The Syrian Crisis

SajeevJino

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Norway to send ships to Syria to ferry weapons out

Norway is the first country to say it will send military servicemen to Syria to help the UN eliminate President Bashar Assad's chemical weapons arsenal.

Norwegian Foreign Minister Borge Brende told The Associated Press in an interview that Norway will send a civilian cargo ship and Navy frigate to Syrian ports to pick up the weapons and carry them elsewhere for destruction.

The UN's Organization for the Prevention of Chemical Weapons is still working out the plan for destroying the stockpiles.

Fifty servicemen usually accompany a Norwegian frigate, but Brende said destroying the weapons is a Norwegian obligation.

He said the operation "is not risk-free." But Brende says leaving the weapons in Syria is an even bigger risk.

Denmark is also considering such support. It is awaiting parliamentary approval.

Norway to send ships to Syria to ferry weapons out | The Times of Israel
 

kseeker

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President Assad gaining ground in Syrian civil war - The Times of India

BEIRUT: Forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad have firmly seized the momentum in the country's civil war in recent weeks, capturing one rebel stronghold after another and triumphantly planting the two-starred Syrian government flag amid shattered buildings and rubble-strewn streets.

Despite global outrage over the use of chemical weapons, Assad's government is successfully exploiting divisions among the opposition, dwindling foreign help for the rebel cause and significant local support, all linked to the same thing: discomfort with the Islamic extremists who have become a major part of the rebellion.

The battlefield gains would strengthen the government's hand in peace talks sought by the world community.

Both the Syrian government and the opposition have said they are ready to attend a proposed peace conference in Geneva that the US and Russia are trying to convene, although it remains unclear whether the meeting will indeed take place. The Western-backed opposition in exile, which has little support among rebel fighters inside Syria and even less control over them, has set several conditions for its participation, chief among them that Assad must not be part of a transitional government, a notion Damascus has roundly rejected.

"President Bashar Assad will be heading any transitional stage in Syria, like it or not," Omar Ossi, a member of Syria's parliament, told The Associated Press.

The government's recent gains on the outskirts of the capital, Damascus, and in the north outside the country's largest city, Aleppo, have reinforced Assad's position. And the more the government advances, the easier it is to dismiss the weak and fractious opposition's demands.

"Assad wants to go to Geneva with credit, not debit," said Hisham Jaber, a retired Lebanese army general who heads the Beirut-based Middle East Center for Studies and Political Research. "He is trying day after day to gain on the battlefield, and when he goes to Geneva he can say, ... 'OK, here's the situation, we are strong on the field. What do you have?"'

The government has made its biggest gains in the suburbs south of Damascus, where army troops backed by guerrillas from the Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah group and Shiite militants from Iraq have captured five towns since Oct. 11. The latest to fall was Hejeira, which army troops swept through Wednesday, just days after capturing the adjacent suburb of Sbeineh.

The troops were quickly followed by state television cameras eager to broadcast the victory: a two-starred government flag triumphantly planted amid bombed-out buildings, twisted rebar and rubble-strewn streets.

In northern Syria, Assad's forces have captured two towns this month, Safira and Tel Aran, southeast of the battlefield city of Aleppo, and have retaken a military base near Aleppo's international airport.

Aleppo, the country's largest city and former commercial capital, is a major prize in the war. Assad's military and the rebels have been battling over it since the summer of 2012, carving it up into rebel- and government-held areas and leaving much of the city in ruins.

In some ways, the recent run of government victories fit into the regular back-and-forth rhythm of the conflict over the past nearly three years, with the pendulum swinging in Assad's favor at the moment.

But the government advances around Aleppo hold greater trouble for the opposition since they suggest the rebels' grip on the north, much of which fell to anti-Assad fighters over the past year, is far more tenuous than once believed.

A confluence of factors has increasingly hampered the opposition's war effort in the north.

