Showing posts with label Nusra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nusra. Show all posts

Friday, June 5, 2020

Thousands of Pakistan Nationals From LeT & JeM Fighting Alongside Taliban In Afghanistan: UN


The report referred to three major Pakistan-based groups active in Afghanistan -- the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan (Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan or TTP), Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM). All three groups operate inside Afghanistan with support of the Taliban

NEW DELHI: Thousands of Pakistani nationals from LeT and JeM continue to support the Taliban against the Afghan government, according to a recently released report by a UN monitoring team.

The report referred to Pakistan’s double game of claiming to fight terrorism while backing terror groups that enhance its foreign policy goals.

“One Member State reported that the total number of Pakistani nationals fighting with terrorist groups in Afghanistan may be as high as 6,000 to 6,500,” said the 11th report from the U.N.’s Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team.

The report referred to three major Pakistan-based groups active in Afghanistan -- the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan (Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan or TTP), Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM). All three groups operate inside Afghanistan with support of the Taliban.

“The presence of these groups is centred in the eastern provinces of Kunar, Nangarhar and Nuristan, where they operate under the umbrella of the Afghan Taliban,” the report stated.

LeT approximately has 800 fighters and JeM has 200 in Afghanistan.

The U.N. report provided details on the locations of LeT and JeM inside Afghanistan.

LeT and JeM fighters are “co-located with Taliban forces in Mohmand Darah, Dur Baba and Sherzad Districts of Nangarhar Province. [TTP] also maintains a presence in Lal Pura District, near the border area of Mohmand Darah, Pakistan. In Kunar Province, [LeT] retains a further 220 fighters and has a further 30, all of whom are dispersed within Taliban forces."


Saturday, December 21, 2019

US Re-Designates Pakistan, China As Countries of Particular Concern On Religious Freedom


Pakistan, China, Myanmar, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan and other countries were placed in the list for having engaged in 'systematic, ongoing religious freedom violations.'

WASHINGTON: The US has re-designated Pakistan and China among seven other countries that are of particular concern for violation of religious freedom, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Friday.

Pakistan and China along with Myanmar, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan were placed in the list for having engaged in or tolerated "systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom," Pompeo said.

The Department renewed the placement of Comoros, Russia and Uzbekistan on a Special Watch List (SWL) for governments that have engaged in or tolerated "severe violations of religious freedom," and added Cuba, Nicaragua, Nigeria, and Sudan to this list.

Sudan was moved to the SWL due to significant steps taken by the civilian-led transitional government to address the previous regime's "systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom."

US also designated al-Nusra Front, al-Qa'ida in the Arabian Peninsula, al-Qa'ida, al-Shabab, Boko Haram, the Houthis, ISIS, ISIS-Khorasan, and the Taliban as Entities of Particular Concern.

"These designations underscore the United States' commitment to protecting those who seek to exercise their freedom of religion or belief," Pompeo said.

"We believe that everyone, everywhere, at all times, should have the right to live according to the dictates of their conscience.

We will continue to challenge state and non-state entities that seek to infringe upon those fundamental rights and to ensure they are held to account for their actions," he said.

This month, the US Government announced designations of 68 individuals and entities in nine countries for corruption and human rights abuses under the Global Magnitsky Act, among them four military leaders of Myanmar were responsible for serious human rights abuses against the Rohingya Muslims and other religious and ethnic minorities, he said.

"In October, we placed visa restrictions on Chinese government and Communist Party officials who are believed to be responsible for, or complicit in, the detention or abuse of Uyghurs, Kazakhs, or other members of Muslim minority groups in Xinjiang, China," Pompeo said.

"Our actions have been and will continue to be, consistent with our position on religious freedom.

No country, entity, or individual should be able to persecute people of faith without accountability.

We have acted, and we will continue to do so," he said.


Monday, April 29, 2019

Ghastly Sri Lanka Tragedy And Strategic Interests of Big Powers


Where does one turn for help to gauge sources of global terror like the one which struck Colombo? Which intelligence agency does one put ones money on? The ground for current terrorism was laid in the 80s when Mujahideen were manufactured in the Salafi mould

by Saeed Naqvi

Not far back in time, Osama bin Laden, the 9/11 hijackers, Wahabis, Salafis, Jabhat al Nusra and their numerous variants were all traced to Saudi Arabia. Today all of that has been placed in the margin of amnesia. Instead, the US, Israel and some Europeans are inviting all and sundry to go hammer and tongs at Iran.

In a world order so Topsy-Turvy, where does one turn for help to gauge sources of global terror like the one which struck Colombo? Which intelligence agency does one put ones money on?

The ground for current terrorism was laid in the 80s when Mujahideen were manufactured in the Salafi mould with Saudi money, American training and equipment and hundreds of Pakistan built madrasas along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border primarily to expel the Soviets from Afghanistan. Once this mission was accomplished in 1989, Americans returned home leaving high voltage Islam to find work. And work, it did find with a vengeance, in Kashmir, Egypt and Algeria.

Ingredients for extremism were thus available when the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 inspired the US to put its imprimatur on the great victory. Operation Desert Storm was launched in February 1992 to teach Saddam Hussain a lesson for his transgression into Kuwait. Desert Storm is a landmark: it was to cover this event that the global media was born. For the first time in history, a war was brought live into people's homes. For the West it was a celebration of triumph over another system. For Iraq and the Muslim world it was yet another defeat, humiliation, helplessness. Coverage of one event on global television had divided the world into two hostile camps - a triumphant West and a defeated, demoralised Muslim world.

