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Des hélicos américains ont attaqué une cible en Syrie


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Et tu crois sérieusement que la Syrie peut donner des leçons (cf: Liban)????

Et j'irai même plus loin, je pense qu'ils étaient au courant de l'opération US, parceque franchement, ils passent aujourd'hui Pour des blaireaux incapables d'empêcher 4 hélicos US de venir chez eux et de repartir comme ils étaient venus.

Si ce qu'Oliv cite est vrai (ce qui confirmerai ce que je pense  :lol:) je joue demain à €millions  :lol:

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09:37  Le raid américain en Syrie aurait été coordonné avec Damas. Des sources du Pentagone ont confié à un journal émirati que l'opération héliportée contre le village d'Abou Kemal ''a été programmée par les Renseignements américains et coordonnée avec les Renseignements syriens''.  (Guysen.International.News)

Selon ces sources, les critiques et condamnations émises par Damas pourraient avoir été prévues dans le plan mis au point conjointement. Si ces informations s'avéraient, elles pourraient confirmer de nombreuses analyses parues dans les médias arabes après le raid, selon lesquelles ''la Syrie a toujours préféré faire faire le ''sale boulot'' par les autres''.

drôle de façon d'essayer de retourner la situation...

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Te fatigue pas les socialo belges sont les spécialistes de la captation du vote de l'immigration musulmane, ils sont donc anti-américains et anti-israéliens... Quand les américains font de la répression c'est dégueulass quand les terroristes islamistes font un attentat, oh les malheureux ils en sont réduits à cela.

vu l'importance de la communauté turque m'étonnerait qu'elle proteste du moins publiquement...

deux poids deux mesures

Tu as raison mon ami,

Aucune réponse de sa part pour l'instant !!!

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Ah mais CVS, les USA ne violent aucun espace aérien car ils sont partout chez eux... :lol:

J'ai pas trop saisi par contre le pourquoi du comment de l'attaque?

Depuis quand construire un bâtiment est un "act of war"?

http://mediatheque.lesoir.be/main.php?g2_view=core.DownloadItem&g2_itemId=281469&g2_serialNumber=1

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US strike in Syria "decapitated" al Qaeda's facilitation network

Al Qaeda leader Abu Ghadiya was killed in yesterday's strike inside Syria, a senior US military intelligence official told The Long War Journal. But US special operations forces also inflicted a major blow to al Qaeda's foreign fighter network based in Syria. The entire senior leadership of Ghadiya's network was also killed in the raid, the official stated.

Ghadiya was the leader of al Qaeda extensive network that funnels foreign fighters, weapons, and cash from Syria into Iraq along the entire length of the Syrian border. Ghadiya was first identified as the target of the raid inside Syria late last night here at The Long War Journal. The Associated Press reported Ghadiya was killed in the raid earlier today.

Several US helicopters entered the town of town of Sukkariya near Abu Kamal in eastern Syria, just five miles from the Iraqi border. US commandos from the hunter-killer teams of Task Force 88 assaulted the buildings sheltering Ghadiya and his staff.

The Syrian government has protested the attack, describing it as an act of "criminal and terrorist aggression" carried out by the US. The Syrian government claimed eight civilians, including women and children, were killed in the strike. But a journalist from The Associated Press who attended the funeral said that only the bodies of seven men were displayed.

The US official said there were more killed in the raid than is being reported. "There are more than public numbers [in the Syrian press] are saying, those reported killed were the Syrian locals that worked with al Qaeda," the official told The Long War Journal. "There were non-Syrian al Qaeda operatives killed as well."

Those killed include Ghadiya's brother and two cousins. "They also were part of the senior leadership," the official stated. "They're dead. We've decapitated the network." Others killed during the raid were not identified.

The strike is thought to have a major impact on al Qaeda's operations inside Syria. Al Qaeda's ability to control the vast group of local "Syrian coordinators" who directly help al Qaeda recruits and operatives enter Iraq has been "crippled."

Ghadiya's staff

The identity of Ghadiya and several members of his senior staff have been known since February 2008 when the US Treasury identified Ghadiya, his brother, and his two cousins as members of the network. The US Treasury department publicly designated Ghadiya, his brother, Akram Turki Hishan Al Mazidih, and his two cousins, Ghazy Fezza Hishan Al Mazidih and Saddah Jaylut Al Marsumis as senior members of al Qaeda's foreign facilitation network.

