Russian involvement in Syrian crisis

bhramos

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American miscreants from the opposition that have entrenched themselves in the prov. Aleppo and in the prov. Idlib, said that the Sochi format, and therefore Russia, are not authoritative to resolve issues in Syria, and, for the future, the opposition will not send negotiators.
And will send Bulgarian missiles.
South prov. Aleppo. These remarkable opposition cockroaches conducted night firing hail.
Well, they will not - and they will not.
On the border with Israel, the SAA quietly liquidates yet another enclave.

 

bhramos

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Syrian Army is squeezing the enclave to eradicate Nusra terrorists in the south-west of Damascus, taking control of new positions in the direction of Shaykh Abdullah's shrine east of Beit Yang.

 

asianobserve

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Rebel groups reject talks on Syrian conflict hosted by Russia

Syrian rebel groups on Monday rejected Russia’s planned Sochi conference on Syria, saying Moscow was seeking to bypass a United Nations-based Geneva peace process and blaming Russia for committing war crimes in the country.

In a statement by around 40 rebel groups who include some of the military factions who participated in earlier rounds of Geneva peace talks,
they said Moscow had not put pressure on the Syrian government to reach a political settlement.


“Russia has not contributed one step to easing the suffering of Syrians and has not pressured the regime that it claims it is a guarantor by move in any real path towards a solution,” the rebel statement said.


https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ect-talks-on-syrian-conflict-hosted-by-russia
 

bhramos

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Russia began to form a permanent grouping in Tartus and Khemeymim.



Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said that Russia has begun the creation of a permanent group of servicemen at the logistics center of the Navy in Tartus and at the airbase of Khmeimim in Syria.

"Last week, the Supreme Commander-in-Chief confirmed the structure and the staff of the main bases in Tartus and Khemeymim, and we started forming a permanent group there," Shoigu said at a conference call on Tuesday, December 26.

He noted that the military police showed themselves on the best side, first widely used during the operation in Syria. According to the minister, the fight against terrorists in Syria was one of the main goals of the Armed Forces last year and the current one.

He also thanked the Federation Council for ratifying the agreements, Tass reports.

Earlier, the Council of Federation approved the ratification of the agreement between Russia and Syria on the expansion of the logistics center of the Russian Navy in Tartus.
 

bhramos

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Who said Russia was leaving Syria? WATCH as the Russian air force pulverizes terrorist positions on the Idlib axis
December 26, 2017 - Fort Russ News - Paul Antonopoulos

IDLIB, Syria - With rumors that Russia was leaving Syria, rather than just downgrading to a limited extent, the Russian air force has been busy today pulverizing terrorist positions in Syria's jihadist-held Idlib province. A full detail of the Syrian Army's progress today against Al-Qaeda affiliates, the al-Nusra Front, can be read here.
Footage has been captured of the Russian air force smashing an Al-Nusra ammunition depot in northern Hama countryside on the border of Idlib province in northwest Syria.

Meanwhile, these screen captures show the moments an underground headquarters for the Al-Nusra Front was blasted out by the Russian air force.





This has marked a mostly successful day in Syria that has seen government forces make significant advancements. However, a Syrian pilot has tragically been beheaded by the Al-Nusra Front, with the video and full report provided here.

http://www.fort-russ.com/2017/12/who-said-russia-was-leaving-syria-watch.html?m=1
 

Wisemarko

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Moscow-based think tank director: Russia’s unexpected military victory in Syria
Ruslan Pukhov
One of the main events of 2017 has been the victory won by the Russian armed forces and the Assad government in Syria. When Russian President Vladimir Putin decisively intervened in Syria’s bloody civil war in September 2015, many were taken completely by surprise. Western commentators and politicians ― including none other than then-U.S. President Barack Obama ― unanimously predicted that Moscow would get bogged down in the Syrian conflict.

Two years on, it is safe to say that Syria has not become a repeat of the Soviet Union’s failed campaign in Afghanistan. The Russian intervention has all but achieved all of its key goals. The military and political situation of the Assad regime, which seemed almost hopeless in the summer of 2015, has radically improved. The Syrian government is now in control of over 90 percent of the country’s territory. The self-proclaimed Islamic State is on the brink of extinction. Many other radical Islamist groups have been left in a severely weakened state. The more moderate anti-Assad opposition, which receives massive military assistance from the United States and Gulf monarchies, is not doing much better, either. Weakened, fragmented and militarily isolated, it has all bust lost any chance of winning the civil war. President Bashar Assad’s political future is no longer in any doubt.

The greatest surprise is not the success of Russia’s intervention in Syria but the very limited forces and assets that have proved sufficient to achieve that victory. Moscow did not deploy any large numbers of troops on the ground. Its losses in Syria have been negligible. The Russian expeditionary force has remained very small throughout the entire campaign ― a few thousand men at the very most, including military police and personnel operated by private military campaigns. No more than a few hundred of them were involved at any one time in any single operation. The amount of military hardware Russia has deployed in Syria is also very limited. By all accounts, the price of the Russian campaign in Syria has proved very affordable, both financially and in terms of the losses of Russian personnel, which remain well below 100 men.

The Russian Air Force group in Syria is not very large, either. It was estimated at various periods at 30-50 combat aircraft and 16-40 helicopters. The number of sorties per aircraft, however, has been impressively high. By late August 2017, Russian planes and helicopters had flown more than 28,000 missions in Syria and attacked approximately 90,000 targets, with a loss of only one Su-24M plane. Let us recall that during the campaign in Afghanistan, the Soviet forces lost an average of one combat aircraft for every 750 sorties. Meanwhile, the Russian UAVs deployed in Syria have flown more than 14,000 sorties.

