The Syrian Crisis

SajeevJino

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Iranian Shahed 129 drone appears over Damascus



‫الغوطة الشرقية || 10-04-2014 || تحليق طيران الأستطلاع فوق مدن وبلدات الغوطة‬"Ž - YouTube


A "Shahed 129"³, type of drone based on the Israeli Hermes 450 model or the Watchkeeper 450 model, but larger than those types, was spotted over Syria on Apr. 10.

The Shahed 129 is a remotely piloted vehicle claimed to have an endurance of 24 hours and an operative range up to 2,000 kilometers. Noteworthy, in September 2013, Tehran unveiled a version of Shahed 129 domestically modified to carry weapons, making the Iranian drone a real UCAV (Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicle).

Still, the Shahed filmed today doesn't seem to carry any weapon, at least based on the blurry images currently available.

It's not the first time a new Iranian drone was delivered to Assad: in November 2013, a Yasir drone, a modified copy of the Boeing ScanEagle (captured by the Iranians in 2012) was filmed over Damascus suburb Hujaira AlBalad, in Syria.

The comment we made back then is still valid today: it's at least funny how fast any "new" Iranian UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle) is delivered to Assad's forces.

The Aviationist » Iranian Shahed 129 drone appears over Damascus
 

SajeevJino

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Report: US, UK investigating another alleged Syria chemical weapons attack

The United States and Britain are investigating reports on recent chemical weapons attacks in Syria committed allegedly by the regime of President Bashar Assad, the British Times reported on Friday.

According to the report, the Assad regime used toxic industrial substances and not chemical weapon in order to avoid suspicion or an international response.

Earlier this week, an Israeli military official was quoted as saying Assad was once again using chemical weapons against rebels trying to topple him.

Report: US, UK investigating another alleged Syria chemical weapons attack - Israel News, Ynetnews
 

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In Assad's coastal heartland, Syria's war creeps closer | Reuters


(Reuters) - For three years, residents of Syria's Mediterranean provinces have watched from their coastal sanctuary as civil war raging further inland tore the country apart, killing tens of thousands of people and devastating historic cities.

But a three-week-old offensive by rebel fighters in the north of Latakia province, a bastion of President Bashar al-Assad's Alawite minority, has brought the battle ever closer and shattered that sense of relative security.

Rebels are now fighting in the hills overlooking the sea, bringing the country's main port of Latakia within their range - rocket-fire killed eight people in one barrage on the city a month ago - and Syria's coast feels under real threat.

"They can erase us, even those of us who support them," said a young Alawite woman as she drank coffee with her fiance in a Latakia cafe, 50 km (30 miles) south of where have rebels seized their first toehold on Syria's coast, by the Turkish border.

While many Alawites, roughly 10 percent of Syria's 23 million people, have actively supported Assad, others sympathized with the popular revolt against him in 2011 but now fear reprisals from his mainly Sunni Muslim enemies.

Memories of a rebel offensive in August, when scores of Alawite villagers near Latakia were killed by radical Sunni Islamists and foreign jihadists, heighten tensions in the bustling streets of the city of 400,000.

Even as Assad, 300 km to the south in Damascus, sounds ever more confident of holding on [ID:nL6N0N13ZT], the chaotic ebb and flow of civil war has intruded even into this most sheltered part of the state, while the hunt for spies and traitors and losses suffered by Assad loyalists continue to sour daily life.

Even before the bombardments started to encroach on the once peaceful city, the cost of Syria's war was plain from the daily funeral processions for fallen soldiers and pro-Assad militia.

"Everyone here has been sending their sons to fight the war in other parts of Syria, and every day we hear the sirens and funerals of those soldiers," said Yasmin, a woman in Latakia who has been active in opposing Assad.

But the arrival of the war on its doorstep has, she said, unnerved the city: "We thought that we were somewhat invincible, as if the rebels would never reach us. But that's not true".

Yasmin said school buildings have filled up with Alawite refugees who fled villages further north to take shelter in the city - a common sight elsewhere but a new phenomenon on the coast: "Now they're like so many other displaced Syrians."

