SYRIA: SPECIAL FORCES FROM TURKEY ATTACK THE SYRIAN ARAB ARMY
February 19, 2015
Yesterday the Syrian Arab Army tried to relief the insurgent-besieged
villages of Nubl and al-Zahraa and to close the corridor between
the city of Aleppo and the Turkish border to the north. The troops
captured three villages and nearly closed the gap in their ring
around Aleppo but were pushed out again in an onslaught by hundreds
of enemies coming from the direction of the Turkish border.
The map shows the areas gained and lost again by the SAA in light
green. (bigger)
A bloody video from the aftermath (now deleted) showed several dozens
of dead Syrian Army fighters massacred in what looked like a well
executed ambush.
This was curious as the usual insurgent groups in the area are not
know for good military planning:
Regime sources say that the defining characteristic of yesterday's
"ferocious" battle was Turkish support for the armed groups, as
evidenced by the transfer of fighters and military supplies from
inside Turkey to Aleppo's northern countryside, including Caucasian
fighters who answer directly to Turkish intelligence.
On Twitter one Omer Khãn, who claims to be a Turkish soldier and is
an avid supporter of the Syrian opposition, looks at the gruesome
pictures of the dead soldiers and remarks (1, 2, 3):
Who where these SAA up against in #Mallah ? Shooting only Head is
feat for a Regular Army, much less for #Rebels.
SAA skulls shattered/shot in/bet Eyes. this is only work of special
units, unlikely any Rebel Org.
#Aleppo Whoever killed those SAA was no Mere Rebel, Pro-Reg cry about
Turkish Intervention.
I concur. Whoever attacked those Syrian troops must have had, unlike
the usual insurgents or jihadists, some extensive and professional
special forces experience.
This is not the first time that Turkey actively intervenes in Syria.
Recently released Turkish court documents show that Turkey, on top of
logistic help, gave direct artillery fire support to the insurgents
in several case.
There are new reports that the U.S. plans to give the insurgents
radios and other equipment to call in air strikes especially to the
Kurds. But the U.S. has already given such equipment to a few selected
Kurdish fighters in Kobani for use against the Islamic State. I doubt
very much that these will be given to "moderate rebels" or will be
used against the Syrian army.
I also doubt that the U.S. will really train or further equip
additional "moderate" anti-Syrian fighters. The biggest lobbyist for
such arming was the former U.S ambassador to Syria Robert Ford. He
has now changed course and admits that there are no "moderates"
who could sensibly be armed:
Ford has accused the rebels of collaborating with the Nusra Front,
the al Qaida affiliate in Syria that the U.S. declared a terrorist
organization more than two years ago. He says opposition infighting
has worsened and he laments the fact that extremist groups now rule
in most territories outside the Syrian regime's control.
Ford said part of the problem was that too many rebels - and their
patrons in Turkey and Qatar - insisted that Nusra was a homegrown,
anti-Assad force when in fact it was an al Qaida affiliate whose
ideology was virtually indistinguishable from the Islamic State's.
...
"It becomes impossible to field an effective opposition when no one
even agrees who or what is the enemy," he said.
Ford said the latest U.S. approach of ditching the old rebel model
to build a new, handpicked paramilitary to focus on the Islamic State
was doomed; Syrian rebels are more concerned with bringing down Assad
than with fighting extremists for the West, and there are far too
few fighters to take the project seriously.
...
Ford said the time had come for U.S. officials and their allies to have
a serious talk about "boots on the ground," though he was quick to add
that the fighters didn't need to be American. He said a professional
ground force was the only way to wrest Syria from the jihadists.
With Ford's support lost the Syrian opposition lobbyists and their
friends in the Obama administration will not be able to get the U.S.
support they want.
Ford is right that a professional ground force is needed to "wrest
Syria from the jihadists". That ground force already exists. It is the
Syrian Arab Army and its allies. But when NATO member and U.S. ally
Turkey sends special forces to support the jihadist in ambushing and
slaughtering those forces without getting rebuffed from Washington
it will take years and lots of bloody slaughters until the jihadists
are finally finished.
