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Thread: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

  1. #1121
    empr guy's Avatar Praefectus
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    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    by disckish I mean they promised the kurds they would stop the city from falling when they had no intention to and their treatment of people at the border (preventing them from going into syria excessive tear gas etc). I don;t think you can blame people for wanting to defend their homes, maybe not smart but understandable.


    And I'd argue the kurds in syria are different then the kurds in turkey but at this point syria looks god forsaken yes (it even spawned the ISIS which is pretty good evidence imho)
    odi et amo quare id faciam fortasse requiris / nescio sed fieri sentio et excrucior


  2. #1122

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    I don't remember such a promise, and borders are not free highway, not everyone can pass whenever they want, we allowed the refugees because of humanitarian reasons, that should be enough.

  3. #1123

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    https://now.mmedia.me/lb/en/reportsf...e-kobane-kurds
    The following is an interview NOW conducted with Abu Saif, the field commander of Raqqa's Revolutionaries Brigades, which is now stationed in Kobane, fighting alongside the People’s Protection Units (YPG) militias of the Democratic Union Party (PYD) of Syrian Kurdistan. Although not much-discussed in the international press coverage of Kobane, the FSA’s participation in this anti-ISIS campaign illuminates just how isolated indigenous Syrian forces are in combating a transnational terrorist army.

    (Note: ISIS is referred to throughout this interview by its widely used epithet, Daesh.)

    NOW: How many men did you have in Kobane fighting alongside YPG militias?

    Abu Saif: We had 1,250, but now the force is down to 300 only.

    NOW: And why did they leave?

    Abu Saif: When we withdrew from Raqqa, after Daesh overtook the city, and went to Kobane, we were a force of about 1,250 fighters. Unfortunately, we had to turn away a lot of these guys because we could not feed them or provide them with ammunition. So we sent some of them across the border to Turkey to take jobs there.

    NOW: Why haven't we seen more about the role you're playing in Kobane?

    Abu Saif: The PR capacity of the Revolutionary Brigades is not that great. However, more importantly, we think of this battle -- we're not just fighting there to support the Kurds. This is also Syrian land, regardless of who populates that city, and it's being attacked by Daesh. So it is our duty to defend it. We also had a more conservative approach to Daesh. We did not pay a lot of attention to the media aspect because, as you know, a lot of people have turned that into a business. They'd carry out an operation, film it, and upload it to YouTube to receive assistance. We don't engage in that as often as other groups. We only advertise some of our operations, but it's not done in a very organized fashion.

    [After this interview was conducted, Abu Saif sent me the above video, purportedly showing Raqqa’s Revolutionaries Brigades' operations in Kobane.]

    NOW: In the past, the FSA has fought the YPG, often alongside Daesh. Is this cooperation with the Kurds just a tactical maneuver, or can you envision a long-term strategic partnership?

    Abu Saif: Initially, we started out actually fighting against the YPG or the PYD, and then when Daesh moved on Raqqa, we stopped fighting against the YPG and shifted into fighting Daesh. Then Daesh pushed us out of Raqqa and we had to withdraw from the city and into the northern suburbs of Raqqa, which are close to Kobane. There was a sort of cease-fire or truce between the FSA and the YPG. Ahrar al-Sham played a role in that cease-fire. And so we were on board with the cease-fire. It was for six months. We reached out to the Kurds and we became friends. Then we withdrew even further into Kobane itself. The YPG were fighting Daesh, so we were forced into an alliance with the YPG. We had nowhere else to go. Daesh were surrounding us on all sides, except of course behind us was the YPG. As the Arabic proverb goes, "the enemy of my enemy is my friend."

    NOW: Can you see the YPG joining the FSA, as both Turkey and the United States seem to want?

    Abu Saif: I don't think the PYD will give up its identity and bundle itself into the FSA. However, in Kobane, our brigade received an offer from the Kurds to have the PYD to join with them and fight under the FSA banner. This might make it more amenable for the Turks to come to Kobane's rescue. This is still in the negotiations phase, no final decisions have been made.

    NOW: You’re in Kobane now. Can you describe conditions in the city? What part is invaded by Daesh, what part is being held by the YPG/FSA?