This chasm widened a hundred fold with the two Intefadas, the four-year-long Bosnian war, 9/11, air strikes and occupation of Afghanistan, the bogus search for weapons of mass destruction leading to the occupation of Iraq, destruction of Mesopotamia and so on.

As a reaction, Jihadist terror began to evolve as a target against which nations could forge coalitions. Then, as an afterthought, terror groups also began to be seen as assets to be let loose on enemies. This latter game became transparent during the Syrian conflict. Countries like Saudi Arabia began to play a lead role in inducting, breeding, arming Jihadists of the most ferocious variety against President Bashar al Assad, casting him as a "Brutal Shia" (therefore heathen) who had to be replaced. The US, Israel, Qatar, Turkey, all joined the expedition. The US, began to train and equip militant groups. President Obama's Defence Secretary Ashton Carter was virtually in tears at being grilled by the Congress as well as the media. In one instance at least (there were others) he had to wind up a $500 million project on live TV because the Jihadists trained by the Americans had walked away, with the heavy equipment and presumably joined some other group.

The sudden establishment of the Islamic State in Mosul remains an uninvestigated mystery. When the IS charged towards Baghdad wielding the latest arms mounted on Humvees straight from the showroom, my sources in Najaf were convinced of their American sponsorship. Every Arab Ambassador in New Delhi at least (except the GCC) was quite candid: this is an American project. They seemed to make sense because candidate Trump himself told Jake Tapper of the CNN that the Obama-Hillary Clinton team had "spent millions in creating terror groups in Syria". In an interview with the New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman in August 2015, Obama admitted to the uses of the ISIS. Asked why he did not bomb the IS when it first reared its head, Obama said: "We did not just start taking a bunch of air strikes all across Iraq because that would have taken the pressure off Iraqi Prime Minister, Nouri al Maliki." In other words, ISIS was an American asset at that juncture. Maliki, an aggressive Shia, had refused to sign the Status of Forces agreement with the US preparatory to their departure from Iraq. The pressure worked. Maliki was replaced.

Later, Friedman advises President Trump in one of his columns not to waste his time fighting the IS. He wants "Trump to be Trump - utterly cynical and unpredictable."

Friedman adds: "Trump should let ISIS be Assad's, Iran's, Hezbullah's and Russia's headache." At the opposite ideological end of the spectrum is that great chronicler of West Asia, Robert Fisk. In a different context, he writes, Trump does not realise that "Israel bombs only the Syrian army, the Shia Hezbullah in Syria but has never ever the IS. In fact the Israelis have given medical aid to fighters from Jabhat al Nusra which is part of Al Qaeda which attacked the US on 9/11." By Fisk's testimony, IS is an Israeli asset too.

At a conference on regional issues in New Delhi, Morgulov Igor Vladimirovich, Russia's Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs, startled the gathering. Since the war in Syria has wound down, the Islamic State is as spare today as the Afghan Mujahideen were in 1989. Vladimirovich's allegation caused raised eyebrows.

"ISIS Fighters Are Being Flown To Northern Afghanistan."

"Since the Afghan air space is under the control of the US and the Afghan government, who is responsible for this transfer of the IS?" he asked. An allegation of much greater global resonance was by Iran's Supreme leader, Ayatullah Ali Khamenei. In the course of his Friday address on January 30, 2018, he said: "The US transfer of terrorists to Afghanistan is aimed at creating a justification for its continuing stay in the region."

Xinxiang, the Caucasus are all vulnerable to IS blackmail, as are other, smaller countries. But remember, IS is also seen by some powers as an asset. A ghastly tragedy can shake a nation. That is precisely when powerful intelligence agencies move in with help, advice which, over a period of time, becomes the kind of deep penetration which begins to navigate policy.

Saeed Naqvi is a commentator on political and diplomatic affairs


Tuesday, December 25, 2018

Is Donald Trump Signalling Adieu To Allies?


by Prakash C Katoch

Instead of a traditional Christmas gift, US President Donald Trump has shocked America and its allies by abruptly signalling the beginning of a US withdrawal from Afghanistan, with a pullout of some 7,000 troops, apparently willing to put his allies to the slaughter like a turkey on Thanksgiving Day.

How Trump has soured America’s relations with the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation and the European Union is well documented anyway. America’s complete turnaround is conspicuous when one recalls that “on the strength of its allies,” the US had planned 18 years back to take out seven countries in five years, starting with Iraq, and then Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and, finally, Iran.

Trump’s eccentricities have been the talk of town in America with a slew of resignations of high-ranking officials and his personal staff members. On becoming president, Trump indicated that he intended to resolve all issues with Russia but has ended up with an ever-heightening cold war with the possibility of a conflict in Ukraine.

After his meeting with North Koran leader Kim Jong Un, Trump boasted he had achieved denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula. Nothing is further from the truth, as has been proved; North Korea is and will remain a nuclear talon of the Chinese dragon – the same as the other talon, Pakistan.

Trump also pulled out of the Iran nuclear accord, adding to the chaos in the Middle East, even as the US is more than self-sufficient in energy resources.

But in particular, Trump’s decision to pull troops out of Syria takes the cake, since he did not even bother to consult his defence secretary or the Senate Armed Forces Committee.

Reading between the lines in the resignation letter by Defence Secretary Jim Mattis, a die hard nationalist and widely respected figure seen as a stabilising influence inside the Trump administration, it is easy to gauge the despair questioning the future of America and America’s respect for concern of its allies

Significantly, Trump has refused to stand down from a decision to withdraw US troops from Syria, has made plans to pull American forces out of Afghanistan, and has pushed the US government toward a shutdown over funding for a border wall.