Posted by b on February 19, 2015 at 12:53 PM | Permalink
http://www.moonofalabama.org/2015/02/syria-special-forces-from-turkey-attack-the-syrian-arab-army-.html#more
February 19, 2015
Yesterday the Syrian Arab Army tried to relief the insurgent-besieged
villages of Nubl and al-Zahraa and to close the corridor between
the city of Aleppo and the Turkish border to the north. The troops
captured three villages and nearly closed the gap in their ring
around Aleppo but were pushed out again in an onslaught by hundreds
of enemies coming from the direction of the Turkish border.
The map shows the areas gained and lost again by the SAA in light
green. (bigger)
A bloody video from the aftermath (now deleted) showed several dozens
of dead Syrian Army fighters massacred in what looked like a well
executed ambush.
This was curious as the usual insurgent groups in the area are not
know for good military planning:
Regime sources say that the defining characteristic of yesterday's
"ferocious" battle was Turkish support for the armed groups, as
evidenced by the transfer of fighters and military supplies from
inside Turkey to Aleppo's northern countryside, including Caucasian
fighters who answer directly to Turkish intelligence.
On Twitter one Omer Khãn, who claims to be a Turkish soldier and is
an avid supporter of the Syrian opposition, looks at the gruesome
pictures of the dead soldiers and remarks (1, 2, 3):
Who where these SAA up against in #Mallah ? Shooting only Head is
feat for a Regular Army, much less for #Rebels.
SAA skulls shattered/shot in/bet Eyes. this is only work of special
units, unlikely any Rebel Org.
#Aleppo Whoever killed those SAA was no Mere Rebel, Pro-Reg cry about
Turkish Intervention.
I concur. Whoever attacked those Syrian troops must have had, unlike
the usual insurgents or jihadists, some extensive and professional
special forces experience.
This is not the first time that Turkey actively intervenes in Syria.
Recently released Turkish court documents show that Turkey, on top of
logistic help, gave direct artillery fire support to the insurgents
in several case.
There are new reports that the U.S. plans to give the insurgents
radios and other equipment to call in air strikes especially to the
Kurds. But the U.S. has already given such equipment to a few selected
Kurdish fighters in Kobani for use against the Islamic State. I doubt
very much that these will be given to "moderate rebels" or will be
used against the Syrian army.
I also doubt that the U.S. will really train or further equip
additional "moderate" anti-Syrian fighters. The biggest lobbyist for
such arming was the former U.S ambassador to Syria Robert Ford. He
has now changed course and admits that there are no "moderates"
who could sensibly be armed:
Ford has accused the rebels of collaborating with the Nusra Front,
the al Qaida affiliate in Syria that the U.S. declared a terrorist
organization more than two years ago. He says opposition infighting
has worsened and he laments the fact that extremist groups now rule
in most territories outside the Syrian regime's control.
Ford said part of the problem was that too many rebels - and their
patrons in Turkey and Qatar - insisted that Nusra was a homegrown,
anti-Assad force when in fact it was an al Qaida affiliate whose
ideology was virtually indistinguishable from the Islamic State's.
...
"It becomes impossible to field an effective opposition when no one
even agrees who or what is the enemy," he said.
Ford said the latest U.S. approach of ditching the old rebel model
to build a new, handpicked paramilitary to focus on the Islamic State
was doomed; Syrian rebels are more concerned with bringing down Assad
than with fighting extremists for the West, and there are far too
few fighters to take the project seriously.
...
Ford said the time had come for U.S. officials and their allies to have
a serious talk about "boots on the ground," though he was quick to add
that the fighters didn't need to be American. He said a professional
ground force was the only way to wrest Syria from the jihadists.
With Ford's support lost the Syrian opposition lobbyists and their
friends in the Obama administration will not be able to get the U.S.
support they want.
Ford is right that a professional ground force is needed to "wrest
Syria from the jihadists". That ground force already exists. It is the
Syrian Arab Army and its allies. But when NATO member and U.S. ally
Turkey sends special forces to support the jihadist in ambushing and
slaughtering those forces without getting rebuffed from Washington
it will take years and lots of bloody slaughters until the jihadists
are finally finished.
Posted by b on February 19, 2015 at 12:53 PM | Permalink
http://www.moonofalabama.org/2015/02/syria-special-forces-from-turkey-attack-the-syrian-arab-army-.html#more