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Eye on Extremism
June 28, 2016
Counter
Extremism Project
DW:
Nonprofit Group Rolls Out Online Tool To Combat IS Propaganda
“A nonprofit group in the US says it has created a technology that can
detect images generated by terrorists and remove them from social media
platforms. DW spoke to Mark Wallace, CEO of the Counter Extremism
Project.”
New
York Post: ISIS’s Thirst For Blood Only Matched By Its Hunger For
Publicity
“‘As shocking and horrific as ISIS’s carnival atmosphere executions of
gay men continue to be, the public’s willingness to participate
demonstrate that ISIS’s actions are built on a well-established
foundation,’ reports the Counter-Extremism Project. ‘ISIS has cynically
exploited these prejudices in order to ingratiate itself among the people
it has conquered as well as to further its hateful agenda and impose its
extreme and violent interpretations of Islamic law in the wider Middle
East and beyond.’”
The
Wall Street Journal: ISIS And The Culture Of Narcissism
“How do we process seeing the perpetrator of the deadliest mass
shooting in U.S. history preening in an NYPD T-shirt, or smiling up at
the camera, shirtless? Which is the true image of Mateen, the
image-obsessed gym rat or dead-eyed killer? The answer is both, and
together they solve a puzzle that perplexes terror experts: Why is ISIS
so successful at recruiting Westerners? The terror group has moved away
from the old recruiting tactics of groups such as al Qaeda, which sought
to connect with deeply observant Muslims. Instead, ISIS is looking for a
new type of recruit, one who spends as much time in the multiplex as in
the mosque.”
Daily
Caller: Despite Afghan Claims Of Victory, ISIS Surging
“Islamic State fighters in Afghanistan killed dozens of Afghan
soldiers and civilians Sunday, despite multiple claims from Kabul that
the terrorist group was utterly defeated. A U.S. military report
estimates between 1000 and 3000 fighters throughout Afghanistan who have
fought the Taliban for the opium rich territory. The Taliban relies
heavily on opium production to fund its terrorist operations and has
clashed with ISIS for control of Nangarhar province. In some cases ISIS
has been able to poach Taliban commanders both by paying high salaries and
taking advantages of fractures in the Taliban movement. After the Taliban
announced the death of their unifying leader, Mullah Omar, in July 2015
the terrorist group has been in a prolonged leadership crisis. The
Taliban’s short-time divisive leader, Mullah Akhtar Mansour, was killed
in a U.S. drone strike May 23.”
Washington
Free Beacon: ISIS ‘Kill Lists’ Increasingly Target U.S. Civilians
“Pro-ISIS hacking groups have started including American civilians
along with military, government, and law enforcement personnel on “kill
lists,” consistent with the terror group’s effort to expand attacks to
random targets and instill fear in the public, according to a new report.
The SITE Intelligence Group, an organization that monitors jihadist
propaganda, examined eight lists recently circulated online by pro-ISIS
hacking groups, including some that name random civilian targets.”
Associated
Press: Bombings Claimed By Is Killed 43 In Southern Yemen
“An Islamic State affiliate carried out a series of attacks in Yemen's
southern port city of Mukalla on Monday, killing at least 43 people and
wounding several others, officials said. The attacks came as the
government and Shiite Houthi rebels planned to suspend talks on ending
Yemen's larger conflict after failing to reach a breakthrough in two
months of negotiations held in Kuwait. The officials said two suicide
bombers and other militants carried out at least seven simultaneous
attacks in Mukalla targeting intelligence offices, army barracks and
checkpoints. In one of the attacks, a bomb was concealed in a box of food
brought to soldiers at a checkpoint to break their dawn-to-dusk Ramadan
fast. In another, a group of militants stormed a police station,
officials said.”
