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

delft

Brigadier
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ISIS abandons offensive in west Palmyra, mass retreat towards Raqqa
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- 04/01/2017

BEIRUT, LEBANON (5:50 A.M.) - The Islamic State's (ISIS) large-scale assault in the western countryside of Palmyra has ended after more than a month on the offensive against the Syrian Arab Army (SAA).

According to a military source in the eastern countryside of Homs, the Islamic State began withdrawing their forces as early as last week, following a successful missile strike by the Syrian Arab Army that killed more than 40 terrorists near the T-4 Pumping Station.

In order to speed up this retreat in western Palmyra, the Syrian Arab Army's rocket battalion flooded the Islamic State's positions east of the T-4 Airport with a barrage of missiles and artillery shells, inflicting heavy damage on the terrorist group's defenses.

While the Syrian Army attacked the Islamic State's positions near the T-4 Pumping Station, their Russian counterparts carried out several airstirkes on the terrorist group's primary oil supply route that stretches from eastern Homs to the Al-Raqqa Governorate.

A military source told Al-Masdar News on Tuesday evening that the Russian Air Force carried out more than 20 airstrikes over the gas rich towns of 'Arak and Sukhnah, resulting in the destruction of a number of oil tankers.

With their front-lines near Al-Raqqa falling apart, the Islamic State has sent its reserves from eastern Homs to this front in order to help drive back the swarming Kurdish forces that pushing east towards the provincial capital.
 
Just as in East Aleppo the attacks are directed at hospitals, schools and civilians and never at the militants until the militants are defeated.
delft if I were you, I would be more careful: there're Government-held enclaves, too, so ... so if ANY territory is covered by the truce, it should be covered by the truce ... I'll leave it at that, and you may have the last word here
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
New Conflict new Tactics
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Ironically this is pretty much how CAS ground support started way way back, The pilot of a recon biplane grabbed a couple mills bombs and made "special deliveries" to the enemy trenches. The Drones in use are Small types not the large Predators and Reapers of the US DOD but rather small Quads made in China and sold the World over. There have been rumors of the USMC modifying some of it's Teranchulahawks to drop grenades on Taliban in the past as well and the Russians earlier this year showed of a Drone that did the same.
 

delft

Brigadier
delft if I were you, I would be more careful: there're Government-held enclaves, too, so ... so if ANY territory is covered by the truce, it should be covered by the truce ... I'll leave it at that, and you may have the last word here
The truce concerns the whole of Syria, but doesn't include IS as well as Al Nusrah and its allies. In this area the water supply to 4 million people was sabotaged just before the beginning of the truce and ten parties of FSA are mixed with Al Nusrah so they are considered to be its allies and so the truce doesn't apply to them unless and until they get out.
 
The truce concerns the whole of Syria, but doesn't include IS as well as Al Nusrah and its allies. In this area the water supply to 4 million people was sabotaged just before the beginning of the truce and ten parties of FSA are mixed with Al Nusrah so they are considered to be its allies and so the truce doesn't apply to them unless and until they get out.
LOL then I have to add one more thing before somebody sends a drone to destroy the pub where I'm now: I of course posted on the presumption the situation is how locals described it!
Today at 8:02 AM
... they claim "All of these armed groups are not belonging or believing in Fateh Asham ideology." ...
 
interestingly,
  • US Doubles Number of Advisers in Iraq as Forces Push into Mosul
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    quotes
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    about Eastern Mosul situation:
    "The axes are beginning to converge as they progress toward the river," and the ISIS fighters "don't have the resources to defend against all three."
  • while I read in Russian Internet
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    (just briefly now) ISIL uses the defense tactics based on VBIEDs which inflicts incomparably heavier casualties on the Iraqis, so (just borrowing a phrase from the above point now) Iraqis won't have the resources to go on with the Eastern Mosul attack
time will tell, I guess
 
WlNGm.png

according to How Many Airstrikes Did US Forces Execute in 2016?
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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
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BY
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| January 5, 2017 | [email protected] |
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The US has killed four mid-level Islamic State commanders in airstrikes in both Iraq and Syria since the beginning of December 2016, the military announced over the past week. The Islamic State commanders were involved in military, suicide, chemical, and financial operations, according to the US military.

Colonel John Dorrian, the Spokesman for Combined Joint Task Force Operation Inherent Resolve, announced the deaths of Imad Abdullah Hamud al Mahallawi, Abu Turk, and Falah al Rashidi at
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yesterday. US Central Command
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on the killing of Abu Jandal al Kuwaiti on Dec. 29.