The rebels have been crippled by infighting since the al-Qaida-linked Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant aggressively pushed into rebel-held areas of the north this year. Fighters from the extremist group, most of them foreigners, have clashed repeatedly with more moderate rebel brigades, leaving scores dead on both sides.

Rebel groups, particularly the Islamic State but more mainstream factions as well, also have been engaged in a brutal side conflict with Syria's Kurdish minority, which has a large presence in the northeast and parts of Aleppo province.

Combined, these two wars-within-a-war have sapped the opposition's strength and undermined the effort to oust Assad.

They have also provided an opening for the Syrian leader to exploit.

"Fighting among ourselves has done a lot of damage," Abu Thabet, the commander of the Aleppo Swords Battalion, said by telephone. "Six months ago, the regime was always on the defensive and we would attack first. Now, after we started infighting, the regime is always on the offensive. They attack, and we defend." Abu Thabet spoke on condition he be identified only his nom de guerre to protect his security.

Rebels also have been frustrated by US President Barack Obama's decision to seek a diplomatic path to disarming Damascus of its chemical weapons.

After an Aug. 21 chemical weapons attack on rebel-held suburbs of Damascus that killed hundreds, Washington accused Assad's forces of carrying them out, though his government denied it. The US then threatened military strikes against Syrian forces. The strikes were averted when Russia brokered a deal to destroy Assad's chemical arsenal by mid-2014.

Many in the opposition had held out hopes that American military intervention, even if limited in scale, would help tip the scales of a deadlocked civil war in the rebels' favor. Compounding their disappointment, many rebels saw the diplomatic deal as a giving green light to Assad to continue killing people with conventional weapons, as well as effectively making the Syrian leader a partner with the international community at least until the arsenal is destroyed.

At the same time, the flow of weapons and ammunition from across the border in neighboring Turkey to fighters inside Syria has slowed to a trickle, rebels say, as Ankara has grown increasingly concerned about the prominent role of Islamic extremists.

"Support from the military council of Aleppo and its suburbs has stopped completely," said Abu Thabet, referring to the rebel body that coordinates the weapons flow from Turkey to rebel battalions doing the fighting.

"This has all stopped," he said. "I'm on the ground, I really don't know what's going on with Turkey or the council, all I know is that we're not getting anything."
 

Armand2REP

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It will be a steady decline for the opposition if they don't unite.
 

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Syrian air defenses 'harass' Turkish F-16 by putting them under radar lock | idrw.org

SOURCE: Hurriyet Daily News

Syrian air defense systems harassed three Turkish jets flying over the southern province of Hatay by placing them under a radar lock, the Turkish General Staff said in a statement on its website today.

The three F-16 jets, which took off in succession from ?ncirlik Airbase in Adana and the Merizfon Airbase in the northern Anatolian province of Amasya, were each put under a radar lock for 10 seconds by Syrian missile systems while flying in Turkish airspace over Hatay's Dörtyol district, the statement said.

A radar lock means that the missiles of the launch batteries were targeting the Turkish planes, ready to be fired.

Syria downed a Turkish F-4 jet that was flying over the Mediterranean Sea on June 22, 2012.
More recently, Turkey shot down a Syrian helicopter on Sept. 16 after arguing that it had violated Turkish airspace by two kilometers.
 

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BBC News - Top Syrian rebel commander Abdul Qadir al-Saleh dies


Abdul Qadir al-Saleh was a former businessman known as Hajji Marea

A top Syrian rebel commander has died of wounds he sustained in an air strike on a rebel-held air base in Aleppo province on Thursday, his group says.

Abdul Qadir al-Saleh, the leader of Liwa al-Tawhid, died overnight, a spokesman told the Associated Press.

Abdul Aziz Salama, the brigade's political leader, had assumed overall command, the spokesman added.

Liwa al-Tawhid is one of the main rebel forces in Aleppo and is estimated to have between 8,000 and 10,000 fighters.

It was formed in July 2012 to unite the many separate fighting groups operating in the northern Aleppo countryside. Later that month, it led a rebel offensive on the city of Aleppo and took control of several districts.