Newsweek:
Israel Moves To Revoke Citizenship Of ISIS Operatives
“Israel is attempting to strip two Arab-Israeli operatives of the
Islamic State militant group (ISIS) of their citizenships and permanent
residency through legal means in a bid to prevent them posing a security
threat to the country’s citizens. Interior Minister Aryeh Deri filed a
request with the Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit on Sunday to approve
the move to remove the citizenship of 24-year-old Luqman Atun of the East
Jerusalem neighborhood of Tsur Baher and the permanent residency of
fellow East Jerusalemite, 26-year-old Khalil Adel Khalil. Luqman traveled
to Turkey in October 2014 in hope of joining the group but he did not
have the financial resources to reach the Syrian frontier that leads to
the group’s self-proclaimed caliphate in the country, The Times of Israel
reported.”
BBC:
Egyptair Crash: Flight Data Recorder Repaired – Investigators
“The damaged flight data recorder from the EgyptAir plane that crashed
last month has been successfully repaired in France, Egyptian
investigators say. They say that work on the Airbus A320's cockpit voice
recorder will begin ‘within hours’. It paves the way for experts to
analyse data that could help explain what caused the crash. Flight MS804
from Paris to Cairo plunged into the Mediterranean Sea on 19 May, killing
all 66 people on board. In a statement, Egypt's investigation commission
said that the flight data recorder had been ‘successfully repaired... by
the French accident investigation agency laboratory’. The voice and
flight data recorders, known as black boxes, arrived in Paris from Cairo
on Monday so that salt deposits could be removed.”
Time:
Iraq Liberates Fallujah From ISIS. Now The Hard Part Begins
“When the Iraqi government declared victory on Sunday after routing
Islamic State gunmen from the key city of Fallujah, it cleared a major
hurdle on the way to a much larger and more complicated fight for the
ISIS-held city of Mosul in northern Iraq. The victory in Fallujah
deprives ISIS of an important territorial asset, a city 40 miles west of
Baghdad from which jihadists directed a lethal campaign of car bombings
in the capital. Now all eyes turn north, toward Mosul, the largest city
still under ISIS control and the most significant strategic prize in the
land campaign against the terror group. The recapture of Fallujah
provides hints—some promising, some foreboding—about how the fight for
Mosul might proceed.”
Bloomberg:
Boko Haram Fighters Prey On Niger After Fleeing Bases In Nigeria
“Driven from its stronghold in northeastern Nigeria, the Islamist
militant group Boko Haram is targeting the world’s least developed
country: Niger. The Nigeria-based militants stepped up attacks in
southeastern Niger this month, raiding villages for food and cattle and
attacking the town of Bosso, near Lake Chad, to steal weapons. A looting
spree in villages near the lake on June 21 was the latest in a string of
raids that have left more than 40 people dead. ‘Boko Haram is on the
defensive and trying to replenish their reserves,’ Vincent Foucher, a
political analyst at the Brussels-based International Crisis Group, said
by phone from Senegal. The organization is facing ‘a regional response
that’s become much more coherent.’ Fishing and farming in the fertile
Lake Chad region have almost ground to a halt, causing hunger among the
280,000 people who have sought refuge in the area.”
Daily
Beast: They Survived ISIS, Then Disappeared
“The way Rasool Abdullah remembers it, he was in a hall with dozens of
other men in an abandoned house outside Fallujah. He was thirsty, as he
had barely any water to drink for the past two days. The heat from the
summer sun made the cramped quarters unlivable. His hands were tied
tightly with zip ties, and from the rooms off the hallway, where he says
people were being tortured, all he could hear was screaming.”
The
National Interest: Get Ready To Fight ISIS's "Virtual
Caliphate"
“2016 continues to see young Muslims inspired by radicalism commit
terrorist attacks across the globe. In Orlando, forty-nine were killed
and fifty-three more injured at the hands of Omar Mateen, a single gunman
who pledged allegiance to ISIS. In the Philippines, at least eighteen
soldiers were killed and fifty-two injured in clashes with Abu Sayyaf
militants. In Indonesia, eight were killed and twenty-four injured in
several explosions directed by ISIS. The events, though unique in scale,
felt eerily familiar for the United States and the rest of the world.
They are a continuation of ISIS’s rhetoric falling on receptive ears,
with social media often being the tool used in the recruitment process
aimed at reaching even the lowest-end user, as seen by Orlando’s lone-wolf
attack.”
