Russian involvement in Syrian crisis

bhramos

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As guns fall silent, Russia to shape Syria’s political endgame
Watch early in 2018 for peace talks in Sochi, focusing initially on drafting a new constitution that will be rubber-stamped at UN-mandated talks in Geneva
Many analysts predict that the upcoming year will witness a phased end to the Syrian conflict — at least, militarily. According to the Russian Ministry of Defense, 85% of Syrian territory has been liberated from ISIS and other groups that had controlled entire cities and towns since 2012. Aleppo was re-taken by the Russian and Syrian armies in December 2016, followed more recently by Albukamal and al-Mayadeen in the Syrian northeast.

In early December 2017, President Vladimir Putin landed in Syria and, from Russia’s military base in Hmeimeem, on the Syrian coast – he announced a thundering “mission accomplished,” promising to bring Russian troops back home in the weeks and months ahead. Excess troops that had been shipped to Syria in 2017 will be returning to Russia in the first weeks of 2018.

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This will not apply to the 1,200 Russian military police deployed in the countryside of Aleppo and Damascus, or to the 1,000 troops monitoring the ceasefire in southern Syria. The Hmeimeem base will remain intact – it was leased to the Russians in January 2017 for 49 years, extendable for another 25.

Putin hopes that other stakeholders in the Syrian conflict – like Iran, Hezbollah, Turkey, and the United States – will take their cue from him and start evacuating soon.

Politically, Putin hopes to jumpstart peace talks at the Red Sea
resort of Sochi some time in January or February. Over 1,000 Syrians will be invited to attend a “national dialogue conference” hosted by the Russian Foreign Ministry, ahead of Russia’s presidential elections in March. They will be tasked with signing off an endgame to the Syrian conflict, in accordance Putin’s terms and conditions.


Internally displaced people from Raqqa city sit in a vehicle in a camp near Ain Issa, Raqqa Governorate, Syria, on May 19, 2017. Photo: Reuters / Rodi Said
This basically amounts to the drafting of a new constitution, followed by setting a date for parliamentary elections. Presidential elections won’t happen before 2021, and Putin insists on President Bashar al-Assad’s right to run for a fourth term in office when his present term ends in three years. Anybody who wishes to challenge him is welcome to do so, say Russian officials, promising that the elections will be free, open, and conducted under UN auspices.

As for the new constitution, a Russian-proposed charter is presently being debated at UN-mandated talks in Geneva, and many expect it to see the light by mid-2018. The Russian draft dilutes some presidential powers, such as the right to name the governor of the central bank, for example, but keeps him firmly in control of the army and security services.

The US president has seemingly surrendered to Putin’s endgame on Syria, so long as Iran is curtailed, ISIS is defeated, and the Kurds are empowered

This has already been flatly rejected by Damascus. The Russian draft goes so far as to modify the name of the country, dropping the word “Arab” from its title, in order to please non-Arab components of Syrian society (namely the Kurds). This has, inevitably, raised the ire of Arab nationalists and they are struggling to restore the present name: “the Syrian Arab Republic.”

The draft also drops Article 3 of the present constitution, which names Islam as the religion of the president, an omission that is strongly opposed by Islamists in the Syrian Opposition. And finally, the proposed charter calls for a quasi-federal system, one that gives different Syrian districts the right to elect their local councils and governor, rather than have him named by Damascus, along with the right to a share of their region’s natural resources. Syrian Kurds, naturally, are happy with this suggestion.

Unless parliamentary elections are called for, the new constitution
will likely be the only serious political development in Syria in 2018. Both – elections and a new constitution – will be debated at Sochi, then agreed through the Geneva process, in compliance with United Nations Security Council Resolution 2254. Passed two years ago, that resolution calls for “elections” without specifying whether they should be presidential or parliamentarian, as well as a new constitution and the start of a transition process.

Russian and Syrian lawmakers interpret that as being a transition from war to peace, and from one constitution to another, rather than from the present government to one made up of its opponents. The opposition, however, insists that it should lead to the departure of President Assad — something that is strongly vetoed by Moscow and Tehran.


Syrian police officers secure a street in the Syrian border town of Jarablus on December 13, 2017. Photo: Reuters / Umit Bektas
At the latest convention of the Syrian Opposition, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in late November, they called for Assad’s departure, but framed it as a goal, rather than a precondition. Damascus insists that demand must be scrapped completely before an agreement is reached, threatening to boycott future talks if it is not. If it does, the Geneva process would be announced dead, but Moscow is keen to keep it afloat, wanting Geneva to effectively legitimize Sochi – so that, in other words, a Russian-engineered endgame enjoys the international community’s stamp, via the UN.

During his November meeting with Putin in Vietnam, US President Donald Trump agreed to let Sochi happen, provided that Iran’s role is controlled and curtailed in the process. The US president has seemingly surrendered to Putin’s endgame on Syria, so long as Iran is curtailed, ISIS is defeated, and the Kurds are empowered. He has already canceled funding for all but one of the armed groups that were on the CIA’s payroll, while other allies of the opposition, like Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, have shifted almost completely into the Russian orbit.

Militarily and politically, much is in store for Syria in the upcoming 12 months. Left standing, though, is the gigantic problem of the Syrian economy – a problem which everybody is clueless on how to address, the Russians included. According to the World Bank, the cost of rebuilding Syria stands at a staggering US$226 billion. This is money that no single country can provide. China and Russia have indicated a willingness to pitch in, along with other BRICS countries. Even with their combined resources, however, a Herculean task lies ahead.

http://www.atimes.com/article/guns-fall-silent-russia-shape-syrias-political-endgame//
 

gadeshi

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Radical Islamists fired mortar shells at Russian airbase in Syria



As Kommersant learned, December 31 at the Khmeimim airbase (the Syrian province of Latakia), one of the most serious incidents occurred in more than two years of military air operations Russia in Syria. According to Kommersant's information, on that day the air base was subjected to mortar shelling by radical Islamists, which resulted in the destruction of at least four front-line Su-24 bombers, two Su-35S multipurpose fighter aircraft and one An-72 military transport aircraft. More than ten servicemen could get injuries.