In January, Liwa al-Tawhid joined the Syrian Islamic Liberation Front (SILF), an alliance of Islamist groups which mostly recognise the Supreme Military Council of the Free Syrian Army but not the National Coalition.

Government advance
Saleh, a former businessman from the town of Marea, had been meeting other senior figures from Liwa al-Tawhid at the time of the air strike.

Youssef al-Abbas, also known as Abu al-Tayyeb, died soon after the attack. There are conflicting reports about whether he was the brigade's intelligence or financial chief.

Saleh and another senior figure, Abdul al-Aziz Salameh, were meanwhile rushed to a hospital in neighbouring Turkey. The opposition Aleppo News Network reported on Friday that they were in a "good condition".

However, Saleh's subsequently died and was brought back to Syria for burial, Liwa al-Tawhid and activists confirmed on Monday.

"We declare the martyrdom of Abdul Qadir al-Saleh," a statement by the brigade said.

Liwa al-Tawhid arrested 30 people suspected of being government informers following the strike.

"As an individual, he was very, very important, certainly in the Aleppo area, but increasingly as an individual that many in Syria felt represented the revolution," Charles Lister, an analyst at IHS Jane's Terrorism and Insurgency Centre, told the AFP news agency.

"He came from a humble background, was outwardly religious but was very open... and he maintained extremely good relations with almost all groups of all different natures."

He said Saleh's death might "spur on the rebels to launch a counter-attack as the regime advances" on opposition-held parts of Aleppo.

A week ago, Liwa al-Tawhid joined five other rebel groups operating in the city, including the al-Qaeda-affiliated al-Nusra Front, in urging people to "face up to regime attacks".

Their joint statement said government forces backed by fighters from the Lebanese Shia Islamist movement Hezbollah, Iranian Revolutionary Guards and members of Abu al-Fadl Abbas, an Iraqi Shia militia, had launched a "fierce offensive to reoccupy" Aleppo.

Aleppo has been divided roughly in half by the government and opposition since mid-2012, when rebel fighters launched an offensive to gain control of northern Syria.

However, in the past few weeks the army has secured the area around the city's international airport and retaken the strategically important Base 80 nearby. Troops have also captured the towns of Safira and Tal Aran.

Despite the rebel losses, Saleh was resolute in an interview with Opposition Orient Television last week, insisting: "We will not let Iran and Hezbollah advance except over our dead bodies."
 

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Syria's chemical weapons could be processed and destroyed out at sea, say sources familiar with discussions at the international body in charge of eliminating the toxic arsenal.

Four days after Albania rejected a U.S. request that it host a weapons decommissioning plant, Western diplomats and an official of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons at The Hague told Reuters the OPCW was studying whether it might carry out the work at sea, on a ship or offshore rig.

Confirming the discussion, the OPCW official stressed there had been no decision: "The only thing known at this time is that this is technically feasible," the official said on Tuesday.

While other states, notably Japan, have dealt with chemical weapons at sea, mounting such a large and complex operation afloat would be unprecedented, independent experts said.

But given the equally daunting challenge of neutralizing over 1,000 metric tons (1102.3 tons) of material in the middle of a civil war, and the reluctance of governments like Albania to defy popular protests against hosting any facility, it is being considered.

"There are discussions about destroying it on a ship," one U.S. official told Reuters.
Exclusive: Syria's chemical weapons may be destroyed at sea - sources
 

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100 rebels killed in bid to break Syrian troops' siege | Business Standard

IANS | Damascus November 25, 2013 Last Updated at 15:34 IST

More than 100 rebel fighters have been killed in the countryside of Syrian capital Damascus as they attempted to break the government troops' siege, media reported Monday.

The Syrian troops repelled the rebels' attack against military base and checkpoints in the towns of Baharieh, Qasimieh, and Qaria al-Shamieh area in the eastern al-Ghouta suburb, reports Xinhua.