The success and affordability of the Russian military intervention in Syria contrast sharply with the U.S. record in many parts of the globe. That success can be ascribed to several key factors.

First, Russia has managed to foster a very productive symbiosis between its expeditionary forces and Syrian government troops. It has taken effective steps to rebuild the fighting ability of the Syrian Army. The revitalized Syrian units were often bolstered by a small but highly capable contingent of Russian support personnel and elite Spetsnaz troops. Even more importantly, high-ranking Russian officers were not limited to advisory roles. They led Syrian troops on many important stretches of the front, bringing in much-needed military experience and expertise. Many of the key Syrian units are led by Russian generals. The 5th Volunteer Assault Corps, which has been the Syrian Army’s main assault unit over the past 12 months, is equipped with Russian hardware and formed and led by Russian commanders, who also hand-picked the unit’s Syrian personnel. This approach may lack political correctness, but it has proved highly effective.

Second, Russia has managed to obviate the need for deploying large numbers of troops on the ground by bringing in private military companies. These companies consist of well-paid mercenaries, most of whom are retired Russian servicemen. The difference from the similar practice in the United States is that the Russian private military companies are not relegated to supporting roles. They are used as highly capable assault forces, and their personnel are often embedded with Syrian units to augment those units’ fighting ability. This approach has proved very useful both militarily and politically, as it minimizes the political cost of direct military intervention. The Russian public has proved completely indifferent to reports of the losses suffered by the mercenary companies, rightly believing that “these people are highly paid, and knew what they were getting into.” As a result ― and contrary to Western expectations ― Russian losses in Syria have not led to any negative domestic repercussions for the Putin administration.

The West tends to ignore the success of the Russian military intervention in Syria, and pays little attention to the various aspects of Russian military activity in that country. Clearly, this is not a pleasant topic for the Western political and military observers whose predictions that Putin would get bogged down in Syria have proved wrong. Nevertheless, the victorious Russian military campaign has major implications for the future course of the Russian military machine.

At just over two years, the campaign in Syria has not been very long, but almost all senior Russian military commanders have been involved in it on a rotational basis. According to a November 2017 statement by the chief of the Russian General Staff, Army Gen. Valeriy Gerasimov, “all the commanders of the military districts, combined-services armies, and Air Force and Air Defense armies, as well as almost all divisional commanders, and more than half of the commanders of combined-services brigades and regiments” have had a stint in Syria. All these officers have gained valuable, real-life experience of complex modern warfare in a remote theater, in a campaign where air power and high-precision weapons have played a major role, and where complex supply and logistics challenges have been largely resolved.

The availability of these experienced commanders, a record of a successful and victorious military campaign, and the lessons learned from using air power, modern technology and special operations forces will provide a major boost to the Russian military machine for years to come. Additionally, the confidence gained by the Russian military in Syria may steer Russian foreign and military policy toward a more assertive and interventionist course.

Ruslan Pukhov is the director of the Centre for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies, a think tank dedicated to studying the defense industry and arms trade.

https://www.defensenews.com/outlook...russias-unexpected-military-victory-in-syria/
 

bhramos

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Russian Su-25 Almost Hits US F-22 During Intercept Over Syria, But Is There More Going On?



"A Russian Su-35 fighter jet, performing an air cover mission at an altitude of 10,000 meters, swiftly approached the F-22 from the rear," their statement added. The pilot reportedly succeeded in "forcing the American aircraft to leave the area."

http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zon...tercept-over-syria-but-is-there-more-going-on
 

pmaitra

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Russian Su-25 Almost Hits US F-22 During Intercept Over Syria, But Is There More Going On?



"A Russian Su-35 fighter jet, performing an air cover mission at an altitude of 10,000 meters, swiftly approached the F-22 from the rear," their statement added. The pilot reportedly succeeded in "forcing the American aircraft to leave the area."

http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zon...tercept-over-syria-but-is-there-more-going-on
"Hits" is an overstatement. It was chased away from what I have read.
 

bhramos

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A one-and-a-half-ton bomb carried the militants' bunker.


The video captures a high-precision powerful bomb KAB-1500. She flashed in the frame a moment before the explosion, a wave from which she knocked the operator off his feet. Such a bomb can pierce about 3 m of reinforced concrete floors or 20 m of ground before exploding. KAB-1500 can take under the wing bombers Su-24, Su-34 and Su-35 fighters.

https://utro.ru/army/2017/12/28/1348322.shtml
 

bhramos

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"Acting decisively": Putin instructed the FSB not to take terrorists in captivity


Russian President Vladimir Putin held a meeting in the Kremlin with servicemen of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation. The head of state awarded the military, who distinguished themselves during the operation in Syria. Commenting on the explosion in one of the supermarkets in St. Petersburg, Putin called the incident a terrorist act. RT conducted a live broadcast.

https://russian.rt.com/russia/article/465342-putin-voennye-nagrazhdenie
 

bhramos

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BDK and container ship

Bosporus. "Caesar Kunikov" and Maersk Kyrenia.
Photo by: Yörük Işık



one going to Syria, one returning from Syria part of Syrian express...
 

bhramos

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The projectile released by the fighters of the 1st Coastal Brigade of the SSA on positions of the SAA.

Sochi is yours, Hama is ours.

PS Apparently hinted at the negotiations of the opposition in Sochi.

 

bhramos

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On December 26, several Syrian Kurdish parties greeted the upcoming Syrian conference on national dialogue in the Russian city of Sochi. In a joint statement, they stressed that, as part of their rights as the Syrian side, they will attend the conference.

"We support any conference that will end the tyranny and achieve peace. We reaffirm our right to attend a conference in Sochi to represent our people and contribute to the solution of this crisis, which has become a tragedy, "the statement of the Syrian Kurdish parties says.
 

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