    Abu Saif: The situation right now is quite miserable. Unfortunately, we had to withdraw at least half of our men. In fact, the situation was quite bad even months ago when we were still fighting Daesh in the suburbs of Rae. No one gave us anti-tank weapons. We had RPGs, but Daesh relied on heavily armored vehicles, after the capture of Mosul.

    When Daesh pushed against Kobane, the situation became even worse. We asked for assistance, but no one gave us anything. There were no anti-tank weapons. When Daesh breached the defenses and made their way into the city, the fighting became street-to-street. We decided we had to withdraw at least half of our forces to save their lives.

    The day before yesterday, Daesh was in control of half of Kobane. However, before we withdrew, we — meaning my brigade and the YPG — planted car bombs, booby-traps and also bombs in some of the houses inside the city itself. So when Daesh took over that portion of the city, there were a number of explosions that came as a surprise to them. Because of that, we were able to push them back to the outskirts of the city. Now they're on the outskirts of Kobane.

    NOW: We know why Turkey isn't allowing warms to the PYD, but why aren't they giving you any?

    Abu Saif: At the end of the day, any weapons that came to us would benefit the PYD, and the Turks don't want that. I am struggling for words right now. When we were in Raqqa, we used to receive assistance from Turkey. These Kurds are also Syrians, and at the end of the day, they are fighting for their land, their women, their children. It’s not as if we are committing a crime here. The international community must come to our aid.
    Lies Mr. Abu Saif!! I tell you that you are a PKK terrorist even if you are an ethnic Arab in the ranks of the FSA!!

    But we all know that Turkey dropped the support to the FSA in northern Syria when it proved ineffective and unwilling to suppress the Kurdish cantons, Abu Saif you haven't realized yet that Turkey firstly tried to use you as a proxy to fight against the Kurds and then has thrown away you as a used towel.

  4. #1124
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    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    Booby Traps?

  5. #1125

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worl...ueeacE7WTMkvzv

    Livefeed back up.

    Tawheed flags in East Center, South, and North. Low key fighting can be heard in the western part. IS is tweeting is appreciation to USAF for accidentally bombing YPG positions again and helping them clear the remaining resistance out.

    YPG/PKK keep popping out of spider holes, emulating the Taliban tactics in Helmand Province during the British Campaign to expel them. But ISA while suffering more causalities is taking less time to clear the resistance than the British Army that utterly botched that campaign and reverted to WW1 trench tactics till the USMC bailed them out. IS is also letting Kurdish Refugees in Turkey and those who fled into IS held territory know its safe to return to their villages, calls on YPG/PKK fighters in Turkey and elsewhere not in combat with ISA to surrender and repent before they get ahold of them after which it will be too late. Sexist recommendation to YPJ to return to the kitchen, Masjid, child rearing, and niqab.

    More pictures of ISA burning drugs, booze, cigarettes, porn, and a taped confession of a YPJ soldier (taken down by youtube) who states under obvious duress that YPJ is a sham, they serve as sex slaves to the men and human shields so the men can escape, states she is repenting, calls upon the other YPJ fighters to give up and repent, yada yada, you know how these videos go generally now.

    Basically at this point ISA is sacking Kobane.
    Well look at this here, a brewing free-for-all in Western Horn of Africa. What could possibly go wrong...

  6. #1126

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    Quote Originally Posted by Visna View Post
    Why should they negotiate peace with someone who seems to be quite pleased with watching them getting killed?
    Why Turkey should negotiate with someone who continues to kill Turkish citizens, burn schools, burn and loot malls, burn vehicles, burn ambulances? Other than that Ayn al-Arab is not Turkish soil, Turkey has no commintment to defend it. Alas, PKK and its Syrian branch do threaten Turkey if Turkey military intervene.

    Quote Originally Posted by Visna
    At best Turkey is just using this as some sort of bargaining chip to get concessions, but it comes with the risk of pissing them off so much that negotiations fail completely. So Turkey will end up having either even more angry Kurds or violent Jihadists to deal with right next door. Good luck with that.
    I agree Turkey using it as some sort of bargaining chip to get concessions. Classic PKK/YPG reply of this bargaining is the terror campaign in Turkey as it is happening right now. Because of that I said they are not a reliable partner to talk the peace progress. The Turkish state should continue the peace progress without them. However, I believe Turkish public sees that peace progress as giving in face of terrorism, and any party who support the peace progress will lose vote. I think Turkish society are fed up with pro-PK Kurds. I predict there will rise of votes for Nationalistic parties. I predict angry Turks will start to defence their lives and their goods from the pro-PKK rioters. The pro-PKK Kurds are not aware that they have been talking with the most un-nationalist government since 1920s.