WITHIN RANGE

The fighting which has brought fear to Latakia started three weeks ago when rebels moved in from Turkey and seized the border crossing at the Armenian Christian village of Kasab - the last crossing point from Turkey into government-controlled territory.

They also captured a small beach nearby to give them their first beachhead on Syria's 250 km of Mediterranean coastline - a symbolic though militarily insignificant gain. They battled Assad's forces for control of hilltops that include a satellite communications post known as Observation Point 45.

Nervous Latakia city residents say heavy artillery fire could easily strike them from that vantage point.

"It's not going to matter if you're with them or not," said a young dentist, speaking in the city centre. "The mortars won't make a distinction. And if the rebels come down here, they won't take time to distinguish between who's with them and who's not."

As elsewhere in the tortuous, grinding war that has already killed 150,000 people, there is no indication that the fighting in Latakia marks any decisive shift in the broader conflict.

The streets of Latakia are as busy as ever, even if only one ship was visible in the harbor in the first week of April - in ordinary times it handles dozens. On Thursday afternoons, bus tickets out of Latakia sell out fast as college students who board at the local university return home for the weekend.

But authorities in the port, which is also a hub for the U.N.-backed international operation to ship out Syria's chemical weapons arsenal by the end of the month, appear anxious.

Two months ago, they shut down Internet connections from cafes and other public places along the entire coast, apparently to prevent communications that evade surveillance.

One cafe owner in Tartous, a city 40 km north of the Lebanese border which also hosts a Russian naval base, said he had protested in to the authorities about being forced offline.

"They told me when people go online from a public place, they can't trace that person like they trace people who surf the net from home," he said.

At frequent government checkpoints along the main coastal highway, armed men scrutinize ID cards for clues to travelers' religion and political sympathies. Most security personnel and senior military officers on the coast hail from local Alawite villages, and have a keen eye for spotting outsiders.

"What are looking scared about?" barked one armed state security patrolman at a nervous college student on a public bus travelling between Latakia and Tartous.

He took the young man's document to "float it" - check it in a computerized system for outstanding warrants or summonses from any of Syria's numerous intelligence agencies.

The process takes a few moments, but can feel like an eternity - since the uprising, many people have been detained after their papers were "floated", or have simply disappeared.

Local people say they have begun to see Iraqi Shi'ite militiamen along the coast, apparently boosting the ranks of the Syrian military. Iraqis, who speak a distinctive dialect, have joined those from Lebanon's Hezbollah as well as advisers and commanders from Shi'ite regional power Iran in aiding Assad.

This correspondent saw unarmed men wearing military fatigues with Shi'ite insignia strolling around several Syrian coastal towns and speaking with Lebanese accents. Alawites consider themselves an offshoot of the Shi'ite branch of Islam.

COMMUNAL VIOLENCE

The death last month of Hilal al-Assad, a cousin of the president, has added to the new feeling of vulnerability among government loyalists in the coastal provinces.

The man, who led the local branch of the National Defense Force militia, died three weeks ago in a battle near the Turkish border with Islamist rebels - the first member of the extended ruling family to be killed since a bombing in Damascus in 2012.

Rumors of rebel atrocities against Christians in the ethnic Armenian town of Kasab, circulated among the Armenian diaspora abroad, have added to the febrile atmosphere further down the coast - despite efforts by rebels to disprove the allegations.

Communal violence has become a feature of the war.

When two people from the ethnic Turkmen community were found dead in a park in Latakia last month, their killing was widely seen as a revenge attack by Alawites for perceived Turkmen support for the rebels and their ties with Assad's enemy Turkey.

Sunni neighborhoods on the coast are being increasingly targeted by security forces hunting rebels, residents say. Young men are detained and taken away for interrogation in facilities where rights groups say many have been tortured and killed.

On the coast road near Tartous last week, a white minibus drove by escorted by three government vehicles mounted with machineguns. Inside the van, were about a dozen, mostly young, men. Their arms appeared to be shackled behind their backs.

Several had their eyes covered by blindfolds.