United
States
Sputnik:
US-Led Coalition Carries Out 30 Airstrikes Against Deash In Syria, Iraq
“The US-led coalition against the Daesh conducted 30 airstrikes
against the terror group’s positions in Syria and Iraq on Sunday,
US Central Command (CENTCOM) said in a press release. Additionally
in Iraq, coalition military forces conducted 23 strikes coordinated
with and in support of the Government of Iraq using
rocket artillery and bomber, attack, fighter, and remotely piloted
aircraft against Daesh targets. The coalition conducted all the
seven airstrikes in Syria near the city of Manbij, where
it destroyed two Daesh tunnels. In Iraq, 23 airstrikes hit Daesh
positions near eight cities, including Baghdadi, Ramadi, and Mosul,
destroying two Daesh tunnels, a bunker, multiple vehicles, four oil
tankers, a boat, a fighting position, three excavators, as well
as a mortar system, CENTCOM noted.”
The
Washington Post: Revamped U.S. Training Program, With New Goals, Has
Trained Fewer Than 100 Syrians So Far
“U.S. military officials are considering ways to ramp up training of
Syrian fighters against the Islamic State as the Pentagon moves
cautiously forward with a revamped program to create an effective
local ground force. Several U.S. officials, speaking to reporters on the
condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing military efforts, described the
steps the Pentagon has taken since late last year, when the
Obama administration abandoned an earlier Syria training plan. After
repeated setbacks to that program, which aimed to create an army of
Syrian fighters from scratch, officials settled on a different
approach, one that would train only small numbers of leaders or other key
personnel from local units who could act as a liaison with U.S. and
allied forces attacking the Islamic State from the air.”
Fox
News: US Officials: 'Dirty' Mideast Intel Partly To Blame For CIA Weapons
Landing In The Wrong Hands
“Weapons supplied by the CIA for Syrian rebel training ‘routinely end
up in the wrong hands,’ partly because of corruption among those rebels
but also due to corrupt Jordanian intelligence teams, multiple U.S.
officials close to the CIA program told Fox News on Monday. The officials
said Jordanian intelligence services aim to use the Islamic
State terror group to push back on growing Iranian influence in the
region. ‘Every Middle Eastern intelligence service is dirty,’ one
official told Fox News. While neither official reached by Fox News could
confirm that U.S.-supplied arms have wound up on the black market, one
said that a ‘majority’ of U.S.-supplied weapons was sold or gifted to
other rebel groups fighting the Assad regime, including Islamist groups
with questionable human rights records.”
Reuters:
U.S. Investigates Reports Hostages Killed In Afghanistan Air Strike
“At least six prisoners of the Taliban as well as a Taliban commander
died following a U.S. air strike in Afghanistan at the weekend, according
to conflicting reports which U.S. officials said they were investigating.
A Defense Department official in Washington confirmed an air strike was
launched against the Taliban on Saturday. The official said on Monday
reports that civilians had been killed in the attack were being
investigated. Details of the incident, near the northern city of Kunduz
on Saturday, remain unclear. It follows a decision by President Barack
Obama to authorize greater use of U.S. combat power against the Taliban.”
Syria
Newsweek:
ISIS Claims Responsibility For Suicide Bomb On Jordan's Border
“The Islamic State militant group (ISIS) claimed responsibility Monday
for the suicide bomb attack on a Jordanian military post last week that
left seven members of the country’s security services dead. The device
detonated outside a Syrian refugee camp in Rukban on the Syrian border in
northeast Jordan, a predominantly desert area. The location is a few
miles from where the borders of Jordan, Iraq and Syria converge. No group
initially claimed responsibility for the attack but on Monday ISIS posted
a video purporting to show the suicide blast in a Facebook post on its
semi-official Amaq news agency, the same channel that claimed the Paris,
Brussels and Orlando attacks.”