The incident came as hundreds of rebel fighters reportedly infiltrated from neighbouring Jordan to help the trapped rebels in the besieged al-Ghouta countryside.

The battles in the south and east of Damascus have been coupled with others on the northern rim of the capital, namely in Deir Attieh town, located in the al-Qalamoun mountains.

Following the government troops' recapture of Qara town in al-Qalamoun, more than 500 radical rebels from the Al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front have stormed Deir Attieh and are entrenched there, according to media reports.

The Syrian troops recently tightened the siege on the town in a bid to recapture it from the Nusra fighters.

The victory in al-Qalamoun is crucial for the Syrian troops as ridding the rebels of the area would secure the road which connects Damascus with central and northern Syria, and cut off the rebels' supply line from neighbouring Lebanon.
 

nrupatunga

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Secret Talks to Save Syria Begin
The United States, Iran, Russia, and Saudi Arabia and others held secret and informal discussions :rolleyes::shocked::shocked:eek:n Thursday to devise a strategy for improving the U.N.'s stalled relief effort in Syria, according to diplomatic sources familiar with the effort. The meeting -- which was held at the French mission to the United Nations in Geneva -- was convened to lay the ground work for a more formal meeting scheduled for November 26 on the future of international relief efforts in Syria.

The participation of American and Iranian officials provides further evidence that the decades-long diplomatic freeze between the two countries is beginning to thaw, offering new areas beyond the ongoing round of nuclear diplomacy where the long-time enemies can cooperate.

One Western diplomat complained that Amos's original plan -- to organize a relatively small, nimble group of influential players -- was now giving way to a much larger, and potentially unwieldy group of countries.

Thursday's meeting also involved representatives from Germany, and officials from the U.N.'s chief relief agency, including the World Food Program and the U. N. Children's Fund and the Norwegian Refugee Council.

Diplomats familiar with the talks said that France has insisted that Syria's neighbor, Turkey, be allowed to participate in Tuesday's talks, while Russia proposed that most of Syria's neighbors, including Iraq, Jordan and Lebanon, be invited. Israel has not been invited.
"The group is getting bigger and bigger. What was supposed to be a small is now becoming a monster," said one diplomat, raising concern that Tuesday's session would degenerate into an oversized gathering of diplomats delivering political speeches. It's not clear, the official, said that this is "something workable."
Hmm, so this is the classic case of too many cook spoil the soup..
@SajeevJino, whats this new us-iran thing??
 
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SajeevJino

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The United States, Iran, Russia, and Saudi Arabia and others held secret and informal discussions on Thursday to devise a strategy for improving the U.N.'s stalled relief effort in Syria, according to diplomatic sources familiar with the effort.
KSA ... ? I think KSA also didn't get invited ..




I want to say only one thing The ----n Diplomacy will not saves anyones a$$ from mullah's ..History teach me they are not a Good Peace Keepers

Only word Come in my Mind is Barack Hussein Obama
 

kseeker

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BBC News - Syria government confirms Geneva peace talks attendance

The Syrian government has confirmed it will attend peace talks planned for January, but says it is not going in order to negotiate a handover of power.

Its delegation to the talks in Geneva will receive direction from President Bashar al-Assad, official media report.

It dismissed the opposition's key demand that Mr Assad play no role in any transitional period.

More than 100,000 people have died since protests against Mr Assad erupted in March 2011.

Almost nine million others have been driven from their homes, around two-fifths of Syria's pre-war population.

Turkey and Iran - who back opposing sides in the conflict - have united in calls for a ceasefire ahead of the 22 January talks known as Geneva II, Iranian media reports.

Speaking at a joint news conference in Tehran, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and his Turkish counterpart, Ahmad Davutoglu, said every effort should be made stop the fighting as soon as possible, Mehr news agency says.

"Iran and Turkey have similar standpoints on several issues, including that there is no military solution to the Syrian crisis," said Mr Zarif. Iran, which backs the Assad government, has already said it will attend Geneva II if invited.