(The identity of the reporter has been withheld for security reasons)
 

SajeevJino

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Advanced US weapons flow to Syrian rebels


The U.S. and Saudi Arabia have supplied Syrian rebel groups with a small number of advanced American antitank missiles for the first time in a pilot program that could lead to larger flows of sophisticated weaponry, people briefed on the effort said.

The White House would neither confirm nor deny it had provided the TOW armor-piercing antitank systems, the first significant supply of sophisticated U.S. weapons systems to rebels. But U.S. officials did say they are working to bolster the rebels' ability to fight the regime.

Some of the TOWs provided to rebels since March are equipped with a complex, fingerprint-keyed security device that controls who can fire it, said Mustafa Alani, a senior security analyst at the Geneva-based Gulf Research Center who is regularly briefed by Saudi officials on security matters.

Advanced US weapons flow to Syrian rebels | Fox News
 

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Mortar shells hit near Syrian parliament, kill 5


Syria's state-run media say a pair of mortar shells hit near the parliament building in central Damascus, killing five people.

SANA news agency says the mortars struck some 320 feet (100 meters) from the parliament in the Salihiya area of the Syrian capital on Monday morning.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack but Syrian rebels often fire mortar shells into government-controlled areas of Damascus. They say they are punishing pro-government forces for besieging areas controlled by the opposition, denying residents food, clean water and medical aid, and for dropping crude bombs on residential areas.

Mortar shells cannot be precisely targeted and often kill civilians.

Syria's conflict is now in its fourth year. It has killed over 150,000 people and forced one-third of the country's population from their homes.

Mortar shells hit near Syrian parliament, kill 5 | The Times of Israel
 

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Watchdog to probe chlorine gas claims in Syria


The world's chemical watchdog announced Tuesday that it is sending a fact-finding mission to probe the recent alleged use of chlorine gas in the Syrian conflict.

The head of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, Ahmet Uzumcu, announced "the creation of an OPCW mission to establish facts surrounding allegations of use of chlorine in Syria," a statement said.

He told a meeting of the body's executive council at headquarters in The Hague that the mission would leave soon.

"The Syrian government, which has agreed to accept this mission, has undertaken to provide security in areas under its control," the statement said.

"The mission will carry out its work in the most challenging circumstances."

United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has expressed support for the mission and the UN will provide security logistics.

The OPCW and the UN are already in the process of destroying Syria's chemical weapons as part of a disarmament deal agreed last August in the wake of deadly sarin nerve agent attacks outside Damascus.

The new probe comes after France and the United States alleged that President Bashar Assad's forces may have unleashed industrial chemicals on a rebel-held village in central Hama province this month.

France made the first claim last week with President Francois Hollande saying his country had "information" — no proof — that Assad's regime was still using chemical weapons despite the August deal.

The United States has said it is investigating the allegations.

"We have indications of the use of a toxic industrial chemical, probably chlorine, in Syria this month, in the opposition-dominated village of Kafr Zita," White House spokesman Jay Carney said on April 21.

There have been conflicting accounts of the alleged chlorine attack on Kafr Zita, with the government and the opposition trading blame.

Activists have also reported other chlorine gas attacks, most recently in Idlib province, in the northwest, last week.

Syria has handed over or destroyed all but around eight percent of its chemical material under the terms of the US- and Russian-brokered deal, which averted the threat of US military action last year.


Watchdog to probe chlorine gas claims in Syria | The Times of Israel
 

W.G.Ewald

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Vol. 36 No. 9 · 8 May 2014

For a second time the LRB has aired Seymour Hersh's highly shaky claim that the opposition was responsible for the chemical weapons attack on the Ghouta on 21 August 2013 (LRB, 17 April). Hersh provides only one source for the key claims in his piece: a 'former intelligence official'. As the bloggers Eliot Higgins and Scott Lucas have shown, he entirely ignores the overwhelming balance of tangible evidence that indicates the responsibility of the regime for the Ghouta attack. The two types of munitions found at the site were the Soviet M14 and an improvised type of rocket known as 'the Volcano'. Both have been spotted in several combat videos, always being used by regime forces and never by the opposition. Contrary to Hersh's claims in his first article, all of the rockets used were well within range of regime-held areas (LRB, 19 December 2013). The position of the intact munitions, in particular 'Missile 197', indicates a firing point to the north, where the regime-held areas were. The 21 August incident involved multiple rocket attacks on the Ghouta from those directions.