Trump’s tweet that ISIS is finished in Syria is laughable indeed. ISIS is far from demolished and the fight is at crucial stage, even as such organisations can hardly be crushed through bombing campaigns – al-Qaeda and Boko Haram being other examples.

In fact, Trump’s decision raises the question whether ISIS is knowingly being given a breather to divert the jihadist group elsewhere. There is evidence that the rise of ISIS and Jabhat al Nusra was a wilful decision of the US. Even today, ISIS in Iraq-Syria and even Afghanistan sports US weaponry and equipment, which is not surprising, since external intelligence agencies generally are at cross-purposes with defence forces, as was also experienced by Indian armed forces operating in Sri Lanka during that country’s civil war.

The immediate affect of the fallout of Trump’s decision to pull out of Syria has been demonstrations in northern Syria fearing a surge in ISIS attacks. The hardest hit will be the Kurds, who were dependent on US support as they are under attack by Turkey.

It is no secret that it is through Turkey that ISIS ravaged Iraq and Syria since 2004 and was able to make millions of dollars on a daily basis from captured oilfields, smuggling oil out via Turkey until Russia started bombing the oil-tanker convoys.

But the wheels of geopolitical dynamics have turned since then. Turkey is buying both US and Russian missiles and beneficiaries of the US withdrawal from Syria will be actors that the US considers its adversaries – the Syrian government, ISIS, Russia, Iran, even Turkey and China.

As for Afghanistan, a US pullout will have serious ramifications for India, including Pakistan’s efforts to shape the reconciliation processes to its advantage and to counter India’s presence in Afghanistan. India hopes that the US will stay the course because the security situation in Afghanistan hasn’t improved.

Also, with the presence of Lashkar-e-Taiba, al-Qaeda and ISIS in Afghanistan, India does not see the Americans fully leaving Afghanistan to itself any time soon, since the US has a commitment not to allow Afghan territory again to become a crucible of terrorism.

Reference is also made to public remarks by the US leadership, acknowledging India’s stake in peace and stability in Afghanistan, including Trump’s reference to India in his strategy for Afghanistan and South Asia unveiled in August 2017.

As commander of the “Resolute Support Mission” and US forces in Afghanistan, General John W Nicholson had to brief then-president Barack Obama personally that instead of pulling out of Afghanistan, more US troops were required; a request that Obama agreed to.

In December 2016, Nicholson stated, “Of the 98 US-designated terrorist groups globally, 20 are in Af-Pak region. This represents the highest concentration of terrorist groups anywhere in the world.”

It is to be hoped that the US will stay the course in Afghanistan, but there is no guarantee any more. If it does not, the result will be Afghanistan falling under Taliban rule, aligned with Pakistan and China.

A US pullout from Syria and Afghanistan would signal that the wheels of the US military machine are coming off, the sunset of America and trust in it by its allies, repercussions of which can be visualised in the Indo-Pacific region and the rest of the world.

Should Trump seek conflict in Ukraine and/or Iran, he would be naïve not to take into account the strategic Russia-China alliance getting stronger by the day because of his own actions. The irony will be the likelihood of the Afghanistan-Pakistan-India region plunging into instability on account of terrorism.


Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Russia Says Israel Indirectly To Blame For Downed Plane Over Syria


MOSCOW: Russia on Tuesday accused Israel of indirectly causing a Russian military plane to be shot down near Syria's Mediterranean coast, and threatened to retaliate against Israel for what it described as a hostile act.

Russia's Defence Ministry said the Il-20 reconnaissance aircraft, with 15 Russian service personnel on board, was brought down by anti-aircraft batteries of Moscow's ally, Syria, in a friendly fire incident.

But the ministry said it held Israel responsible because, at the time of the incident, Israeli fighter jets were mounting air attacks on Syria targets and had only given Moscow one minute's warning, putting the Russian aircraft in danger of being caught in the cross-fire.

"We view the actions of the Israeli military as hostile," Russian Defence Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov told Russian state television. "As a result of the irresponsible actions of the Israeli military, 15 Russian service personnel perished."

Israel's military declined to comment, as did the prime minister's office and the Foreign Ministry.

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu spoke to his Israeli counterpart, Avigdor Lieberman, and told him Moscow held Israel wholly responsible for the shooting down of the plane, Russian news agencies reported. The Israeli Defence Ministry confirmed the call but declined to give any further details.

Moscow said its plane disappeared from radar screens as it was coming in to land at the Hmeymim air base in western Syria late on Monday, just as Israeli jets and French naval vessels were mounting air strikes on targets in the same area of Syria.

France denied launching any missile strikes.

According to the ministry, the Israeli F-16 jets carrying out the air strikes used the Russian plane as cover to allow them to approach their targets on the ground without being hit by Syrian anti-aircraft fire.

"Hiding behind the Russian aircraft, the Israeli pilots put it in the line of fire of Syrian anti-aircraft systems. As a result, the Il-20 ... was shot down by the (Syrian) S-200 missile system," Konashenkov said.

He said the Israeli pilots "could not have failed to see the Russian aircraft, as it was coming in to land from a height of 5 km (three miles). Nevertheless, they deliberately carried out this provocation," Konashenkov said.

RETALIATION THREATENED 

The spokesman said: "This absolutely does not correspond to the spirit of Russian-Israeli partnership."

"We reserve the right to take commensurate measures in response," Konashenkov said, without giving details of what those measures would be.

The Kremlin was extremely concerned by the incident and President Vladimir Putin expressed his condolences for those who were killed, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

Several countries have military operations under way around Syria, with forces on the ground or launching strikes from the air or from ships in the Mediterranean. In some cases, those countries are backing opposing sides in the Syrian conflict.