    It is not Turkey's interest of having a ISIS at border and/or an PKK statelet at border. It is inevitable that Turkey will face angry pro-PKK Kurds and angry Jihadists (and pro-ISIS scum). The question is not if, but when. Yes, I agree Turkey needs luck, lot of luck.

    Quote Originally Posted by empr guy
    So every kurd that defends their home against trash like ISIS is now a terrorist? And they're the ones that aren't serious about peace?
    No, only PKK/YPG are terrorists. Others are Arabs, Kurds, Turkmens, Yezidis who defend their home against ISIS. It is not ISIS is killing Turkish citizens, it is PKK has been killing Turkish citizens. Hence, why Turkey considers PKK is a threat at least on level of ISIS.

    Quote Originally Posted by Principe Alessandro
    I wonder why do you bother to tell the same lies that your political class is propagandizing, even the FSA fighters allied with YPG trapped in Kobane are some sort of kryptoPKK terrorists?
    Now, it is time to personal insults? I do not lie. If I do make a mistake I own my mistake and apoligise. I try to be honest.

    About the FSA fighters in Ayn al-Arab, we have only a youtube video you posted. I think we need more source on them. For example about their ethnic composition and how many are they. Personally, I have only pity for them; for bleeding their lives for a partner who have done nothing to their arch enemy: Assad. For PKK/YPG supporters it is clear where I stand, and what I think about them.

    Quote Originally Posted by Principe Alessandro
    What about the possibility that the shooting was carried by islamist Kurds? Erdogan had no shame in supporting even al-Nusra in order to destroy the Kurdish cantons in Syria, I bet that he is doing the same in Turkey.
    No. They are PKK scum. Understand this clearly; those people who attack Turkish military, police, civilians are PKK scum. Your second sentence is an opinion yourself and your third sentence is unrealistic. Because it is PKK scum who are attacking. In some Kurdish neighbors it is enough to be killed if you have a beard. Alas, I fear angry Turks and Kurds will start reprisal attacks against pro-PKK scum and there will be bloodbath.

    Quote Originally Posted by Vanoi
    And for the fifth time, Kobani is just a town. People seem to forget about the dozens of villages the ISIS take over around kobane.

    To say all the civilians have fled to Turkey is ridiculous. There are numerous reports of civilians still in the area of kobane and in the town itself.
    If there is left any civilian already not fled to Turkey it should be his decision to stay. I do not believe Turkey has any obligation to help stupid people especialy he is citizen of another country and he is out of Turkish borders.

    Quote Originally Posted by Vanoi
    I don't think you speak for the Turkish public.

    And if anything the last two days have shown Turkey cares more about pride than peace. If i was a Kurd and i watched as my government sit by and did nothing to help the people in Kobane and I would be pretty pissed off too.

    Don't try and claim the people protesting are all pro-PKK. Manty kurds just hate the Turkish government for its inaction regarding kobane.

    I got a good question wolf. Visnia already mentioned it. If i was a PKK kurd, why would i want peace with the government that seems content or even supportive of seeing my people being killed?
    Right, I can not speak for the Turkish public, but only for myself. I consider myself liberal and open minded. I care for ordinary people. What I do not care about the baby killers and supporters of them. If I think such about these events, you can understand the reaction of ordinary people here.

    Turkey, as any state, care about her interests. It is her right. And she has no moral obligation other than help in humane help.

    The mentality of pro-PKK Kurds right now is seeing and watching the dissolution of their far reached dreams. This is what feeds their rage now.

    I claim the people protesting in Turkey are all pro-PKK Kurds. Heck, there are also many Turks just hate Turkish government. But those protests are not againsts to the government, they are against the state and Turks. Those burning flags, burning statues of Atatürk, burning ambulances are slaps to face of Turkish state and people.