Ghadiya, whose real name is Badran Turki Hishan Al Mazidih, was an Iraqi from Mosul. He was working as an al Qaeda logistics coordinator in Syria since 2004, when he was appointed to the position by Abu Musab al Zarqawi. After Zarqawi's death, he "took orders directly, or through a deputy" from Abu Ayyub al Masri, al Qaeda's current leader in Iraq,

Ghazy Was Ghadiya's "right-hand man," the Treasury stated. "As second-in-command, Ghazy worked directly with [Ghadiya], managed network operations, and acted as the commander for [Ghadiya's] AQI [al Qaeda in Iraq] network when [Ghadiya] traveled."

Akram directed al Qaeda operations along with Ghadiya in the Al Qaim region right on the border with Syria. He smuggled weapons from Syria into Iraq, and ordered "the execution of AQI's enemies," Treasury stated. "Akram also ordered the execution of all persons found to be working with the Iraqi Government or US Forces."

Marsumi was an al Qaeda financier who "facilitated the financing and smuggling of AQI foreign fighters from Syria into Iraq." He helped Syrian suicide bombers enter Iraq, and also wired hundreds of thousands of dollars to Ghadiya to facilitate operations.

All four men lived openly inside Syria. The US Treasury identified Ghadiya, Ghazy, and Akram as living in Zabadani. Marsumi lived in the village of Al Shajlah.

A senior US general and the Iraqi spokesmen both noted that al Qaeda leaders were openly living inside Syria, and the Syrian government did nothing to shut down the network.

"The attacked area was the scene of activities of terrorist groups operating from Syria against Iraq," Ali al Dabbagh, Iraq's spokesman told Reuters. "Iraq had asked Syria to hand over this group which uses Syria as a base for its terrorist activities."

Major General John Kelly, the commander of Multinational Force - West, described Syria as "problematic" during a briefing on Oct. 23. "The Iraqi security forces and the Iraqi intelligence forces feel that al Qaeda operatives and others operate, live pretty openly on the Syrian side," Kelly said. "

Background on al Qaeda's Syrian facilitation network

Syria has long been a haven for al Qaeda as well as Baathists who fled the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. Terrorists and insurgents took advantage of the long, desolate, and unsecured border, which stretches more than 460 miles along Iraq's western provinces of Anbar, Ninewa, and Dohuk.

At the height of the Iraqi insurgency, an estimated 100 to 150 foreign fighters poured into Iraq from Syria each month. Operations in Anbar and Ninewa have pushed that number down to 20 infiltrators a month, according to the US military.

Wanted insurgent leaders, such as Mishan al Jabouri, openly live in Syria. Jabouri, a former member of the Iraqi parliament, fled to Syria after being charged with corruption for embezzling government funds and for supporting al Qaeda. From Syria Jabouri ran Al Zawraa, a satellite television station that aired al Qaeda and Islamic Army of Iraq propaganda videos showing attacks against US and Iraqi forces.

Al Qaeda established a network of operatives inside Syria to move foreign fighters, weapons, and cash to support its terror activities inside Iraq. An al Qaeda manual detailed ways to infiltrate Iraq via Syria. The manual, titled The New Road to Mesopotamia, was written by a jihadi named Al Muhajir Al Islami, and discovered in the summer of 2005.

The Iraqi-Syrian border was broken down into four sectors: the Habur crossing near Zakhu in the north; the Tal Kujik and Sinjar border crossings west of Mosul; the Al Qaim entry point in western Anbar; and the southern crossing at Al Tanf west of Rutbah near the Jordanian border. Islami claimed the Al Tanf and Habur crossing points were too dangerous to use, and Al Qaim was the preferred route into Iraq.

The US military learned a great deal about al Qaeda's network inside Syria after a key operative was killed in September of 2007. US forces killed Muthanna, the regional commander of al Qaeda's network in the Sinjar region.

During the operation, US forces found numerous documents and electronic files that detailed "the larger al-Qaeda effort to organize, coordinate, and transport foreign terrorists into Iraq and other places," Major General Kevin Bergner, the former spokesman for Multinational Forces Iraq, said in October 2007.

Bergner said several of the documents found with Muthanna included a list of 500 al Qaeda fighters from "a range of foreign countries that included Libya, Morocco, Syria, Algeria, Oman, Yemen, Tunisia, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Belgium, France and the United Kingdom."

Other documents found in Muthanna's possession included a "pledge of a martyr," which is signed by foreign fighters inside Syria, and an expense report. The pledge said the suicide bomber must provide a photograph and surrender their passport. It also stated the recruit must enroll in a "security course" in Syria. The expense report was tallied in US dollars, Syrian lira, and Iraqi dinars, and included items such as clothing, food, fuel, mobile phone cards, weapons, salaries, "sheep purchased," furniture, spare parts for vehicles, and other items.