Foreign powers involved in the conflict -- including Israel and Russia -- operate hotlines to exchange operational details to avoid one side accidentally attacking the other's forces.

However, diplomats and military experts have warned that the risk of inadvertent strikes is high.

Relations between Russia and Israel have been cordial over the past few years, with Moscow trying to act as a mediator between Israel and its biggest regional adversary, Iran.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was the guest of Russian President Vladimir Putin at a military parade on Moscow's Red Square in May this year.


Thursday, June 28, 2018

How Russia's Military Is Becoming Even Deadlier

Russia's advanced Main Battle Tank the T-14 "ARMATA"

By using Syria as the ultimate battlefield to test new weapons and tactics

by Dave Majumdar

Russia is willing to keep its forces in Syria despite the potential losses incurred because the Kremlin believes that the benefits outweigh the costs. From the Russian perspective, Moscow’s campaign in Syria affords the Kremlin invaluable combat experience that is helping it to refine the capabilities of its military forces.

“The use of our armed forces in combat conditions is a unique experience and a unique tool to improve our armed forces,” Russian president Vladimir Putin said during a televised public question and answer session on June 7. “No exercises can compare with actually using the armed forces in combat conditions.”

Gaining Combat Experience

In the Kremlin’s view, one of the most important reasons for Russia to continue its campaign in Syria is to further refine its newly developed precision-guided strike capability. “Syria is not a shooting range for Russian weapons, but we are still using them there, our new weapons,” Putin said. “This has led to the improvement of modern strike systems, including missile systems. It is one thing to have them, and quite another thing to see how they fare in combat conditions.”

Putin noted that Syria has also proven to be important for Russia’s defense industry—which has gained valuable insights into how the Kremlin’s forces use their hardware in combat. “When we started to use these modern weapons, including missiles, whole teams from our defense industry companies went to Syria, and worked there on-site—it is extremely important for us—to finalise them and figure out what we can count on when using them in combat conditions,” Putin said.

Russia’s Syrian Proving Ground

But Syria has proven to be more than just a proving ground for Russia’s military technology. The Syria campaign has helped Russia to further develop its military leaders and provided its officer corps with actual combat experience. That, in turn, has allowed Russian forces to vastly improve their tactics, techniques and procedures.

“Our commanders – we had a large number of officers and generals go in Syria and take part in these hostilities – began to understand what a modern armed conflict is, how important communication, intelligence, interaction between all-arms units and formations is, how important it is to ensure the effective operation of the aerospace group, aviation, ground forces, including special operations forces,” Putin said. “This has enabled us to take another major step in improving our armed forces.”

Michael Kofman, a senior research scientist at the Center for Naval Analyses specializing in Russian military affairs, noted that the Kremlin’s war in Syria has proven to be invaluable to Moscow as a de facto live-fire training range. “Much of the senior military staff has rotated through Syria, and so has a substantial percentage of the air force,” Kofman said. “Most of the district commanders and combined arms army commanders have spent time on staff in Syria. Syria is now the good war, designed to bloody the Russian armed forces and a sustainable training pipeline for senior officers.”

Indeed, much of the funding for the Kremlin’s Syria campaign is drawn from the Russian military’s training budget. “Money for the war is taken from the combat training part of the military budget,” Vasily Kashin, a senior fellow at the Center for Comprehensive European and International Studies at Moscow's Higher School of Economics, said. “All of the new equipment was combat tested there—even the types not yet approved for serial production, tens of thousands of officers got real combat experience. Spending the same amount of money on training would not get the same results.”

Regarding training and lessons learned, the Russians believe that the war is essentially cost neutral. “Of course, it is extremely important and, in a sense, it is paying for itself,” Kashin said.

Lessons Learned

The most important lesson the Russian military has learned in Syria is the need for airpower to coordinate closely with ground forces. “In Syria, first, the Russian Aerospace Forces learned how to fight, and then increasingly began to learn how to fight in support of ground forces,” Kofman said. “Here special forces units and advisers fought a separate battle, but increasingly they began to integrate air power with ground operations in real time.”

The Russian military also quickly learned the limitations of its sensors and weapons systems. “The Russians quickly figured out that while they had the platforms, their weapons and systems were still inadequate for precision employment,” Kofman said. “The SVP-24 [computerised bomb-sights] added considerable accuracy, but they had to fly too high, and ultimately Russian munitions are far too big for the job. Eventually, the helicopter force came in as one of the few components that has the ability to deliver PGMs [precision-guided munitions] against moving targets.”

While the Syria campaign has exposed weaknesses in Russia’s weapons, sensors, tactics and training, it has also afforded Moscow an opportunity to address those deficiencies. The Russians have made enormous gains in capability since the beginning of their campaign in Syria in 2015. “Over time they refined the recon strike complex, working out the ability to engage targets in near real time,” Kofman said.

The Cost of War

But Russia’s gains in Syria have not come without a price—Moscow has lost both men and material during its intervention in that war-torn nation. Putin acknowledged that Russian forces had lost both troops and equipment during the Kremlin’s intervention in Syria to prop up the Assad regime. “We know that the use of the armed forces in combat conditions means losses,” Putin said. “We will never forget about those losses and will never leave the families of our comrades, who have not returned home from Syria, in trouble.”

Despite the losses, Putin insists that Russian military operations in Syria are needed to secure Moscow’s vital interests in the region. Moreover, while Putin insists that Russia has ceased major combat operations inside Syria, Moscow will not withdraw its forces from the region anytime soon. “Our military is there in order to secure Russia's interests in this vitally important region of the world, which is very close to us, and they will be there as long as it benefits Russia and in pursuance of our international commitments,” Putin said.