Opposition conditions
The Syrian foreign ministry said its delegation to the talks would pursue "the Syrian people's demands, first and foremost eliminating terrorism". Officials routinely refer to all opposition in these terms.

Referring to comments by Western and some Arab foreign ministers, who support a move away from Mr Assad's regime, the Syrian foreign ministry said: "They need... to wake up from their dreams.

"If they insisted on these delusions, there is no need for them to attend," branding the UK and France's position a throwback to "the era of colonialism".

"Our people won't allow anybody whomsoever to steal their exclusive right to determining their future and leadership," it said.

The attitudes that the government has announced are clearly designed to put off the opposition, which is in disarray over whether to attend, the BBC's Jim Muir reports form Beirut.

The uncompromising statement certainly will not encourage the opposition to take the plunge, especially as the regime is politically, diplomatically and militarily in a stronger position than it has been for a long time, our correspondent adds.

Syrian families leave the besieged town of al-Moadamiyeh
The opposition says aid must be allowed through to besieged areas
The UN, US and Russia have been trying for months to get both sides to agree a political solution to the conflict.

Earlier this week, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said Syria's government and opposition would both attend the talks.

The UN special envoy to Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, said a full list of participants was yet to be established, adding that Iran and Saudi Arabia were "possible participants".

Hopes of a breakthrough in Geneva were raised after world powers agreed a deal with Iran on Sunday over its controversial nuclear programme.

Mr Ban said he expected representatives of both sides to come "with a clear understanding" that the goal of the talks was the full implementation of the Geneva Communique, issued after a meeting of the UN-backed Action Group for Syria in the Swiss city in June 2012.

He reiterated that the peace talks would seek to establish a transitional government with full executive powers - as envisaged in the Geneva Communique.

Earlier this month, the main opposition alliance, the National Coalition, agreed to attend Geneva II if a number of conditions were met.

The coalition's leader, Ahmed Jarba, also stressed that the president would "have no role in the transitional period".

Relief agencies would have to be given access to besieged areas and all detainees, particularly women and children, had to be freed, Mr Jarba said.
 

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BBC News - Syrian army secures Damascus-Homs motorway

Syrian government forces are reported to have taken control of the motorway linking Damascus with the city of Homs.

The road has been closed for several weeks because of heavy fighting with rebels in the Qalamoun mountains, which run along the border with Lebanon.

The army is also said to have captured most of Nabak, a town next to the road, 80km (50 miles) north of the capital.

Over the weekend, opposition activists accused government forces of carrying out atrocities against families there.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based activist group, reported that five children had been shot dead in an industrial area.

Photographs purportedly showing bloodied corpses were posted online.

Offensive

Troops backed by pro-government militiamen and members of the militant Lebanese Shia Islamist movement Hezbollah launched an offensive in mid-November to oust rebel fighters from the Qalamoun mountains and cut off their cross-border supply routes.

The army has already seized the towns of Qara and Deir Attiya, both along the Damascus-Homs motorway, but fighting around Nabak blocked the key road for about 20 days, restricting fuel deliveries to the capital.

On Monday, the Syrian Observatory reported that government forces had managed to regain control of the motorway, but that it was not yet safe.

The pro-government newspaper, al-Watan, said the army expected to reopen the road "within a short time", adding that it had "extended full control over Nabak". It also quoted a military source as saying 100 rebel fighters had been killed or captured.

However, opposition activists disputed the claim, saying the rebels still held part of the town and that fighting was continuing.

The nearby motorway serves as the main link between Damascus and the north, as well as government strongholds along the Mediterranean coast.

It will also be crucial for the transportation of Syria's chemical weapons to ports from where they will be loaded on to ships.

Norway and Denmark have offered merchant vessels to help transport the chemicals abroad, while the US will provide a vessel on which they can be destroyed at sea.

'Blasphemy' execution

On Monday, the head of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), which is leading the mission to destroy the stockpile, warned that it would be "quite difficult to meet" the 31 December deadline for transporting the most toxic chemicals out of the country.

