian airstrikes) were in areas where there probably were not ISIL forces," he told reporters. ISIL is an acronym for ISIS.

"The result of this kind of action will inevitably, simply be to inflame the civil war in Syria," Carter said.

A senior U.S. administration official told CNN's Elise Labott that a Russian airstrike near the Syrian city of Homs "has no strategic purpose" in terms of combating ISIS, which "shows they are not there to go after ISIL."

Syrian state-run news agency SANA reported that Russian warplanes had targeted "ISIS dens" in al-Rastan, Talbiseh and Zafaraniya in Homs province; Al-Tilol al-Hmer, in Qunaitra province; Aydoun, a village on the outskirts of the town of Salamiya; Deer Foul, between Hama and Homs; and the outskirts of Salmiya.

According to the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, 28 people were killed in the strikes, including women and children. The Syrian National Coalition reported that 36 people were killed, all civilians.

The U.S. official said the United States had no intention of preventing the strikes, but that Russian planes didn't seem to be flying in areas where the United States is operating.

"They are not stupid," the official said.

BBC news is also reporting that US and Russian armed forces are to meet urgently and hold talks about their respective operating areas so as to prevent friendly fire events.
 

Diane Lane

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BBC news is also reporting that US and Russian armed forces are to meet urgently and hold talks about their respective operating areas so as to prevent friendly fire events.

It doesn't appear we have the same objectives (U.S. and Russia) over there.
 

Redheart

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BBC news is also reporting that US and Russian armed forces are to meet urgently and hold talks about their respective operating areas so as to prevent friendly fire events.
The talks apparently meant nothing to the Russians because they bombed U.S-backed rebels anyway.

But that's not all, Russia's ally Iran intends to send ground troops to aid Assad. This "war against ISIS" never really was about fighting the savages. It was all for Assad. His friends are now openly helping him under the guise of fighting ISIS.

Assad allies, including Iranians, prepare ground attack in Syria: sources| Reuters
Hundreds of Iranian troops have arrived in Syria in the last 10 days and will soon join government forces and their Lebanese Hezbollah allies in a major ground offensive backed by Russian air strikes, two Lebanese sources told Reuters.

"The (Russian) air strikes will in the near future be accompanied by ground advances by the Syrian army and its allies," said one of the sources familiar with political and military developments in the conflict.

"It is possible that the coming land operations will be focused in the Idlib and Hama countryside," the source added.

The two sources said the operation would be aimed at recapturing territory lost by President Bashar al-Assad's government to rebels.

 

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6 Russian air strikes destroy ISIS bomb factory, command centers – Defense Ministry — RT News

Russian jets have performed 14 combats flights, conducting six pinpoint airstrikes against Islamic State targets in Syria on Friday, according to Russia’s Defense Ministry.

“During the day, the Russian aviation group continued conducting pinpoint airstrikes against the infrastructure of the IS group in Syria,” Defense Ministry spokesman, Igor Konashenkov, said.

“Su-34, Su-24-M and Su-25 planes performed 14 flights from Hmaimim air base, during which six airstrikes against IS targets were conducted,” he added.

In the town of Maarrat Al-Nuuman in Idlib province, an Su-25 attack aircraft completely brought down a large terrorist workshop, which was producing bombs and improvised explosive devices.

A nearby IS base, hosting weaponry and military vehicles was also targeted, with ten pieces of military hardware, including several APCs, was eliminated, the ministry said.

A terrorist command center was destroyed by Su-24-M and Su-25 attack aircrafts near the town of Khan Shaykhun in Idlib province.

In the Al-Latamna district of Hama Governorate, guided air bombs delivered from Su-34 bombers blew up a militant’s underground HQ, the Defense Ministry said.

Su-25 aircraft also targeted two bunkers in the same area which had been hosting Islamic State command centers and arm depots. According to the ministry, munitions at one of the depots detonated and caused a total destruction of the bunkers.

“The targeting accuracy of the Russian air grouping in Syria was achieved by the usage of aircraft within the reconnaissance-strike complex,” the Russian Defense Ministry said in a statement.

On Thursday, the Defense Ministry had to address concerns sounded by the Western politicians and media that Russian bombardment actually targeted democratic Syrian opposition forces, instead of IS, and led to civilian casualties.

The ministry stressed that it’s after IS in Syria, adding that all airstrikes are based on accurate intelligence data and take place away from residential areas.

Russian aviation has been carrying out airstrikes against Islamic State and other terrorist groups in Syria since Wednesday.

The operation performed at the request of Syrian President, Bashar Assad, is designed to provide air support to the government troops, which is struggling to contain the spread of jihadist militants in the war-torn country.