Domestic Support for Russia’s Syrian Campaign

Nonetheless, Putin—perhaps cognisant that the Russian population is not onboard with an open-ended commitment in the Middle East—said that Moscow does not intend to remain in Syria permanently. “We are not planning to withdraw those units, but I am drawing your attention to the fact that I did not call these sites bases,” Putin said. “We are not building long-term structures there and can withdraw all of our service members quickly without material loss. So far, they are necessary, they are fulfilling important tasks, including ensuring Russia's security in that region and ensuring our interests in the economic sphere.”

Russia's Next Big Nuclear Missile Submarine Launches Tomorrow

Putin took pains to squarely frame Moscow’s intervention in Syria in terms of direct threats to the Russian homeland. Putin made the case to his people that it is better to fight Islamic extremists from the former Soviet Union’s Central Asian republics in Syria rather than at home in Russia itself. “Let me remind you that thousands of militants, natives of Central Asian countries, with which we have no controlled borders, are massing on Syrian territory,” Putin said. “It was better to deal with them and destroy them over there than confront them with lethal force here.”

Kashin notes that polls show that the Russian population supports the Kremlin’s war in Syria. “In general, a majority of the people support the Syrian campaign,” Kashin said. “But only a minority of people really care about the Syrian campaign.”

Indeed, the percentage of the Russian public that actively takes an interest in the campaign in Syria generally hovers around a fifth of the population. “When something really happens there, there would be some 30 percent of people who are really looking into it,” Kashin said. ”When nothing major happens, it would be only some 20 percent really taking any interest. But among the people who really care about the campaign—which means they spend time reading and watching—support for the war is overwhelming.”

The reason for that support is that those Russians who are paying attention to the campaign believe that it is better for Moscow to fight extremist elements in Syria rather than inside Russia itself. “The explanation that we are killing people who otherwise would come to the former Soviet territories sounds logical,” Kashin said.

Is Syria Really One of Russia’s Vital Interests?

While the Kremlin might claim that its campaign in Syria is of vital interest to Russia, there is room for considerable skepticism. “On balance, the Russian leadership sees Syria as an important campaign, and of strategic value in terms of interaction with the United States,” Kofman said. “However, it is not a vital interest. If it was, Putin would not be emphasizing how quickly they're positioned to leave. On the contrary, Moscow is keeping a close eye on how much they're leveraged into this conflict, and making sure there is nothing there that cannot be withdrawn on short notice.”

Ultimately, Russia is willing to stay the course in Syria so long as the Kremlin reaps more benefits than it incurs costs. For now, the Kremlin’s campaign in Syria is reaping Moscow impressive benefits as a live-fire training ground where Russian forces can test their men and material in a real war while incurring minimal risks. Thus, it is an opportunity for Russia to refine not only its military technology but also its tactics, techniques and procedures under real operational conditions. And as such, Syria is invaluable for the Russian military to gain combat experience while the Kremlin struggles to rebuild Russia as a great power capable of competing head-to-head with the United States.


Monday, May 28, 2018

26 Syrian Regime, Nine Russia Fighters Killed In Is Attack: Monitor


The Russian military is backing Syria's army with air strikes and troops, but there are also widespread reports of private Russian mercenaries on the ground

BEIRUT: At least 26 Syrian regime forces and nine Russian fighters were killed in an Islamic State group attack earlier this week in Syria's eastern desert, a monitor said today.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the jihadists had targeted a group of Syrian and allied Russian fighters near the town of Mayadeen in Deir Ezzor province on Wednesday.

"There were 35 pro-government forces killed, including at least nine Russians. Some of those Russian nationals were government troops, but not all of them," said Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman.

The remaining 26 were all Syrian forces, he told AFP.

The Russian military is backing Syria's army with air strikes and troops, but there are also widespread reports of private Russian mercenaries on the ground.

The defence ministry in Moscow said Sunday four Russian servicemen had been killed in clashes with militants in Deir Ezzor.

It did not give a date or precise location, but the Observatory said it was the same incident as the IS attack near Mayadeen.

Two of the servicemen were "military advisors commanding the Syrian artillery" and were killed on the spot, the defence ministry said.

It said two more Russian soldiers died later in a Russian military hospital following the fighting. Three other troops were wounded. The ministry said the fighting lasted around an hour and left 43 militants dead.


Thursday, May 17, 2018

Russian Air Defences Were Beaten Badly By Israeli Forces In Syria - Here Are Its Excuses

Pantsir and S 400 in Syria

  • Moscow offered two explanations on Monday as to why Russian-made Pantsir S-1 missile defence system took a direct hit during an Israeli airstrike last week.
  • "One is that it had already used up its ammunition reserve," Aytech Bizhev, the former deputy commander-in-chief of the Russian Air Force, said, according to RT. "The other is that it was simply turned off; it wasn't battle ready."
  • Whatever the reason, the incident wasn't good advertising for the Russian system.

Moscow offered two explanations on Monday as to why its Russian-made Pantsir S-1 missile defence system embarrassingly took a direct hit during an Israeli airstrike last week.

"One is that it had already used up its ammunition reserve," Aytech Bizhev, the former deputy commander-in-chief of the Russian Air Force, said, according to RT. "The other is that it was simply turned off; it wasn't battle ready."

Israeli fighter jets struck dozens of Iranian military sites in Syria last Thursday, killing at least 23 people, including 5 Syrian soldiers. Israel said it launched the attack after Iranian forces fired 20 rockets towards the Golan Heights on Wednesday, some of which were shot down.