"This is very challenging, especially in view of the security situation, which is worsening in this country," Ahmet Uzumcu told reporters in Oslo, a day before he will collect the Nobel Peace Prize on behalf of the OPCW.

Mr Uzumcu also said there was "quite an ambitious timeline" to get less-toxic chemicals out of Syria by 5 February, adding that "there might be a few days' delay".

But he was still confident that all of Syria's chemical weapons would be destroyed on time, by the middle of 2014.

In a separate development on Monday, the Syrian Observatory reported that jihadist rebels from the al-Qaeda affiliated Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) executed a man in the northern province of Idlib after accusing him of blasphemy.

The diesel merchant, who suffered from a mental illness, was arrested after jokingly asking the ISIS fighters if they thought he was "the god of fuel" when they complained that there were impurities in his supplies, the activist group said.

The UN also said that a mass campaign to vaccinate some 23 million children against polio in the Middle East was starting this week.

It said the programme is a vital response to an outbreak of polio in Syria, where 17 cases have been detected. The aim is to reach more than 2 million Syrian children, particularly those in contested areas.
 

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Assad is in a very good position.
- He is on the offensive taking back his country from militants.
- His Iranian friends have scored a diplomatic victory.
- Most sanctions will soon go away, this will give Iran an economic boost, which means more money for Syria.
- Americans don't want to supply weapons to the terrorists. The Arab states can not run this operation by themselves as effectively as the CIA.
 

SajeevJino

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Assad is in a very good position.
- He is on the offensive taking back his country from militants.
- His Iranian friends have scored a diplomatic victory.
- Most sanctions will soon go away, this will give Iran an economic boost, which means more money for Syria.
- Americans don't want to supply weapons to the terrorists. The Arab states can not run this operation by themselves as effectively as the CIA.

Thanks for the Update


Yes Because of the Chemical Deal and some foreign Boots also stationed and Two Norwegian Warships also inside Syrian territory

But once they Cleared moving the Chemical weapons there should be a clash b/w the Sunni and Shia Clerics just what happening in Iraq nowadays .

Hope nothing get more worse and Syria should Conduct Polls to ease his Situations
 

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United States suspends non-lethal assistance into northern Syria
The United States has suspended all non-lethal assistance into northern Syria after Islamic Front forces seized headquarters and warehouses belonging to the opposition's Supreme Military Council (SMC), a U.S. Embassy spokesman in Ankara said.

Fighters from the Islamic Front, a union of six major rebel groups, took control of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) bases at the Bab al-Hawa crossing on Syria's northwestern border with Turkey late on Friday.
Now that his red line breech didn't show any fireworks is potus having his new withdrawal line?? What happens to gcc??
 

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Terrorists struggles utilising a medieval trebuchet.

 
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China military ship to help guard Syria chemical weapons destruction | Reuters

(Reuters) - China is to send a military ship to help protect a specially adapted U.S. vessel that will destroy Syria's chemical weapons arsenal, the Foreign Ministry said on Thursday.

Syria is due to hand over deadly toxins which can be used to make sarin, VX gas and other lethal agents under an international agreement forged after an attack on the outskirts of Damascus killed hundreds in August.

The chemicals will be destroyed on board the specially adapted U.S. ship because they are too dangerous to import into any country. There is no agreement yet on where the ship will anchor while the work is carried out.

"China has decided to send a military ship to participate in the protection mission for the shipping of Syrian chemical weapons," ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a daily news briefing.
 

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Chinese warship in Cyprus to aid Syrian mission
Chinese warship in Cyprus to aid Syrian mission | The BRICS Post


Beijing has confirmed the arrival of a Chinese navy frigate in the Cypriot port of Limassol on Saturday to aid in the process of dismantling Syria's chemical weapons.

Chinese Ambassador to Cyprus Liu Xinsheng and Cypriot Defence Minister Fotis Fotiou oversaw the arrival of the Chinese warship Yancheng.