As he was explaining Moscow’s decision to get involved in Syria, Vladimir Putin said that radicals from many countries, including Russia, have flocked to Iraq and Syria to join the terrorist group. They must be defeated so that they do not return home with battle experience and ideology adopted in the war zone, the Russian president stressed.
 

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Iraqi forces retake areas around Ramadi
2e663af1-030d-4848-93ac-bb7e08b052e8_16x9_788x442.jpg

Reinforcements for Iraqi anti-terrorism forces arrive at the Ramadi Stadium after regaining control of the complex and the neighboring al-Bugleeb area. (AP)

By AFP | Baghdad
Wednesday, 7 October 2015

Iraqi forces have retaken several areas north and west of Ramadi as efforts to close in on the Anbar provincial capital seized by ISIS extremists in May intensify, officials said Wednesday.

An operation involving 2,000 troops backed by air strikes from the U.S.-led coalition led to the recapture of several neighborhoods from the ISIS.

A brigadier general from the Anbar operations command said those included Zankura, Albu Jleib, Al-Adnaniyah and parts of Albu Risha and an area known as Kilometre 5.

“The Iraqi security forces also took control of the main road west of Ramadi and they are now using it to support the forces positioned to liberate Ramadi,” Adhal Fahdawi, a member of the provincial council, told AFP.

According to the U.S.-led coalition's daily tally of air strikes in Iraq and Syria, a total of 27 strikes have been conducted in the Ramadi area since the start of October.

“The coalition's air support has played a big part in this progress,” Fahdawi said. “If operations continue at this pace, I expect the liberation of Ramadi to be possible by the end of the month.”

Ahmed al-Assadi, spokesman for the Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary organization also involved in the operation, even predicted it would happen “in the next few days”.

Iraqi officials, including Assadi and Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, had said immediately after ISIS fighters blitzed the security forces out of Ramadi in mid-May that a reconquest would be a matter of days.

The Iraqi forces' advance has been sluggish however, sparking mounting criticism of the US-supported effort to train and equip Iraqi fighters in Anbar.

Last Update: Wednesday, 7 October 2015 KSA 16:00 - GMT 13:00
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2015/10/07/Iraq-forces-retake-areas-around-Ramadi-.html
 

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ISIS kills top Iranian military commander Hossein Hamedani - CNN.com

A top Iranian military commander has been killed by ISIS in Syria, where he was advising the Syrian army in its fight against extremists, Iranian state media reported Friday.

Brig. Gen. Hossein Hamedani, a former commander in the Iran-Iraq War of 1980-88, was killed Thursday night outside Aleppo during an attack by ISIS, Iran's semiofficial FARS News Agency reported.

Hamadani was there "to render military advice to the Syrian army and popular forces in their fight" against ISIS, the agency reported.

One of the Syrian regime's strongest allies, Iran admits to having military advisers to aid Syrian government forces in the country's civil war, which has killed more than 300,000 people in four years.

Iranian media carried messages of condolence from Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, who described Hamedani's death as a big loss and applauded the senior commander for his bravery in protecting Shiite holy sites.
 

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ISIS kills top Iranian military commander Hossein Hamedani - CNN.com

A top Iranian military commander has been killed by ISIS in Syria, where he was advising the Syrian army in its fight against extremists, Iranian state media reported Friday.

Brig. Gen. Hossein Hamedani, a former commander in the Iran-Iraq War of 1980-88, was killed Thursday night outside Aleppo during an attack by ISIS, Iran's semiofficial FARS News Agency reported.

Hamadani was there "to render military advice to the Syrian army and popular forces in their fight" against ISIS, the agency reported.

One of the Syrian regime's strongest allies, Iran admits to having military advisers to aid Syrian government forces in the country's civil war, which has killed more than 300,000 people in four years.

Iranian media carried messages of condolence from Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, who described Hamedani's death as a big loss and applauded the senior commander for his bravery in protecting Shiite holy sites.

Russia has been so busy at attacking rebels fighting ISIS that they are advancing and even killed an Iranian General.
 

Redheart

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Strange way of fighting the savages if you ask me.

Isis seizes ground from Aleppo rebels under cover of Russian airstrikes | World news | The Guardian
Islamic State militants have scored their most significant advances in the province of Aleppo, the closest they have come to Syria’s former commercial capital in two years, as it becomes increasingly clear that they are taking advantage of Russian airstrikes against the rest of the opposition to march into new territory.
As at now, I think whatever it is Russia is doing in Syria, one thing thing the Russian's aren't doing is fighting ISIS because ISIS is still fighting on Assad's side. They all want to defeat the rebels first, don't they?

How Assad helped the rise of his 'foe' Isil - Telegraph
When push comes to shove, Mr Assad thinks that most Syrians and the Western powers will back him over the fundamentalists.

But this plan will only work if ISIS is the most powerful rebel force.
Seems like Assad's plan will work.
 
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