The US killed both al Rashidi and Abu Turk in separate airstrikes on Dec. 4, 2016. Al Rashidi was “was involved in ISIL’s [Islamic State] use of VBIEDs,” or suicide car bombs, in the city of Mosul, where the Islamic State is under assault from Iraqi forces, Iranian-backed Shiite militias, and Kurdish Peshmerga. The suicide bomb has been one of the Islamic State’s most effective weapons in Mosul, and Coalition aircraft have launched numerous airstrikes against suicide bombs and factories. The group claims to have used 220 “martyrdom operations” during the first 10 weeks of its defense of Mosul; this accounts for 20 percent of the claimed 1,112 suicide operations claimed in Iraq and Syria, during 2016. [See FDD’s Long War Journal report,
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.]

Dorrian described Abu Turk as an Islamic State “financial facilitator in Qanfusah, Iraq, who had connections to ISIL leaders and facilitated funds to the group.” He was killed during fighting in the Iraqi city of Sharqat just south of Mosul, which was recently wrested from the Islamic State.

Al Mahallawi, a “legacy al Qaeda Iraq member serving as an ISIL leader in Al Qaim,” was killed on Dec. 21, 2016 in an airstrike in Al Qaim, the western Iraqi town on the border with Syria where he commands troops. The Islamic State controls Al Qaim and the towns along the Euphrates River Valley up to Anah. Dorrian described al Mahallawi’s death as “significant because as ISIL continues to lose population centers, they want to transition towards spoiler attacks in the outlying areas of Iraq and Syria.”

Al Kuwaiti, who was killed near the Tabqa Dam in Syria, was described as “an ISIL gang leader in Raqqah” who previously served as a member of the Islamic State’s “War Committee,” which is tasked with directing the group’s offensive and defensive military operations in Iraq and Syria. Al Kuwaiti was involved in the Islamic State’s December 2016
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.

“Abu Jandal was involved in the use of suicide vehicles, IEDs and chemical weapons against the SDF,” or Syrian Democratic Forces, an alliance of rebel groups and militias that is attempting to drive the Islamic State from its strongholds in northern Syria, including Raqqah. He was “reassigned to Tabqa to try to improve ISIL’s defenses” against the SDF.

The US military has targeted senior and mid-level Islamic State leaders, external operations planners, and military commanders while also striking the groups military and civilian infrastructure throughout Iraq and Syria in an effort to deny the group territory and deal it a “lasting defeat.” Among the most important leaders killed in 2016 include
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, the group’s top spokesman and external operations leader;
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, the Islamic State’s war minister;
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, the information minister and central shura member; and
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, the emir of the Middle East external networks.
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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
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BY
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| January 5, 2017 | [email protected] |
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The Department of Defense
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today that multiple airstrikes killed an estimated 20 or more al Qaeda “militants” in northern Syria at the beginning of the month.

The results of the bombings are still being “assessed,” according to a statement by Pentagon Press Secretary Peter Cook. But US forces “struck two al Qaeda vehicles that had departed a large al Qaeda headquarters near Sarmada,” which is in the northern Idlib province, on Jan. 1. The Pentagon thinks that “five al Qaeda militants” were killed and two vehicles were destroyed during this strike.

Then, on Jan. 3, US forces “struck the headquarters compound itself, including multiple vehicles and structures.” These bombings “killed more than 15 al Qaeda militants,” while also destroying “six vehicles” and “nine structures.”

Al Qaeda’s “foreign terrorist fighter network used this headquarters as a gathering place, and their leaders directed terrorist operations out of this location,” according to Cook’s statement. “We are confident these strikes will degrade al Qaeda’s ability to direct operations in Syria.”

Although the Defense Department doesn’t say it, the airstrikes were likely among the most significant carried out against al Qaeda facilities in Syria to date.

Since Sept. 2014, the US has targeted al Qaeda veterans in Syria on multiple occasions. More often than not, however, these airstrikes have targeted individual jihadi leaders or small groups of jihadis. There have been exceptions. In Nov. 2014, for instance, the US
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associated with
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near Sarmada. The strikes relied on US “bomber, fighter and remotely piloted aircraft” and likely damaged or destroyed “several vehicles, as well as buildings assessed to be meeting and staging areas or bomb-making and training facilities.” US officials stressed at the time that the airstrikes were intended to hit specific cadres of al Qaeda members, and not Al Nusrah Front (as al Qaeda’s branch in Syria was known at the time) as a whole. The US also stated that the bombings were not intended to defend Syrian rebel groups that were clashing with Al Nusrah.