    Many (I say majority of) Turks and Kurds do not want to enter Syria problem, let alone to against an action about Ayn al-Arab.

    As you said if I can not speak for Turkish public, twice I can not speak for pro-PKK kurds. Therefore I do not want to comment on it. I can only say that I do not want to live with pro-PKK kurds at the same country. I do not want them in my country. I do not want to the state give them in.
    Last edited by Aikanár; October 10, 2014 at 03:12 PM. Reason: insulting others
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  7. #1127

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    Quote Originally Posted by white-wolf View Post
    Now, it is time to personal insults? I do not lie. If I do make a mistake I own my mistake and apoligise. I try to be honest.

    About the FSA fighters in Ayn al-Arab, we have only a youtube video you posted. I think we need more source on them. For example about their ethnic composition and how many are they. Personally, I have only pity for them; for bleeding their lives for a partner who have done nothing to their arch enemy: Assad. For PKK/YPG supporters it is clear where I stand, and what I think about them.
    How it is an insult to say that you are repeating the same lies of your politicians?

    YPG and the other Kurdish groups are currently totally neutral regarding the civil war between Assad regime and the rebels, they clashed with whoever dared to exploit their territory. It is their right to stay out of this civil war since they have nothing to gain in helping one of the warring parties. With ISIS it is totally different, both the FSA and the YPG have the strategic interest to ally themselves since ISIS is an enemy to both of them.

    Those FSA fighters found refuge in the Kobane canton after being pushed by ISIS from Raqqah.
    No. They are PKK scum. Understand this clearly; those people who attack Turkish military, police, civilians are PKK scum. Your second sentence is an opinion yourself and your third sentence is unrealistic. Because it is PKK scum who are attacking. In some Kurdish neighbors it is enough to be killed if you have a beard. Alas, I fear angry Turks and Kurds will start reprisal attacks against pro-PKK scum and there will be bloodbath.
    I don't know how much truth it holds but in other forums some Kurds claimed that Hizbullah members were openly carrying firearms and the security forces did nothing to stop them or they were even complicit in cracking down pro-PKK kurds, and I bet that Faildogan has no shame in supporting them same as he supported the most hardcore islamists among the Syrian rebels.
    Last edited by Principe Alessandro; October 10, 2014 at 07:38 AM.

  8. #1128

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    A hint, don't believe what Kurds say in internet, its %90 propaganda.

    Its largely pro-pkk people themselves that is attacking Hizbullah, or anyone with beard, majority of those who are killed in clashes are Hizbullah as far as I know. they say some are burned, some are killed by smashing their heads with rocks.

    Hizbullah is just a small minority among Kurds anyway, only have significiant presence in several cities.

    Ak-47s are very cheap and easy to find in east, many people have them in their house.
    Last edited by Tureuki; October 10, 2014 at 07:54 AM.

  9. #1129

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    Ah, Tureuki beat me.

    Ironic part is ISIS declared Turkish (actually Kurdish) Hizbullah, aka HüdaPar, as infidels. Methinks, they are another channel that pro-PKK kurds emptying their rage of their sinking dreams of Greater Kurdistan or their inability to create and defend a communist Kurdish heaven.
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  10. #1130

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    Actually they are from KRG so in reality they have no connection with PKK.

  11. #1131

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    An article that sums the costs of pro-PKK riots to Turkey.

    Turkey’s interior minister has presented the grave cost of recent violence in Turkey, noting that 31 people have been killed in armed clashes between protesters demonstrating in solidarity with the Syrian border town of Kobane and groups opposing them since Oct. 7.

    More than 1,000 people were being held in custody as of Oct. 10, Efkan Ala added.

    “Since Tuesday [Oct. 7], 35 provinces have been affected by these incidents. In these incidents, 31 people have unfortunately lost their lives. Most of these people lost their lives during violent actions between opposing groups,” Ala told reporters at a press conference on Oct. 10.

    He was speaking after two police officers were killed and a police chief was seriously wounded in an attack in the eastern Anatolian province of Bingöl late on Oct. 9.

    “Five terrorists who launched the attack in Bingöl last night were killed,” Ala said, noting that militants involved in another attack in Diyarbakır were also captured.

    Some 139 security officers, 125 of whom are police officers and five of whom are gendarmerie officers, have been wounded, Ala said, noting that 351 people have been wounded in total.