Reuters:
Plight Of Stranded Syrian Refugees Worsens As Jordan Blocks Aid - Aid
Workers
“Thousands of Syrian refugees stranded on Jordan's northeastern border
with Syria are running out of food after a militant suicide attack
prompted the army to shut the area, international relief workers and
refugees said on Monday. Jordan, a staunch U.S. ally, declared the area a
closed military zone after a suicide bomber, believed to be an Islamic
State militant, drove a vehicle last Tuesday from the Syrian side and
rammed it into a military base close to Rukban camp, killing seven border
guards. Aid workers said convoys of food which normally go to the camp
were being held up for a sixth day in Ruwaished, the closest town to
Rukban camp, which is far from any inhabitable place. Only water trucks
were being allowed through.”
Iraq
Daily
Caller: Iraq Prepares To Free Mosul From ISIS After Fallujah Victory
“Iraq is preparing to recapture Mosul after its Sunday victory over
Islamic State in Fallujah. Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi was
ecstatic Sunday as he traveled to Fallujah to officially declare complete
victory over ISIS. The seizure of Fallujah represents the second major
city retaken by the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) since the taking of
Ramadi in December. In response to the victory, al-Abadi encouraged the
Iraqi people to celebrate. ‘I call on all Iraqis, wherever they are, to
get out and celebrate,’ al-Abadi told state television with an Iraqi flag
over his shoulders. Al-Abadi is not resting on his laurels though, as he
also noted ‘we will raise the Iraqi flag in Mosul soon.’ Mosul is Iraq’s
second largest city, and acts as the ISIS de facto capital in Iraq. ISF
and its allies, backed by U.S. air strikes, have been preparing a
siege of the city for months. U.S. forces have been actively training ISF
for what they believe will be a very tough fight.”
Turkey
The
New York Times: Seeking To Improve Ties With Russia, Turkey Apologizes
For Downing Warplane
“Turkey continued its diplomatic fence mending on Monday, apologizing
for downing a Russian jet near its border with Syria last year. In a
letter to President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia on Monday, the same day
Turkey announced a rapprochement with Israel, President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan expressed regret about the November episode, in which Turkish
forces shot down a Russian warplane that Turkey said had violated its
airspace. The downing infuriated Russia and paralyzed relations between
the two countries: The Kremlin ordered sanctions on Turkish food imports,
stopped visa-free travel for Turks and barred Turkish tour operators from
offering Russian tourists vacation packages. Mr. Erdogan has become
isolated diplomatically after adopting an increasingly authoritarian
stand, a combative position with Europe regarding the international
migrant crisis, and a newly muscular foreign policy, including a failed
strategy in Syria. The outreach on Monday can be viewed as an effort to
repair some of that damage.”
Associated
Press: Turkey: Pope's Genocide Remarks Won't Help Peace Efforts
“Turkey says Pope Francis's recognition of the Ottoman-era killings of
Armenians as genocide during his visit to Armenia won't help efforts to
establish peace and stability in the Caucasus region. A Turkish Foreign
Ministry statement said Monday that the pope had again ‘disappointed’ the
Turkish people with remarks and accused him of ‘bias’ and ‘religion-based
discrimination’ against Turkey. Francis has said the 1915 slaughter by
Ottoman Turks of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians constituted planned
‘genocide’ during his three-day visit. Turkey rejects the term genocide,
saying the death toll cited by historians is inflated and that people
died on both sides of the conflict. When Francis first used it last year,
Turkey recalled its ambassador for 10 months and accused the pope of
spreading lies.”
Egypt
Associated
Press: Egypt Detains, Deports Prominent Female TV Host
“Egyptian authorities on Monday detained and deported a famous TV host
whose program had been critical of the government's policies, including
its crackdown on freedom of speech, her lawyer and officials said.
Liliane Daoud was taken from her house to an undisclosed location, Zyad
el-Elaimy said. Daoud hosted a talk show on ONTV, a private network that
has adopted a less critical editorial line since Ahmed Abou Hashima, a
pro-government businessman, purchased it last month. El-Elaimy said
Daoud's arrest, by men who claimed to be from the Passport Department,
came hours after the network ended her contract, and that authorities
intend to deport her.”
