ISIS/ISIL conflict in Syria/Iraq (No OpEd, No Politics)

I've read the Government yesterday lost (
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), and today reportedly (just pro-Government tweets) regained, "Ghazalan Camp" in the area of
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and since I was able to locate that camp :) I created this:
b5VqT.jpg

the critical Government supply route highlighted in yellow; Rebels to the west (for example in "Ramlah": mid-right), ISIL to the east (either out of this view, or at "Mount Shubayt":
Apr 17, 2016
... so it seems Government regained initiative in this area and is back somewhere (I of course don't know where exactly) in "Jabal Shubayt" region in the map below, took it up from Khanaser Plain (both Sirdah and Qualayah shown in that map are on a hill LOL I've never been there though):
wXdAu.jpg

...
"Sirdah" is in both the old and new maps)

EDIT
in case you wondered why I put question mark after "70 km" to Aleppo: that's because I have no idea which way now the Government supplies go to Western Aleppo, and you may enlighten me
 
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in case you cared, you could take it back from
Jul 30, 2016
Jul 6, 2016

... and recently "Hawsh ash Shalaq" (to the south-west from Maydaa), which I believe is "Hawsh al-Farah" in the most recent "miladvisor" map:
Coj1XwvWcAQaKAg.jpg

(it's
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)​
to see the progress of the Government carving Eastern Ghouta Pocket; the most recent is "Nawsh Nasri":
Cppr8psWIAAI7Ox.jpg

(it's
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)​
 
found this very interesting view in Twitter, added (red/blue) the current positions (don't take too seriously my perspective projection):
ok51F.jpg
I put also ISIL on the horizon, as the point is:
If Two Dogs Strive For A Bone,
A Third Runs Away With It
 
...
I put also ISIL on the horizon ...
... and of course it's not only me who's talked ISIL recently:
Trump refuses to back away from false claim Obama founded ISIS
Donald Trump repeatedly accused President Obama of founding the Islamic State group on Thursday, refusing to take back a patently false allegation even when questioned about the logic of his position.

A day after lobbing the attack against the president during a rowdy rally, Trump pressed ahead during a round of interviews. The Republican presidential nominee brushed off conservative radio commentator Hugh Hewitt's attempt to reframe Trump's observation as one that said Obama's foreign policy created the conditions in Iraq and Syria that allowed ISIS to thrive.

"No, I meant he's the founder of ISIS. I do," Trump said, using another acronym for the extremist group that has wreaked havoc from the Middle East to European cities.

Hewitt asked Trump if he would acknowledge that Obama hates the Islamic State, noting that the president is "trying to kill them." Over the past two years Obama has organized a broad coalition of countries and launched more than 10,000 U.S. airstrikes to defeat ISIS.

"I don't care," the billionaire businessman replied. "He was the founder. The way he got out of Iraq — that was the founding of ISIS, OK?"

Hewitt asked Trump if he would acknowledge that Obama hates the Islamic State, noting that the president is "trying to kill them." Over the past two years Obama has organized a broad coalition of countries and launched more than 10,000 U.S. airstrikes to defeat ISIS.

"I don't care," the billionaire businessman replied. "He was the founder. The way he got out of Iraq — that was the founding of ISIS, OK?"

"Once again, he's echoing the talking points of Putin and our adversaries to attack American leaders and American interests," Sullivan said.

In the interview with Hewitt, Trump did acknowledge the root of his argument was that if Obama "had done things properly, you wouldn't have had ISIS." But he then added, "Therefore, he was the founder if ISIS."

Trump had previously said Clinton founded the militant group, but shifted the blame to Obama on Wednesday during a rally in Florida.

"In many respects, you know, they honor President Obama," Trump said Wednesday during a raucous campaign rally outside Fort Lauderdale, Florida. "He is the founder of ISIS," he said, repeating the allegation three more times for emphasis.

Trump also pointedly referred to the president by his full legal name: Barack Hussein Obama. The accusation — and his use of the president's middle name, Hussein — echoed previous instances where he's questioned Obama's religious faith and loyalties to the country.