    “Of those people who imposed vandalism in our country during these incidents, 1,024 have been taken under custody and 58 have been arrested. Investigations about the others are still underway,” he said.

    More than 1,100 buildings, including 212 school buildings, 67 police department buildings, 25 district governor offices, 29 political party buildings, blood donation centers belonging to the Turkish Red Crescent Society (Kızılay), 780 municipality buildings and more than 1,100 municipality vehicles, ambulances and police vehicles have been vandalized during the clashes, Ala said.
    An article from Guardian by Huge Pope: Why Syria’s disaster threatens a war in Turkey (I think a balanced article).

    Turkey feels as if it’s reliving an old nightmare. Each morning television presenters and newspaper headlines glumly round up news from the Islamic State (Isis) siege of the Syrian Kurdish town Kobani, and its spillover into Turkey. three Riots, tear gas, and live fire this week have killed more than 20 people in cities in Turkey’s Kurdish south-east. There have been multiple arson attacks on cars, buses and trucks, ethnic tensions, street corner nationalist gangs, curfews and armed troop deployments unseen since the miserable years of all-out Turkish Kurd insurgency in the 1990s.
    At the same time politicians have begun shrilly pouring doubt on the vital, nine-year-old peace process between the Turkish government and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) insurgents. This reached an apex of absurd conspiracy when both sides began labelling each other as being “the same” as Isis, a group which is actually their mutual enemy.

    ....
    Last edited by white-wolf; October 10, 2014 at 08:18 AM.
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  12. #1132

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    Quote Originally Posted by white-wolf View Post
    An article that sums the costs of pro-PKK riots to Turkey.



    An article from Guardian by Huge Pope: Why Syria’s disaster threatens a war in Turkey (I think a balanced article).
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  13. #1133

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    Quote Originally Posted by TWmodding View Post
    So set aside the diffrences and help your enemy, he wil become your friend.
    Too much blood spilled by these sub humans, unlike ISIS vermin which did not kill one Turkish citizen yet.


    Quote Originally Posted by Principe Alessandro
    Actually they are from KRG so in reality they have no connection with PKK.
    Are you sure? This picture is from Ayn al-Arab



    This picture is YPG leader Salih Muslim talking in front of Öcalan picture:


    In this picture YPG militants swear with a picture of , oww schock!, Öcalan.


    Note: To whom who do not know, Öcalan is the leader of PKK who is now in prison at Turkey for a lifelong sentence.
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  14. #1134
    Vanoi's Avatar Dux Limitis
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    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    Quote Originally Posted by white-wolf View Post
    If there is left any civilian already not fled to Turkey it should be his decision to stay. I do not believe Turkey has any obligation to help stupid people especialy he is citizen of another country and he is out of Turkish borders.
    Do you seriously think these people don't want to leave? How about the fact they are stuck now? They cna't leave? the ISIS are everywhere. And battles are close by. You act like its so easy for a refugee in ISIS territory to cross the border.

    Quote Originally Posted by white-wolf View Post
    Turkey, as any state, care about her interests. It is her right. And she has no moral obligation other than help in humane help.

    The mentality of pro-PKK Kurds right now is seeing and watching the dissolution of their far reached dreams. This is what feeds their rage now.
    Turkey has the power to stop a group that is rapidly advancing across Syria up to Turkey's border and across Iraq killing and enslaving thousands. And Like i said earlier, if i was a Kurd and i watched Turkey sit by and watch my people die i would be pretty pissed too.

    Quote Originally Posted by white-wolf View Post
    I claim the people protesting in Turkey are all pro-PKK Kurds. Heck, there are also many Turks just hate Turkish government. But those protests are not againsts to the government, they are against the state and Turks. Those burning flags, burning statues of Atatürk, burning ambulances are slaps to face of Turkish state and people.
    Thats problem. You keep claiming this but its nothing until you prove it. Are all the Kurds burning ambulances? Are all the Kurds burning statues of Atatürk? Are all the Kurds killing people in turkey? I don't think so.

    Quote Originally Posted by white-wolf View Post
    Many (I say majority of) Turks and Kurds do not want to enter Syria problem, let alone to against an action about Ayn al-Arab.