Middle
East
Times
Of Israel: Hamas Won’t Negotiate Over Israelis Held In Gaza — Official
“Hamas official said on Monday that the Islamist terror group will not
negotiate the release of Israeli soldiers and civilians until the its
preconditions are met, casting doubt on the efficacy of a promise by
Ankara to work toward freeing them at Israel’s behest. As part of
the rapprochement deal announced on Monday between Israel and Turkey,
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that Ankara has promised to help
return two soldiers whose bodies are believed to be held by Hamas, and
two Israelis thought to be in the captivity of the terrorist group.”
The
Economist: Israel And Turkey Restore Relations
“Israel and Turkey, two non-Arab regional powers in the Middle East,
have long been considered natural allies; and for decades worked together
to counter the influence of their shared enemies in Syria and Iran. The
relationship began to deteriorate under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
who as prime minister, pursued a policy of engaging with the Arab world,
often at the expense of Turkey’s other allies. Ties were frayed in early
2009, following Israel’s armed incursion into Gaza, and were cut off in
May 2010, when Israeli naval commandos intercepted a flotilla of boats
that was attempting to sail to Gaza, resulting in the deaths of ten
Turkish activists.”
Reuters:
Eight Suicide Bombers Target Lebanese Christian Village
“Eight suicide bombers attacked a Lebanese Christian village on
Monday, killing five people and wounding dozens more, in the latest
violent spillover of the five-year-old Syrian war into Lebanon. Security
sources said they believed Islamic State was responsible for the bombings
in the village of Qaa on Lebanon's border with Syria, but there was no
immediate claim of responsibility. Lebanese security services have been
on heightened alert for militant attacks in recent weeks. Islamic State
had urged its followers to launch attacks on ‘non-believers’ during the
Islamic holy month of Ramadan, which began in early June.”
Libya
Sputnik:
Daesh Terrorists In Libya Use Civilians As Human Shields – Military
“The Daesh jihadist group militants in Libya's port city
of Sirte are using civilians as human shields and their houses
as bases, Brig. Gen. Mohamed Ghasri, spokesman for Libyan
forces loyal to government in Tripoli, said. ‘They’ve made
civilians into a human shield, keeping them from leaving the
city and using their houses as bases,’ Ghasri was quoted
as saying by The Times on Monday. According to the
spokesman, thousands of civilians were trapped in the Sirte areas
seized by the Daesh. ‘[Daesh militants] are also using residential
roofs as sniper positions, preventing us from moving forward,’
Ghasri added.”
Nigeria
Reuters:
Nigerian Army Says It Freed Over 5,000 People Held By Boko Haram
“Nigeria's army on Sunday said it had freed more than 5,000 people
held by the Islamist militant group Boko Haram during an operation over
the weekend in the northeast of the country. Nigeria's army has over the
last year, sometimes aided by troops from neighboring countries,
recaptured most of the territory that was lost to the group, which has
waged a seven-year insurgency aimed at creating an Islamic state in the
remote northeast. The army said troops, supported by members of a
grassroots security force, conducted raids in 15 villages on Sunday,
during which they ‘killed six Boko Haram terrorists and wounded several
others’.”
United
Kingdom
BBC:
Birmingham Man 'Kept Explosives At His Home'
“A 28-year-old man has been charged with preparing for acts of
terrorism. Zahid Hussain, of Naseby Road in Alum Rock, Birmingham, is
accused of keeping explosives at his home, West Midlands Police said. Mr
Hussain was arrested in June last year and has been detained under the
Mental Health Act since then, the force added. He is due to appear at
Birmingham Magistrates' Court on Tuesday.”
Germany
Deutsche
Welle: German Lawsuit Accuses Turkey Of 'War Crimes' In Military
Operations Against Kurds
“A group of German lawmakers and rights activists on Monday filed a
civil lawsuit against Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan for alleged
‘war crimes’ committed in ongoing military operations in the Kurdish
populated southeast of the country. Lawyers Britta Eder and Petra
Dervishaj filed the more than 200-page document with Federal prosecutors
in Berlin as ‘an ethical obligation to bring charges here in Germany
against Turkey for war crimes.’ The complaint also mentions former prime
minister Ahmet Davutoglu and other top officials from the government,
military and police. The accusations echo those of Turkey's Kurdish
opposition and human rights groups, which have documented widespread
abuses during months of counter-terror operations in southeast Turkey.”