But the day before that attack, Israel had also struck near the Syrian capital of Damascus, shortly after they determined "abnormal movements of Iranian forces" in Syria, and President Donald Trump announced the US would pull out of the Iran nuclear deal.


As for the destruction of the Pantsir S-1, there "can be no third option as it wouldn't have let itself to be destroyed," Bizhev said. "When it's battle-ready it performs constant surveillance of enemy aircraft and has a very fast reaction time. It would've brought down those cruise missiles with either its cannons or own missiles."

A retired Russian colonel, Mikhail Khodorenok, also said that the Pantsir S-1 wasn't camouflaged, which means that it "wasn't ready for engagement," adding that the incident doesn't "question the [system's] high combat capabilities," RT reported.

Nevertheless, there are other possible reasons as to how the Pantsir S-1 took a direct hit.

It could be that its radar was turned off in order to avoid anti-radiation missiles (it was likely hit by a Delilah anti-radar cruise missile), or it could be that the Syrian regime operators simply bungled.

Bizhev said that the Israeli jets had a geographic advantage in that they fired their missiles "without entering the [Syrian] air defense area," approaching "at low altitudes [and] then bounced from behind the Golan Heights, carried out the attack and left," RT reported.

The Pantsir S-1 "requires between three to five minutes to go operational," Bizhev also said, adding that it's exhausting for the crew to keep the system on at all times.

But questions remain.

For example, why was the system turned off and not strategically placed or camouflaged given that there had been back-and-forth strikes in the previous two days?

Also, did the Pantsir S-1 run out of ammunition before the strike or during it? The latter doesn't seem to jive with Russia's excuses, given that it wasn't camouflaged and turned off. The former also appears strange considering that the operators would want a loaded system since Israel and Iranian forces had been trading strikes.

Whatever the reason as to how the Pantsir S-1 took a direct hit, it wasn't good advertising for the Russian system at a time when Moscow heavily depends on foreign military sales to boost its flagging economy.

Source>>

Thursday, May 10, 2018

Iran Targets Israeli Bases Across Syrian Frontier, Israel Pounds Syria


The attack on the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, just past midnight, marked the first time Iranian forces have hit Israel from Syria

JERUSALEM/BEIRUT: Iranian forces in Syria launched a rocket attack on Israeli army bases in the Golan Heights early on Thursday, Israel said, prompting one of the heaviest Israeli barrages in Syria since the conflict there began in 2011.

The attack on the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, just past midnight, marked the first time Iranian forces have hit Israel from Syria, where they have deployed along with Iran-backed Shi'ite militias and Russian troops to support President Bashar al-Assad in the civil war.

Syrian state media said dozens of Israeli missiles hit a radar station, Syrian air defence positions and an ammunition dump, underscoring the risks of a wider escalation involving Iran and its regional allies.

Israel said 20 Iranian Grad and Fajr rockets were shot down by its Iron Dome air defence system or fell short of the Golan targets. The Quds Force, an external arm of Iran's Revolutionary Guards, carried out the launch, Israel said.

"It was commanded and ordered by (Quds Force chief General) Qassem Soleimani and it has not achieved its purpose," military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Jonathan Conricus told reporters.

Israel struck back by destroying dozens of Iranian military sites in Syria, Conricus said, as well as Syrian anti-aircraft units that tried unsuccessfully to shoot down Israeli planes.

"We do not know yet the (Iranian) casualty count," he said.

"But I can say that in terms of our purpose, we focused less on personnel and more on capabilities and hardware ... to inflict long-term damage on the Iranian military establishment in Syria. We assess it will take substantial time to replenish."

'RIGHT DECISION' 

The Israelis fear that Iran and its Lebanese guerrilla ally Hezbollah are turning Syria into a new front against them. Israel says its occasional strikes in Syria aim to foil that.

Iran vowed retaliation after a suspected Israeli air strike last month killed seven of its military personnel in a Syrian air base.

Israel regards Iran as its biggest threat, and has repeatedly targeted Iranian forces and allied militia in Syria.

Expectations of a regional flare-up were stoked by U.S. President Donald Trump's announcement on Tuesday that he was withdrawing from the Iranian nuclear deal. Hours later, Israeli rocket rockets targeted a military base in Kisweh, a commander in the pro-Syrian government regional alliance said.

That attack killed 15 people, including eight Iranians, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, though the commander said there were no casualties. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied responsibility.

The Trump administration cast its hard tack against the Iranian nuclear deal as a response, in part, to Tehran's military interventions in the region.

The Golan flare-up with Israel "is just further demonstration that the Iranian regime cannot be trusted and another good reminder that the president made the right decision to get out of the Iran deal," White House press secretary Sarah Sanders told Fox News.

RUSSIA WARNED 

The tensions worry Russia, which wants to stabilise Syria.

Thursday's flare-up came hours after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu returned from a visit to Moscow, where he discussed Syria concerns with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Conricus said Israel forewarned Russia of its strikes on Thursday, which Syrian state media first reported hit Baath City in Quneitra, near the border. Further waves of missiles followed. Syrian state media said Israeli missiles had been brought down over Damascus, Homs and Sueida.

"Air defences confronted tens of Israeli rockets and some of them reached their target and destroyed one of the radar sites," Syrian state news agency SANA reported, citing a military source. Another rocket hit an ammunition warehouse, it said. 

Syrian state television was broadcasting footage of its air defences firing, and playing patriotic songs. Damascus residents described explosions in the sky from air defence systems.

Israeli media said residents of Metulla, on the Lebanese border, had been instructed to go to bomb shelters. There was no official confirmation.

Lebanon's National News Agency reported Israeli jets circling over Lebanese territory early on Thursday before exiting.