Logistical problems and the ongoing Syrian war has resulted in a missed deadline and delays in the international effort to rid Syria of its arsenal.

The Chinese ambassador said Beijing is fully committed in its support to the efforts of the United Nations and its chemical watchdog, the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW).

"China supports the efforts of the international community to destroy the Syrian chemical weapons "¦ we wish this operation a success," said Liu.

Earlier in December armoured Russian trucks were flown into Syria to transport the chemical weapons.

Syria agreed to abandon its chemical weapons under a deal proposed by Russia that was given the go-ahead by US President Barack Obama after intense negotiations between US Secretary of State John Kerry and the Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

In accordance with the UN Security Council resolution in September 2013, the chemical weapons will be transported out of Syria and be delivered to an American vessel for destruction.

Vessels from China, Russia, Denmark and Norway will escort the transportation of the chemical weapons.

Meanwhile, the Italian Foreign Ministry has confirmed it has made one of the country's ports available for the transfer of Syrian chemical stockpile to US vessel, the Cape Ray for destruction, Rai state television reported on Saturday.
 

SajeevJino

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The Russians Upgrading the Syrian Su 24MK to M2 to standard to kill More Syrian Civilians

Here is the Blog Post clearly indicating the upgrading Process




The Su-24 represents the most modern and main strike element of the Syrian Arab Air Force (SyAAF). They have taken an active part in the Syrian civil war since November 2012. While most of the SyAAF attack aircraft are already worn out and struggling to cope with the high demands, the Su-24's just received a full factory overhaul in Russia, ensuring they can maintain a high operational tempo.

Syria received a total of twenty-two Su-24's since 1990. Twenty Su-24MK's were ordered from the Soviet Union in 1988 and delivered in 1990.[1] One Su-24MK and one Su-24MR were donated by Libya in the mid 90's.[2] However, one Su-24 has already been lost in Syrian Civil War, bringing the total inventory down to twenty-one aircraft.

The fleet equips 819 squadron based at T4 in the middle of Syria with a few planes being detached to Seen in the South.
The MK version Syria received was a downgraded variant of the Su-24M, the M being built for the Soviet Union and the MK for export customers like Algeria, Iraq, Iran, Libya and Syria. The Su-24MR is a reconnaissance aircraft with no provision for bombs, but with two panoramic cameras and a side-looking radar installed instead of the attack radar and the laser/TV system on the Su-24M.

The single Su-24MR aircraft was acquired via Libya. This country was unable to maintain her six Su-24's on her own because of the imposed arms embargo. Being unable to acquire spare sparts from Russia, Libya sought help elsewhere. Syria and Iran were quick to help out and the fleet remained operational by help from these two countries. At the same time, both Syria and Iran attempted to convince Libya to sell the six Su-24's to them, this without success. As a 'thank you' for the Syrian help, the Libyans donated two Su-24's to Syria. One of them being the MK version while the other was a MR.
Oryx Blog: Syria and her recently upgraded Su-24's (1)

Oryx Blog: Syria and her recently upgraded Su-24's (2)


:hmm:

Although little known to the public, the whole Syrian Su-24MK fleet was upgraded to MK2 level in the past years. All twenty-one Su-24MK's were upgraded to MK2 standard, with the single Su-24MR not being upgraded. The MK2 upgrade brings the Su-24's on the same standard as the Algerian Su-24MK2's and the Russian Su-24M2's. The upgrade provides for improved targeting, navigation and fire control systems by replacing the plane's old control systems. The plane is also being made compatible with newer versions of the KAB-500/1500's and for Kh-31A's, Kh-31P's, Kh-59's and R-73's.

The contract was signed in 2009 and work started in 2010, with the upgrade on all the planes being completed in 2012.[3] More than half of the twenty-one upgraded Su-24's made it back to Syria without any problems, but up to ten of them weren't so lucky and were still stuck at Rzhev last autumn.

one conclusion for me ..!! I think the Autor didn't read up the last Para Through
 

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