In June, when a shooter who claimed allegiance to ISIS killed 49 people in an Orlando, Florida, nightclub, Trump seemed to suggest Obama was sympathetic to the group when he said Obama "doesn't get it, or he gets it better than anybody understands."

In the past, Trump has also falsely suggested Obama is a Muslim or was born in Kenya, where Obama's father was from. The president, a Christian, was born in Hawaii.

As he works to keep his campaign message on track, Trump in recent days has sometimes tried to clarify controversial statements by arguing he was being misinterpreted. But given the opportunity Thursday morning by Hewitt and others to take back the claim that Obama founded the terror group, Trump did the opposite.

"He was the founder, absolutely the founder," Trump said on CNBC. "In fact he gets the — in sports, they have awards. He gets the most valuable player award."

Trump has long blamed Obama and his former secretary of state — Clinton — for their Mideast policy. Republicans believe that the U.S. decision to leave Iraq in 2011 created a power vacuum that allowed al-Qaida in Iraq, a subsidiary of the larger terror group al-Qaida, to morph into the 30,000-strong Islamic State group that in 2014 seized a third of Syria and Iraq.

The U.S. has led a coalition of a dozen Western and Arab countries in a sustained airstrike campaign — backed by Iraqi ground forces — that have cut the group in half and cost it 45 percent of its territory. Yet, the group still inspires or backs terror attacks around the world.

The White House declined to comment on Trump's accusation.

The Islamic State group began as Iraq's local affiliate of al-Qaida, the group that attacked the U.S. on Sept. 11, 2001. But the group carried out massive attacks against Iraq's Shiite Muslim majority, fueling tensions with al-Qaida's central leadership, which blames its grievances on the West. The local group's then-leader, Jordanian-born Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, was killed in 2006 in a U.S. airstrike but is still seen as the Islamic State group's founder.
source is NavyTimes:
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JzyMW.jpg
anti-Government attack, reported by both sides, against the road marked "2" above

(it's the direction to ... Iraq; "M5", shown in the middle, leads to Homs, and then to Hama-Idlib-Aleppo, but ...)

in its part east to
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, "around where the right-most 2 sign is";
it's interesting to see how close Damascus is

EDIT quickly
f7Oco.jpg

"Jabal ad Dumayr" is the mountain range also visible in the top-right corner above; also the airbase shows in both maps
 
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according to reports, by both sides, the westernmost region of the Government-held part of Aleppo ("Zahraa Base", highlighted in bottom-left corner in the map below) has been most recently attacked, the assault "spearheaded" by a VBIED, so it may turn out to be an important development:
POAjo.jpg
 
what is this? (the interview available at
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Russia says close to joint military action with U.S. in Aleppo: agencies
Russia and the United States are close to starting joint military action against militants in Syria's Aleppo, Russian news agencies on Monday cited Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu as saying.

Fighting for control of Aleppo has intensified in recent weeks and there have been some gains for rebel groups battling Syrian government forces.

Shoigu's statements come as a surprise because Russia and the United States back different sides in the conflict while participating in talks to try to find a political solution.

"We are now in a very active phase of negotiations with our American colleagues," the RIA news agency cited Shoigu as saying.

"We are moving step by step closer to a plan - and I'm only talking about Aleppo here - that would really allow us to start fighting together to bring peace so that people can return to their homes in this troubled land."

Shoigu said about 700,000 people were still living in Aleppo and that those living in the eastern part of the city were "hostages of armed groups".

Russia backs Assad in the five-year-old Syria conflict, while the United States wants to see Assad step down.

Earlier on Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Syrian militants had used a temporary ceasefire around Aleppo to regroup.


Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov said Iran, Turkey and Saudi Arabia should play a more active role in helping to resolve the Syria crisis.

"(They should) sit down at the table and negotiate," Bogdanov told the RIA news agency, saying he would meet representatives of the Syrian opposition in the Qatari capital, Doha, on Aug. 16.
source:
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