A lot hinges on Hersh's implication that the Islamist fighters arrested in Turkey in May 2013 were part of a sarin-producing operation. Indeed, the local press did report that the men were carrying two kilogrammes of sarin. The charges laid by the court did not say this: they said that the men were carrying chemicals that could have been used to produce sarin. Perhaps they intended to do so, but they would have needed much more time. At least eight 'Volcanoes' were fired on the Ghouta. Each warhead carries an estimated fifty litres of sarin. It took Aum Shinrikyo years, trillions of yen and a dedicated factory to come up with less than a tenth of that. Not only did the jihadists supposedly come up with the sarin in miraculously large quantities without anyone knowing about it, according to Hersh's intelligence official they then filled perfect copies of regime munitions with the stuff, transported them to areas north of the Ghouta (unopposed by the regime forces occupying those areas) and launched them at their own side.

Hersh has dropped his arguments of December – including the claim that a secret US sensory system in Syria should have shown evidence of the attack – and wants us to take the word of a single unnamed spook instead. Likewise, the Russian Foreign Ministry initially said there had been no attack and that the YouTube footage was false, on the basis of the timestamp on the videos. When it was pointed out that this was due to the time difference between Syria and the US, where YouTube marks its timestamps, and that the actual timing was entirely consistent with reports of the attack, the idea was dropped without further ado. This is not a method of argument that inspires confidence.

Whose sarin? Assad's, almost certainly. Why did he do it? Perhaps he thought Russian diplomatic cover would let him get away with it. That is what happened, after all.

Jamie Allinson
London NW6
Seymour M. Hersh · The Red Line and the Rat Line: Erdoğan and the Syrian rebels · LRB 17 April 2014
 

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Britain has called for an urgent investigation into chemical weapons attacks by the Syrian regime after a Telegraph investigation showed chlorine bombs are being used to kill children.

Scientific analysis of samples from multiple gas attacks, conducted exclusively for The Telegraph, show sizeable and unambiguous traces of chlorine and ammonia from the scene of three recent attacks.

William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, has called for a fact-finding mission from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) announced on Tuesday to be carried out "urgently".

"Reports suggesting that chemical weapons have again been used, heaping further misery on the people of Syria, are utterly sickening," the Foreign Secretary said.

"Time is of the essence in establishing the full facts. The mission must be given full access to all sites and be allowed to carry out its investigation without any interference or delay.
Syria chemical weapons: Britain calls for urgent investigation - Telegraph
 

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Russia to Provide Syria with First Batch of Jet Trainers until End of Year

MOSCOW, May 5 (RIA Novosti) - Russia plans to send the initial batch of the Yakovlev Yak-130 jet trainers to Syria until the end of 2014, with further plans to fully complete the contract for 36 aircraft in 2016, the Kommersant newspaper wrote Monday, citing a source close to Russian arms exporter Rosoboronexport. Damascus will receive nine aircraft until the end of this year, and in the next two years - 12 and 15 respectively, according to the informant. "Thus, we will fulfill obligations under a previously signed contract for the supply of 36 Yak-130 jets," the newspaper quoted the source. Last June, Kommersant wrote that Syria had transferred some $100 million of advance payment to Russia for the first six Yak-130 jets under a contract signed in December 2011. At that moment all Yak-130s were ready, waiting only for a political decision to install engines and avionics, and then to be sent to Syria, according to the RIA Novosti source back in the days. Syria has been facing an internal armed conflict since March 2011. Russia has repeatedly stated that it supplies the country only with defensive weapons without violating international law.

Russia to Provide Syria with First Batch of Jet Trainers until End of Year | Defense | RIA Novosti
 

amoy

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Report: Thousands flee Syria rebel clashes - Middle East - Al Jazeera English

UK-based rights group says fighting between rival rebel groups have displaced 60,000 people in Deir Ezzor province.