But as FDD’s Long War Journal assessed at the time, the US government was drawing a false distinction between the “Khorasan Group,” which was made up of al Qaeda veterans who also served in Al Nusrah, and the rest of al Qaeda’s paramilitary forces in Syria. In reality, they were all part of al Qaeda’s international organization. [See FDD’s Long War Journal report,
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.]

Today’s statement from the Pentagon does not seek to draw any similarly misleading lines. The targets are referred to as simply al Qaeda.

In December, the Obama administration released a memo outlining the legal underpinnings for its counterterrorism operations around the globe. Tellingly, the definition of al Qaeda in Syria was written to “encompass references to the Nusrah Front, which is al Qaeda’s official affiliate in Syria and which changed its name to Fatah al-Sham Front in July 2016.” In addition, the memo’s authors noted, “there are some members of al Qaeda who have relocated to Syria from other conflict zones who are not members of the Nusrah Front.”

In other words, as the Obama administration leaves office, al Qaeda in Syria is being defined more broadly — and accurately — than at the outset of the current air campaign. The language was markedly different from that employed in late 2014. This is consistent with President Obama’s order to the Pentagon to launch airstrikes against leaders and other figures in JFS more broadly, instead of just select al Qaeda veterans in Syria, as was the practice in the past.

In November, the Washington Post
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that Obama had ordered the Defense Department “to find and kill the leaders of” JFS, after years of the administration “largely” ignoring the group.

Some of the jihadis killed in the airstrikes on Jan. 1 have been identified by their fellow ideologues on social media. These identifications were also
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by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

Three of the men killed are said to be: a Syrian known as Abu Mu’tasim al-Dairi, an al Qaeda veteran known as Abu Khattab al-Qahtani, and a Uighur jihadist known as Abu Omar al-Turkistani. According to
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(and corroborated by jihadis who reported the deaths online), Qahtani had “previously fought in Afghanistan” and Yemen before moving to Syria. Turkistani was “one of the four most prominent leaders of the” Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP), which is affiliated with al Qaeda.

According to some online jihadi sources, Turkistani was also a senior figure in Jabhat Fath al Sham (JFS), which was formerly known as Al Nusrah Front. He was reportedly playing a leading role in the merger talks taking place between JFS and other groups, and may have been in line to assume a leadership position in a newly-formed entity.

If this assessment is true, then Turkistani played a role similar to Abu Omar Saraqib at the time of his death last year. Saraqib was the “general commander” of Jaysh al Fath (“Army of Conquest”), an alliance led by al Qaeda and its closest allies in Syria, when a bomb killed him in September. The jihadis blamed Saraqib’s death on the US-led coalition, claiming that warplanes had targeted the operations room responsible for breaking the siege of Aleppo. Jaysh al Fath
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, dubbed “The Battle of the Hero Martyr Abu Omar Saraqib.” The offensive in Aleppo ultimately failed.

But the death of Saraqib highlighted a recurring problem in Syria: Al Qaeda and its extremist partners have been pooling the resources of various organizations under the banner of Jaysh al Fath. Turkistani may have been involved in a new, but similar effort at the time of his demise.

As the airstrikes on Jan. 1 and Jan. 3 demonstrate, al Qaeda has developed a major paramilitary force in Syria. According to US officials contacted by FDD’s Long War Journal last year, the group could have as many as 10,000 fighters, if not more, in Syria today. And al Qaeda’s operations include groups that are not technically part of Jabhat Fath al Sham (JFS), such as the Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP). Indeed, Abu Omar al Turkistani was reportedly a member of the TIP and also possibly JFS. The TIP is al Qaeda’s ethnic Uighur group, and also draws in other nationalities from Central Asia and elsewhere. The TIP operates in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria and other countries.

Al Qaeda “remains committed to carrying out terrorist attacks against the United States and the West,” Pentagon Pentagon Press Secretary Cook said in his statement today. “We will continue to take action to deny any terrorist safe haven in Syria” and “not allow al Qaeda to grow its capacity to attack the United States or our allies and friends around the world,” he added.

Note: The spelling of al Qaeda was changed to make it consistent throughout this article, including in quotes where it was originally spelled differently.
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