The emergency incident at the Syrian airbase Khmeimim "Kommersant" became known from two military-diplomatic sources. Without going into details, they reported that the militants of one of the terrorist groups fired at a Russian military facility in Syria, which resulted in the actual destruction of four Su-24 bombers, two Su-35S fighters, one An-72 transport vehicle, and an ammunition depot detonated after hitting a mortar shell. In total, according to unofficial data, more than ten servicemen could suffer. The incident was not commented at the Russian Defense Ministry: the military only officially confirmed the death of two pilots who piloted the Russian Mi-24 helicopter that day. According to the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation, there was no fire impact on the helicopter - the equipment itself failed.

https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/3514249
No videos, no wrecks, no fire trails...
No comments...

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nirranj

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@Mods please delete any duplicate comments I posted. And also this comment after deleting the duplicates ☺
 

gadeshi

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bhramos

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Syrian War Report – January 4, 2018: Russian Forces Suffer Casualties In Khmeimim Shelling

 

bhramos

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The automated control system on the aircraft carrier "Admiral Kuznetsov", from which the SU-33 was decked (even though most departures were made from "Khmeimim"), and air-and-space Su-24M.

Both types of aircraft are equipped with "Hephaestus", which allows the high-precision application of conventional airborne weapons to target designation, including "from the spot." Specifically, it seems that a certain reconnaissance group number 4 gives the Central Command 24-ke on the subject of the "motorized infantry unit" discovered, five hundred pig iron flies over the isis, then a cluster bomb with anti-tank submunitions is being prepared, but from the ground it is reported that so far "will suffice".

 

bhramos

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The Russian airborne system was not able to land at the airbase of Khmeimim and returned to Russia. Departed in the evening from Krymsk.

Spotters report that the Russian Il-76MD transport aircraft of the 223th flight detachment with the RA-78830 number was unable to land at the airbase of Khmeimim in Syria. The car flew from the military airfield Chkalovsky in the Moscow region, made an intermediate landing at the airport in Krymsk (Krasnodar Territory), and then proceeded through the airspace of Turkey in the direction of the air base Khmeimim. After making several calls over the base, Il-76MD did not land and eventually headed north. Heading toward Russia through Turkish airspace, the plane will land at the airfield in Sochi.

The reason the carrier could not land in Syria is unknown. Perhaps this is due to the situation on the base after the shelling by militants on December 31. According to other information, this is due to the weather conditions in Latakia.



 

bhramos

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Fist operations in Syria: new fighters arrived at the base of Khmeimim in September - Russia 24

 

bhramos

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personally my conjectures, why the photo of the plane, allegedly damaged at the airbase of Khmeimim in Syria, is fake.



1. the color of the aircraft ...
in the photo the fuselage of a dark gray hue, in the real life of the SU-24 VKS fuselage is silvery or light gray.
2. The clothes of the person next to the airplane.
no matter what the weather was in Latakia, in a green pea coat and blue semi-enamels-poluotehnichke technical staff (and any other military personnel) there does not go! fact! in the SAR l / s RF Armed Forces is wearing a new, modern clothing. Yes, and, in general, ITS VKS does not have this form of clothing.
3. The car in the background ...
and not ZIL-131 Is it ?? which in Syria is not and can not be. with semicircular arched tops for the tent ... and the tent itself: canvas ..))))
4. Well, the photo itself is made so that the remains of the stabilizer akkurat close the identification mark on the keel.
 

bhramos

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Information on the photos of Su24, with Khmeimim.

Damage to the aircraft (only one stabilizer is damaged), indicate that the impacts are not caused by a mine - otherwise there would be a lot of debris and the whole tail of the aircraft was damaged.

It is possible that the aircraft received damage from the MZA, while performing combat sorties (a few days ago there was such information.)

It is also clear that the FABs are suspended on the plane - usually the aircraft are not equipped with the means of destruction at the parking lots. Plus, the picture is taken in the afternoon, we must assume that the damaged aircraft immediately would have removed the BC - and in the daytime it would have already been without the BC

It is very likely that the aircraft has just sat down and it is inspected by technical personnel.


 

bhramos

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The MTR Sniper in Syria ...

Yes, the paddle The Austrian "Steyr-Mannlicher SSG 08"

 

bhramos

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Report from the destroyed airbase "Khmeimim" with the destroyed Su-24M (b / n 29 white)

 

bhramos

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Last Monday, the national defense forces destroyed the homemade UAV fighters near the Khmeimim air base in Latakia.

Made of wood and plastic; not to be seen by radars, Syrian NDF fighters were able to shoot down an enemy drone loaded with bombs while patrolling in a neighboring village.

According to the source, NDF fighters used AK-47 assault rifle to shoot down it, the video shows the wreckage of the downed drone.

 

Hindustani78

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And???
RU MOD reported not mortar but MLRS shelling on the 30-th of December.
2 rockets from 3 launched were shoot down by Pantsyr S1 QRSAM, 3-rd status is not reported.
I presume that 3-rd has killed 2 serviceman.

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Seems AC-130 gunship and a mortar team engaged in heavy combat. As AC 130 are already being deployed in Syria.


15 NOV 2017


The footage was purported to show US operations in Syria

 

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