The fighting comes as rebels agreed a deal with the Syrian government to withdraw from Homs [AP]

At least 60,000 people have fled towns in the Deir Ezzor province in eastern Syria which has been the scene of fierce clashes between rival rebel groups, opposition activists say.

The al-Qaeda affiliated al-Nusra Front have been battling the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) for four days despite an order from al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri to stop fighting, the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Sunday.

"Residents of the towns of Busayra, home to 35,000 people, Abriha, home to 12,000 people, and al-Zir, home to 15,000 people, have nearly all been displaced by the fighting in the area," the Observatory said.

The group, which relies on a vast network of contacts on the ground for its data, said al-Nusra Front's fighters burnt down several houses in Busayra, as did ISIL in Abriha.

At least 62 fighters have been killed in this week's clashes, said the Observatory. "There are battles now in an area around 10km from Busayra that has an oil rig and a gas plant," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said.

The latest showdown between al-Nusra and ISIL erupted on Wednesday in energy-rich Deir Ezzor, bordering Iraq.

Homs evacuation delayed

Meanwhile, the planned evacuation of fighters from rebel-held parts of the Syrian city of Homs has been delayed by a day, activists say, though a ceasefire is still holding in the country's third-largest city.

A rebel pullout from Homs, which is known as the 'capital of the revolution', would hand President Bashar al-Assad complete control of the city and deal a major symbolic blow to the uprising-turned civil war.

But local activists said it wasn't clear why Syrian forces weren't allowing the first phase of several hundred rebel fighters to leave the Old City area on Saturday.

Rebels in the city agreed on Friday to surrender territory in exchange for safe passage to other opposition-held areas. Homs is strategically important as it connects government strongholds along the western coast with the capital, Damascus.

The conflict in Syria since March 2011 has killed more than 150,000 people and forced nearly half the country's population to flee their homes.
 

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Official: Head of Syrian air defense killed


A Syrian official says the head of the country's air defenses has been killed in clashes near the capital, Damascus. The official said Sunday that Lt. Gen. Hussein Ishaq was killed as rebels attacked a Syrian air defense base near the town of Mleiha.

The official said the incident occurred Saturday. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to brief journalists about Ishaq's death. Ishaq is one of a few high-ranking military officers to be killed in the country's 3-year-old civil war.

Official: Head of Syrian air defense killed - Israel News, Ynetnews
 

amoy

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Read more here: HOMS, Syria: Rebels level historic Aleppo hotel in Syria - World Wires - MiamiHerald.com
HOMS, Syria -- With a gigantic explosion, Syrian rebels on Thursday leveled a historic hotel being used as an army base in the northern city of Aleppo by detonating bomb-packed tunnels beneath it, activists and militants said.

The blast near Aleppo's medieval citadel, an imposing city landmark that was once swarming with tourists, killed an unknown number of soldiers. It turned the Carlton Hotel, known for its elegant architecture and proximity to the citadel, into a pile of rubble.

The attack was a powerful statement that the rebels could still deal heavy blows elsewhere in Syria even as they withdrew from Homs, surrendering that city to President Bashar Assad's forces.




Syrian election candidate praises Assad's war on rebels, wants ties with West | Reuters

(Reuters) - One of President Bashar al-Assad's two challengers in next month's election praised his military campaign against Islamist rebels but said Syria must do more to maintain ties with the West and rebuild its economy after three years of war.

Hassan al-Nouri said there was no difference between the three candidates over military strategy against Syrian rebels and their foreign Sunni Muslim backers in the ongoing conflict.

"Our enemy is still the same enemy. We are all against terrorism," Nouri told Reuters in an interview less than three weeks before an election which authorities portray as a landmark for democracy and the West has dismissed as a sham.
---------------------------------------------------------

When will all the terrorists be wiped out and the Syrian tragedy come to an end? Bashar al-Assad is undoubtedly the only hope in the anti-terrorism war and a secular Syria. :thumb:
 

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Activists: Death toll in Syria's war tops 160,000


BEIRUT (AP) — The death toll in Syria's three-year conflict has exceeded 160,000, an activist group said Monday, a harrowing figure that reflects the country's relentless bloodletting that appears no closer to a resolution.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it has documented 162,402 deaths since the uprising against President Bashar Assad's government began in March 2011.