    As you said if I can not speak for Turkish public, twice I can not speak for pro-PKK kurds. Therefore I do not want to comment on it. I can only say that I do not want to live with pro-PKK kurds at the same country. I do not want them in my country. I do not want to the state give them in.
    See thats the problem too. Your country is content with supporting rebels in Syria and meddling in their civil war, but when the civil war takes a turn and extreme jihadists start taking over and Iraq starts to fall, and your country doesn't want to help clean up the mess it helped create. If turkey didn't want to get involve din Syria, it shouldn't have supported the rebels in the first place. Now Turkey has to help clean up the mess it helped create.
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    While you are at it, allow Germany to rearm, it's not like they committed the worst atrocity in modern history, so having a strong army can't lead to anything pitiful.

  15. #1135

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    That the battle for Kobani has turned into a Turk PKK debate is a strategic victory for ISIS. One would think they can actually play chess. Both sides did pretty bad things in that conflict. The roots of it are nationalistic though and based on false promises of the western powers like my country as far back as 1920. I grew up with American Indians and we did not like each other either and often fought, though nobody died doesn't mean I have any liking for them to this day. I don't, and I would think they were pretty weird if they liked me. ISIS wants this it takes Turkey and the Kurds out of the game while you get busy fighting each other. BTW the majority of casualties in the Turk-PKK conflict were Kurdish and civilian so you don't a high card for that.

    Turkey does not have to set a foot in Syria it simply has to let Kurdish fighters through to help those in Kobani. The US government has to let let the CAG on the GWB go balls out, first to protect the crossing with area munitions something not yet used against ISIS, then to create a barrier ISIS reinforcements cannot get through. If it was an American Infantry Battalion stuck in Kobani you would not be able to see the battlefield, the timidity of the air campaign is astonishing to me.

    If this does not happen and Turks and Kurds go back to their fight, do you not think ISIS will be involved recruiting among Turks who hate Kurds, they will turn on you when they feel ready, they will not allow Turkey to be its own nation that does not fit with their ideology. Attacking the Kurds is a means to an end and Turkey is falling for it.

    There is no place for the US in the Caliphate to come and no place for Turkey either unless I miss my guess.

    Old enemies can become friends, one of the nations whose people have the very highest regard today for the US is Vietnam, look it up. Due in no small part to the efforts of veterans of both sides who fought in that war.
    Last edited by muller227; October 10, 2014 at 11:04 AM.

  16. #1136
    Aram Kurdo's Avatar Tiro
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    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    a little demonstration in Tehran in front of Turkish Embassy.


    a great Demonstrations were held in Iranian Kurdish Cities For Supporting Kobani, and criticizing Terrorism of ISIL and of course their ally, Fascists of Turkey.
    http://vista.ir/news/17670278/%D8%B1...A9%DB%8C%D9%87

    the other day,
    (Freedom Square, Center of The City of Sna (Sanandaj) Capital of Kurdistan of Iran)






    the solgans were: All Kurds are one, Kobane Is not Alone - Save Kobani - ISIL Terrorize, Turkey Supports - Death To Fascism Means Down With Fascist Turkey!

    Koabni is Uniting Kurds to Face against Terrorism of ISIL and also against Fascism Of Criminal Turkey.
    Racists and Fascists Call You Terrorists, Humanity Calls You "FREEDOM FIGHTER"
    YPJ (Women protection Units) Warriors in Rojava (Kurdistan Of Syria)




  17. #1137
    Mary The Quene's Avatar Praeses
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    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    Islamic state fighters are threatening to overrun Iraqs Anbar province

    BAGHDAD — Islamic State militants are threatening to overrun a key province in western Iraq in what would be a major victory for the jihadists and an embarrassing setback for the U.S.-led coalition targeting the group.
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/...3e5_story.html

    Well this sucks
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  18. #1138

    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    Death toll is 37 right now. Among dead I saw one Syrian and one Saudi citizen as well.

  19. #1139
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    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    Gentlemen, a small break for some maintenance and the thread will be with you shortly.

  20. #1140
    Garbarsardar's Avatar Et Slot i et slot
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    Default Re: ISIL War in Iraq and Syria

    Re-opened. Please keep it as civil as possible.

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