Thursday, April 26, 2018

Russia Widens EW War, ‘Disabling’ EC-130s In Syria

EC-130 Compass Call electronic warfare aircraft

GEOINT: The Compass Call is supposed to be one of America’s foremost electronic warfare weapons, but the EC-130s flying near Syria are being attacked and disabled “in the most aggressive EW environment on the planet,” the head of Special Operations Command said here today.

“Right now in Syria we are operating in the most aggressive EW environment on the planet from our adversaries. They are testing us everyday, knocking our communications down, disabling our EC-130s, etcetera,” Gen. Raymond Thomas told an audience of some 2,000 intelligence professionals.

While, for obvious reasons, we don’t know many details about the nature of the attacks on the EC-130s, we do know the Russians have done what one EW expert called a “good job” in several recent conflicts using EW. And the Russians are in force in Syria and provide most of the gear used by the Syrian military.

“The Russians have redone and reengineered their entire EW fleet in the last 20 years,” notes Laurie Moe Buckhout, a retired Army colonel who specializes in EW. After the Russians attacked Georgia, they concluded they needed to upgrade their EW capabilities, she says. “The Russians put in millions on upgrades after Georgia. They’ve ended up with killer capabilities, jamming in a multitude of frequencies for hundreds of kilometers.”

She also notes that the Russians may not have gone head to head against the EC-130s EW attack capabilities. They may have taken the much easier route of interfering with the Position, Navigation and Timing (PNT) or their communications gear, making it more difficult to fly the aircraft since crews would have had to rely on maps, line of sight and other techniques.

“The problem the EC-130s have is that, while they are jamming, the crews aren’t doing much else,” making them more vulnerable to attacks, she says. “They could have gone after the PNT or the comms.” The Russians “know all of our vulnerabilities.”

There are other problems US forces must cope with, says Loren Thompson, a well known defence consultant: “We’ve spent so much time fighting enemies in Southwest Asia who were technically unsophisticated that we are not up to speed on tactical electronic warfare.” Buckhout said Thompson has a point.


Sunday, April 15, 2018

India Distances Itself From Military Strikes In Syria


India over decades has advocated policy of non interference in internal affairs of a sovereign nation and called for dialogue to address all situations.

India on Saturday distanced itself from the military strikes in Syria and called for dialogue and negotiations, and on the basis of the principles of the UN Charter and in accordance with international law.

Responding to queries regarding the recent strikes in Syria, MEA Spokesperson said: "We have taken note of the recent strikes in Syria. India is closely following the situation. The alleged use of chemical weapons, if true, is deplorable. We call for an impartial and objective investigation by the OPCW to establish the facts."

"In the meantime, we urge all Parties to show restraint and to avoid any further escalation in the situation. The matter should be resolved through dialogue and negotiations, and on the basis of the principles of the UN Charter and in accordance with international law. We hope that the long drawn suffering of the people of Syria would come to an end soon," the spokesperson noted while making it clear that India doesn't favour military strikes in Syria.

India over decades has advocated policy of non interference in internal affairs of a sovereign nation and called for dialogue to address all situations.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has lambasted Western strikes in Syria and described it as an act of aggression even as his American counterpart described it as mission accomplished. Russia even claimed that Syrian air defences shot down 71 of the 103 missiles shot by USA, UK & France against chemical weapons complexes in Syria.

Russian government sources appreciated India's position on the military strikes in Syria.


Syria Says Western Attack 'Doomed To Fail: State Media


Syrian state media accused Western powers of trying to hinder the investigation with their attack

DAMASCUS, SYRIA: Syrian state media slammed Western strikes on Saturday as illegal and "doomed to fail," after the US, France, and Britain launched a joint operation against the Damascus government.

"The aggression is a flagrant violation of international law, a breach of the international community's will, and it is doomed to fail," said state news agency SANA.

Huge blasts were reported around Damascus early on Saturday, moments after the US, France, and Britain announced they were striking Syria's chemical weapons capabilities.

AFP's correspondent in Damascus said several consecutive blasts were heard at 4:00 am local time (0100 GMT), followed by the sound of aircraft overhead. Smoke could be seen emerging from the northern and eastern edges of the capital.

SANA reported that the joint operation was targeting military installations around Damascus and near the central city of Homs.

It said three civilians were wounded in the Homs attacks but did not give a toll for Damascus or mention any combatant casualties.

Several missiles hit a research centre in Barzeh, north of Damascus, "destroying a building that included scientific labs and a training centre," SANA reported.

State media published images of a cloud of reddish smoke hanging over the capital and said that air defences were activated to block the attack.

But it said skies were clear over Aleppo in the north, Hasakeh in the northeast, and Latakia and Tartus along the western coast, where key Syrian and Russian military installations are located.

The joint operation came one week after a suspected chemical attack on an opposition-controlled town outside Damascus left more than 40 people dead.

Western powers blamed President Bashar al-Assad, but Syria and its ally Russia categorically denied the claims and accused the West of "fabricating" the incident to justify military action.

The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons was set to begin its investigation inside the Eastern Ghouta town of Douma on Saturday, just hours after the strikes.

Syrian state media accused Western powers of trying to hinder the investigation with their attack. 

"The three aggressors preempted the OPCW's mission in Ghouta, with the aim of hiding their lie," SANA said on Saturday.


Friday, March 16, 2018

Russia’s Next-Generation S-500 SAM Enters Production

The S-400 is currently Russia's most capable SAM system, with a battery deployed to Syria (illustrated). The S-500 system offers improved range and capability against stealthy aircraft and ballistic missiles

Combat vehicles of the Almaz-Antey Air and Space Defense Corporation’s S-500 Prometei (Prometheus) next-generation surface-to-air missile (SAM) system have entered production at the manufacturer’s newly constructed plant in Nizhny Novgorod. Russian media also reports that another new manufacturing site, in Kirov, commenced manufacture of advanced missiles for that system.