The figure includes civilians, rebels and members of the Syrian military, the Observatory said. It also includes militiamen, such as Lebanese Hezbollah members, who have been fighting alongside Assad's forces, and foreign fighters battling with the rebels for Assad's ouster.

The Observatory remains the sole organization providing a reliable tally of Syria's dead.

The UN has stopped updating its own tally of the Syrian dead, saying it can no longer verify the sources of information. The world body's last count in late July was 100,000 dead.

The Observatory bases its tally on information it gets from a network of activists on the ground in Syria. The figures are based on the names of those killed, collected by activists who document the dead in hospitals, morgues and identify them from video materials.

Of the 160,402 people that the Observatory said have died in the conflict so far, about a third — or 53,978 — were civilians. Those deaths include 8,607 children and 5,586 women.

The uprising has also claimed the lives of 26,858 rebel fighters and 37,685 Syrian soldiers, the Observatory said.

The Syrian government does not publicize the number of its casualties.

In addition, the Observatory said 25,147 pro-government fighters have also died on the battlefield, including 438 Hezbollah militants, and 1,224 Shiite foreign fighters and Palestinian militants.

From among foreigners and other fighters who have sided with the rebels, 13,529 were killed, including members of an al-Qaida-linked group and other hard-line Islamic and Islamic leaning groups. There are also 2,891 unidentified bodies in the conflict, and 2,314 identified bodies of Syrian army troops who have crossed over to the opposition side to fight the government.

Activists: Death toll in Syria's war tops 160,000 | The Times of Israel
 

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Iran's Drone War in Syria
ran has been providing Syria's regime with drones—some of them inspired by American technology—and they're already playing a significant role in keeping Bashar Assad in power. On Sunday, Tehran announced it had replicated a top-of-the-line U.S. drone it claimed it captured in 2011, raising the possibility it will send still more sophisticated aerial robots into the skies over Damascus.

In some respects, this shouldn't come as a surprise. Iran's robust drone program dates back to the early 1980s, and it first tried to weaponize the birds some 30 years ago, long before American Predators and Reapers first soared aloft.

The Middle East was the first great proving ground for unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs, as they're called. During the 1980s, Israel flew drones over Lebanon's Bekaa Valley to spot Syrian artillery and anti-aircraft positions, allowing the Israeli Air Force to knock out the Syrian air defenses with minimal risks to its pilots. At about the same time, Iran began using drones to spy on Iraqi positions in its epic war against Saddam Hussein. It was during that bitter conflict that Iranian engineers crudely mounted Soviet rocket-propelled grenades on their drones and fired them at Iraqi troops.

Over the last decade, even as American drones grew fearsome and infamous, killing alleged terrorists and many civilians in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Yemen, the Iranians began expanding their own program dramatically.

According to Varun Vira, an expert at c4ads, a think tank in Washington, D.C., that specializes in defense issues, Iran now has a couple of dozen airframes and platforms it can use. "In recent years," says Vira, "the drone program appears to be maturing, judging from the number of new unveilings in 2012 to 2013, including variants of the Shahed, Azem, Mohajer, Hamaseh and Sarir drones, to name but a few." Given the overwhelming support of Iran for the Damascus regime, it was probably inevitable that Tehran's drones would go into action there. "They've been seen on several airbases in satellite imagery, including Damascus, Hama and Shayrat airbases," says Vira.

In addition to the steady influx of Iranian military drones, civilian drones also have appeared on the Syrian battlefield. In November 2013 rebels released images of a DJI Phantom they claim to have brought down in the besieged city of Homs. These tiny quad-copters are available in hobby shops in the United States and are often seen filming sporting events or music videos when mounted with GoPro cameras.