The Combating Terrorism Center at West Point later conducted a detailed study of the "Sinjar Records," which was published in July 2008. The study showed that al Qaeda had an extensive network in Syria and the Syrian government has allowed their activities to continue.

"The Syrian government has willingly ignored, and possibly abetted, foreign fighters headed to Iraq," the study concluded. "Concerned about possible military action against the Syrian regime, it opted to support insurgents and terrorists wreaking havoc in Iraq."

Al Qaeda established multiple networks of "Syrian Coordinators" that "work primarily with fighters from specific countries, and likely with specific Coordinators in fighters’ home countries," according to the study. The Syrian city of Dayr al Zawr serves as a vital logistical hub and a transit point for al Qaeda recruits and operatives heading to Iraq.

A vast majority of the fighters entering Iraq from Sinjar served as suicide bombers. The Combating Terrorism Center at West Point estimated that 75 percent conducted suicide attacks inside Iraq.

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J'avais emis l'hypothèse dans mon premier post plus avant que les US avaient monté cette opération afin de capturer ou libérer quelqu'un. Il semble que cela se confirme mais semble t'il, le "colis" a été "poinçonné" avant la "dernière levée"... 

"LONDON, England (CNN) -- The U.S. forces who killed a top militant in Syria last week intended to capture him, but he and his bodyguards were killed in a gunbattle, a Saudi source with access to detailed intelligence told CNN.

U.S. officials last week confirmed that an American airstrike from Iraq into Syria killed Abu Ghadiya, described as a kingpin in al Qaeda's smuggling of foreign fighters into Iraq.

The officials -- who did not want to be named because they were not authorized to speak to the media -- also said members of his network were killed as well. The U.S. military has not officially confirmed the October 26 strike in the town of Abu Kamal.

The Saudi source said U.S. forces picked up Abu Ghadiya's presence at the Syrian location in the morning of October 26 and acted quickly against him.

Abu Ghadiya's name emerged many times during Saudi interrogations of al Qaeda suspects, the source said, noting that a profile emerged of the militant as an important part of the logistical chain in al Qaeda's network.

He had been an effective and persuasive recruiter of Arab fighters intent on attacking U.S. forces in Iraq, and had been described as a Baathist, a member of the political movement that ran Iraq during the Saddam Hussein era, the source said.

The source said Abu Ghadiya used Baathist money to smuggle fighters, and pay off Syrian generals to ignore the cross-border activities. The Saudi source said plenty of Baathist money is stashed away, hidden before the 2003 invasion."

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De toute façon, al-qaeda c'est comme une hydre, tu coupes une tête, t'en as deux qui poussent. J'ai le sentiment que c'est ce qui se passe avec cette attaque en Syrie.

Est-ce qu'on a des chiffres ou des estimations sur le nombre de combattants qu'avaient al-qaeda en 2001 et maintenant ?

Juste pour avoir une idée de la progression du conflit, car j'ai vraiment l'impression que ça s'éternise.

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Il semblerait que l'opération soit comprise dans une vaste campagne de luttre contre Al Quaida mené par le Pentagone dans zones hors Irak/Astan, tout en évitant l'Iran.

http://www.lemonde.fr/ameriques/article/2008/11/10/le-pentagone-a-autorise-les-attaques-contre-al-qaida-partout-dans-le-monde_1116725_3222.html#xtor=RSS-3208

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Il semblerait que l'opération soit comprise dans une vaste campagne de luttre contre Al Quaida mené par le Pentagone dans zones hors Irak/Astan, tout en évitant l'Iran.

http://www.lemonde.fr/ameriques/article/2008/11/10/le-pentagone-a-autorise-les-attaques-contre-al-qaida-partout-dans-le-monde_1116725_3222.html#xtor=RSS-3208

Pourquoi pas l'Iran?  :O

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Pourquoi pas l'Iran?  :O

Exact, c'est de la discrimination!

Plus sérieusement, le Pentagone sait que Al Quaida sera jamais le bienvenue chez les Chiites (surtout avec leurs attentats en Irak) et se serait bête de créer une nouvelle "alliance" contre nature en allant embêter les Iraniens sur leurs territoire.

Je pense aussi que la lutte contre AQ est totalement découpler de la stratégie visant l'Iran.

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:P Le GIGN aurait pu faire mieux. Quelques bombes de gaz soporique par exemple pour assomer tout ce joli monde...

Pour Mani, toujours pas nouvelles de notre députée belge  >:(

Rien !!!

Et on appelle cela une démocrate ?!

Elle préfère les Syriens et son dictateur.  :P

ok, je sors -->

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