The S-500 represents a next step in the evolution of long-range Russian SAMs after the S-400 Triumf that became operational 11 years ago. Although its development and firing trials have proceeded more slowly than initially expected, Russian defense minister Sergei Shoigu expects deliveries to commence in 2020. Funding for the acquisition is provided in the State Armament Program 2018-2027 signed by President Putin earlier this year.

Although the S-500 makes use of the same wheeled chassis and can employ several types of missiles developed for its predecessor, it is a generation ahead of it, according to Almaz-Antey general designer Pavel Sozinov. He attributed the newer system to the fifth generation of Russian rocketry. In terms of design solutions, the S-500 is “completely different” from the S-400, as more focus has been paid to automation. Besides, it comes with two cores, one specialized in engaging ballistic targets and the other tailored for aerodynamic ones. The first employs the 77N6 kinetic interceptor family.

Against aerodynamic targets the system can use the 48N6 family of missiles with a launch mass of about two tons and an effective range of up to 130 nm (240 kilometers) as well as the more recent 40N6 with higher performance. Optimized for shorter ranges, the 9M96 and 9M100 families are smaller, weighing 530 pounds (240 kg) and upwards.

Compared to the S-400 system, the maximum firing range of the S-500 is increased from 215 to 324 nm (400 to 600 km). It can simultaneously shoot at multiple targets, including cruise missiles travelling at speeds of up to Mach 5. The S-500 can detect a ballistic missile at a distance of up to 1,080 nm (2,000 kilometers) and hit it at altitudes of up to 130,000 to 165,000 feet (40,000 to 50,000 meters). It can engage incoming ballistic missile travelling at speeds of up to six kilometers per second.

In the global market for weapons, the S-500 challenges the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) from Lockheed-Martin. “We are trying to considerably surpass” the U.S. system in performance, Sozimov said.


Thursday, March 15, 2018

Israel Concerned Over Su-57 Debut In Syria


by Arie Egozi

Tel Aviv: Russia's surprise deployment of Sukhoi Su-57s to a base inside Syria has positioned its new stealth fighter within the same region of operations as the Israeli air force's Lockheed Martin F-35I.

Video footage appearing to show Su-57s arriving in Syria was confirmed by pictures captured by an Israeli imaging satellite. The new type's deployment marks the peak of Moscow's direct intervention so far in Syria's long-running civil war.

Israeli sources assess that Russia has sent dozens of new weapon systems to Syria, to undergo testing under combat conditions. But the Su-57's arrival – which places two of the world's most advanced stealth combat aircraft within close proximity – creates a unique situation.

While Israel has not reacted officially to the development, a senior source says there is no doubt that Moscow has sent its newest fighter to the region in order to test it against Western technologies.

In mid-February, the biennial "Juniper Cobra" exercise, which also involves US forces, began in Israel. The three-week activity is aimed at improving the nation's defences against ballistic missile threats, using a scenario where US assets are deployed to provide assistance.

The exercise creates a situation where a large number of advanced radars are looking at the airspace across the region, making the Su-57's arrival of particular interest.

Russia claims to have developed a new radar system that can detect stealth aircraft, but sources suggest that the Sunflower system may lack the fidelity required to support targeting by missiles.

Syrian reports indicate that the Israeli air force is flying over the country on a daily basis using manned and unmanned platforms, and also striking targets. Moscow's new deployment – made two weeks after a border clash during which an Iranian-operated stealth unmanned air vehicle and an Israeli Lockheed F-16 were shot down – means the "hotline" established to deconflict the movements of Russian and Israeli aircraft will become more critical.


Friday, February 9, 2018

Al-Qaeda Still Going Strong As ISIS Crumbles: UN Report


Coalition forces advance as they take part in an operation against Islamic State

UNITED NATIONS: Al-Qaeda's global network remains "remarkably resilient," posing more of a threat in some regions than the Islamic State group, UN sanctions monitors said in a report today.

The report sent to the Security Council said that Al- Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), based in Yemen, served as a communications hub for the UN-designated terror group as a whole.

"Al-Qaeda affiliates remain the dominant terror threat in some regions, such as Somalia and Yemen, a fact demonstrated by a continuous stream of attacks and foiled operations," said the report.

In West Africa and South Asia, Al-Qaeda-linked groups pose as serious a threat as IS affiliates who "currently remain unable to reach a dominant position," it said.

UN member-states however see potential for linkups between Al-Qaeda and IS groups to support each other, warning that in some regions this could be a new threat, the report said.

The Islamic State lost its self-declared caliphate in Syria and Iraq last year but Al-Qaeda "remained remarkably resilient," said the UN monitors.

In Syria, the Al-Nusrah Front "remains one of the strongest and largest Al-Qaeda affiliates globally," with its fighters "using threats, violence and material incentives" to absorb smaller armed groups.

Al-Nusrah commands between 7,000 and 11,000 fighters, including several thousand foreigners, and has its main power base in Syria's Idlib province.

In Libya, IS remains intent on regaining a foothold following the loss of Sirte and has reinforced its presence with fighters returning from Iraq and Syria, the report said.

Fighters from Boko Haram, which has expanded its reach from northern Nigeria, are maintaining small cells in Libya who could then move on to other regional countries.

"Member-states assessed that there is a potential for the transfer of leaders from ISIL in Libya to other conflict zones in West Africa and the Sahel region, including Mali," said the report.