The rebels claim the quad-copter was being used by government forces to spy on their positions. But given the fact that the Phantom was found intact and is far less capable than the military technology in the Syrian arsenal, it is possible that it was a rebel drone all along. Indeed it would make sense for rebels to invest in these miniature UAVs because a Phantom with a GoPro attached costs much less than the street value of an AK-47 assault rifle. According to Vira, the DJIs can provide some basic "over the hill" intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capability for infantry, "but they're far from what's needed for persistent surveillance over combat areas, and they're low-altitude and fairly easily shot down."

The first evidence of Iranian drones in Syria appeared in early 2012, when opposition activists released video showing a Pahpad AB-3. The drones became known locally by the Arabic slang term wizwazi, and their presence was usually a good indicator of imminent shelling or airstrikes. There have since been numerous sightings of various models -- in December 2013, the al Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra shot down a small Yasir drone and displayed the wreckage on social media.

The Yasir drones are particularly interesting because Iran claims to have developed them by reverse engineering American technology captured in 2012. In this case, Iran says they developed their own model based on captured American ScanEagle mini UAVs, a claim Washington will not confirm, but which was widely reported in the media. When Tehran unveiled its own copycat Yasir drone, officials made a point of publicizing it with a press conference attended by a high-ranking military delegation from Russia. According to Vira, "Gauging Iran's true UAV capabilities is very difficult," but pictures of the crashed Yasir show that it appears to be quite similar in design, "so it is likely to have been at the very least inspired by the ScanEagle."

The Yasir shoot-down provided solid evidence of advanced Iranian weaponry in Syria, as does recent footage of an Iranian Shahed-129 over Damascus. Iran has armed drones in its own arsenal, but so far only unarmed drones have appeared in Syria and their main purpose appears to be reconnaissance.

According to Vira, "It appears fairly clear that the Syrian Air Force suffered significant attrition, and that Iranian/Russian resupply of spare parts, jet fuel, technicians, etc., is what has kept them in the fight." The Iranian drones "are important in providing relief to an overstretched [Syrian Air Force]," says Vira, thus "freeing up Syrian aircraft for combat roles."

But "Iran likely has its own limits in terms of mission creep in Syria," says Vira. In other words, the Islamic Republic does not want to be implicated in direct attacks by providing armed drones, but "given this backdrop, Iranian ISR help, no doubt, is much appreciated."

Despite the expansion, improvement, and proliferation of Iran's drone program, American technology remains far in advance.

Peter Singer, an expert on drones and author of Wired for War, says Iranian claims of reverse engineering are "plausible on the hardware side, but dubious on the full software side." Singer says that despite being able to fly, Iranian technology cannot provide the same level of ISR support as its American counterparts and that reverse engineering is not enough to "shift the regional balance of power."

There is, however, every indication that Iran keeps trying. In 2011, it captured a highly advanced "stealthy" American RQ-170 on its territory. The incident was embarrassing for Washington from the beginning, and has gotten moreso as Iran claims to have deciphered data captured from the UAV.

The jury is still out on whether Iranian engineers can effectively reverse engineer the RQ-170 Sentinel, but in 2011, Air Force chief General Norton Schwartz said "There is a potential for reverse engineering clearly." In a 2011 article for Wired, David Axe speculated that Iran would seek Chinese help in examining the RQ-170.

Iran now claims that it studied the American model to help create its first super-drone, the Fotros, and it seems quite eager for people to believe the new model is partially based on technology from the captured RQ-170. According to the Iranian ministry of defense, the new weapon is capable of delivering a 500-pound payload, can stay aloft for over 24 hours, and has a range of 2,000 miles. Extraordinary claims, to be sure, but Vira warns, "Iran has a history of hyping, exaggerating or even outright falsifying the capability of new military technology. The Fotros used in the unveiling appeared unfinished."

Regardless of its true capacity and origin, the name "Fotros" appears to be a metaphor for the process of reverse engineering an American drone. In Shia mythology, Fotros was an angel who disobeyed God and was banished to Earth. After praying for forgiveness, Fotros was redeemed by the Imam Ali who gave him back his wings. On Sunday, Iranian state media reported that the Fotros would be flying soon. If so, it may only be a matter of time before we see those fallen angels in the skies over Syria.
 

SajeevJino

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Syrian Air-Defense Capabilities and the Threat to Potential U.S. Air Operations

On May 17, the Syrian regime lost Lt. Gen. Hussein Ayoub Ishaq, its top air-defense commander and one of the highest-ranking military officials killed since the conflict began in 2011. Although it is unclear exactly what impact the general's death will have on the war, the loss will likely come as a psychological blow that further degrades the morale of the air-defense forces. Given this development and the effects of three years of fighting, what kind of threat does the regime's air-defense system represent now?


Full Report @

Syrian Air-Defense Capabilities and the Threat to Potential U.S. Air Operations - The Washington Institute for Near East Policy

written By

Major Chandler Atwood, USAF
 

SajeevJino

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Iranian Shahed 129 spotted over eastern Ghouta of Damascus 24/05/2014



 

amoy

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Russia, China veto U.N. bid to refer Syria to international court | Reuters

(Reuters) - Russia and China vetoed on Thursday a resolution to refer the situation in Syria to the International Criminal Court for possible prosecution of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during the country's three-year civil war.

This was the fourth time Russia - a close ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government - and China have blocked U.N. Security Council action on Syria during the three-year civil war that has killed more than 150,000 people.

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, said the victims of the conflict "deserve to have history record those who stood with them and those who were willing to raise their hands to deny them a chance at justice."
 

nrupatunga

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Assad Supporters Turn Out in Lebanon as Syrian Expats Vote
Thousands of Syrians flocked to their embassy in Lebanon as expat voting started Wednesday ahead of Syria's June 3 presidential election, a vote that is widely expected to give Bashar Assad a third seven-year term in office.

The Syrian opposition and its Western allies have denounced the election as a sham designed to lend Assad a veneer of electoral legitimacy.

The government in Damascus, meanwhile, has touted the vote as the political solution to the three-year-long conflict that began as an uprising against Assad's rule.

Expatriate voting was to take place in Syrian embassies and consulates abroad where the staff has not defected to the opposition. Some European countries have said they will not allow Syrian expatriate voting to be held in their capitals.

Polls would be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. but Syrian Ambassador in Beirut Ali Abdel-Karim Ali said voting could be extended further into the evening.

The crowd snarled traffic as Assad supporters lined up in the street outside the embassy in the southeastern Beirut neighborhood of Yarze.

Many said they came to vote and show their support for Assad, including groups of men, women and children who carried Assad's photos and waved Syrian flags.

"With our souls, with our blood, we will sacrifice for you, Bashar," they chanted.

There are about 1.1 million Syrians who live in Lebanon as refugees. Many among the refugees and opposition supporters abroad are expected to boycott the vote. The two other candidates in the race are mostly symbolic contenders and little known figures.

The government in Damascus also touts the June 3 election as a referendum on Assad's violent crushing of the armed rebellion that began as an uprising against his rule.

The conflict, now in its fourth year, has killed over 162,000 people and displaced one-third of Syria's prewar population of 23 million.
 

SajeevJino

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Air raids on Syria's Aleppo 'killed almost 2,000 in 2014'


Barrel bombings and other Syrian government air raids on rebel districts of Aleppo and surrounding areas have killed 1,963 civilians since January, including 567 children, a monitoring group said Friday.

A total of 283 women were also among those confirmed killed in the air strikes, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights which relies on a network of medics and activists on the ground for its reports.

The Britain-based monitoring group said the victims it documented were killed between January 1 and Thursday night in rebel-held areas of the northern city and the surrounding countryside.

Control of Aleppo, Syria's former commercial hub, has been divided since a rebel offensive in 2012.

Government aircraft launched a bombing campaign against rebel-held districts in the east in mid-December, frequently dropping shrapnel-packed barrel bombs.

The use of the munitions -- which are unguided and cannot be directed against military targets -- has been condemned by the international community and human rights groups.

https://au.news.yahoo.com/world/a/23990403/air-raids-on-syrias-aleppo-kill-almost-2-000-in-2014/
 

Kaalapani

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France's Former Foreign Minister: UK Government Prepared War in Syria Two Years Before 2011 Protests .

I think britanistan needs another spanking like it got from Iran.
 
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