The
New York Times: As Migrants Face Abuse, Fear That ‘Brexit’ Has Given
License to Xenophobia
“Less than a week after a referendum on British membership in the
European Union, which galvanized fears about untrammeled immigration into
the country, human rights advocates and leading politicians expressed
alarm that the vote had given license to xenophobia, unleashing hatred
among an economic underclass. Although the police in at least two major
cities said they had not recorded an increase in hate crimes after the
vote, there were concerns that anti-immigrant sentiment was now rippling
through British society and infecting daily life. During the referendum,
the ‘Leave’ campaign effectively stoked fears of an immigrant influx to
garner support, and the baiting of refugees was further fanned by
concerns about terrorism, the influential euroskeptic tabloid press and
by the far-right, which attributed Britain’s economic problems to
immigration.”
France
Associated
Press: France Opens Manslaughter Inquiry Into EgyptAir Crash
“French authorities opened a manslaughter inquiry Monday into the May
crash of an EgyptAir plane that killed 66 people, saying there is no
evidence so far to link it to terrorism. Prosecutor's office spokesman
Agnes Thibault-Lecuivre said the inquiry was launched as an accident
investigation, not a terrorism investigation. She said French authorities
are ‘not at all’ favoring the theory that the plane was downed
deliberately, though the status of the inquiry could eventually change if
evidence emerges to that effect. Investigators decided to start the probe
before waiting to analyze the plane's flight data and voice recorders,
based on evidence gathered so far, she said, without elaborating.
EgyptAir Flight 804, an Airbus A320 en route from Paris to Cairo, slammed
into the Mediterranean on May 19. The reason for the crash remains
unclear. The pilots made no distress call and no group has claimed to
have brought down the aircraft.”
Europe
BBC:
Snowden: Russian Data Collection Plans 'Dangerous'
“US whistleblower Edward Snowden has criticised new anti-terrorism
legislation approved by Russia's parliament. He wrote on Twitter that the
‘Big Brother law’ was an ‘unworkable, unjustifiable violation of rights
that should never be signed’. Among the new rules are tough punishments
for failing to report crime, or inciting terrorism online. It must
still be signed into law by Russian president Vladimir Putin. Mr Snowden,
a former contractor for the CIA, fled to Russia in 2013 after leaking
details of extensive internet and phone surveillance by the US National
Security Agency. Commenting on the law, he wrote: ‘Mass surveillance
doesn't work. This bill will take money and liberty from every Russian
without improving safety.’”
Arabic
Language Clips
Financing
of Terror
Elwatan
News: Turkey: $1.5 Billion Annually – The Terrorists' Revenues From Drugs
The "Terror Funded by Drug-trafficking" report, issued by
the Turkish Interior Ministry, indicates that proceeds of terrorist
organizations from cannabis farming amount to 500 million Turkish Lira
(about $170 million), while their profits from drug trafficking reach up
to $1.5 billion a year. The report claims that terrorist organizations
have turned to drug trafficking to increase their sources of funding.
Now, the proceeds from production, transportation, distribution and sale
of drugs have become the primary source of funding. The report
noted that terrorist attacks, wars and political instability have contributed
to a favorable environment for the expansion of drug trafficking.
Muslim
Brotherhood
Alarabiya:
Complaint To Interpol Calling For The Arrest Of Fugitive Muslim
Brotherhood (Leader) Youssef Nada
fter insulting Egypt, describing it as "corral", an Egyptian
lawyer named Tariq Mahmoud filed a complaint to the Office of the
Attorney General in Alexandria and the Interpol. The complaint is
directed against Muslim Brotherhood fugitive Youssef Nada, a member of
the international organization and the group's former international
relations coordinator. Attorney Mahmoud said that Nada had, during a
recent TV interview, insulted the Egyptian people and the Egyptian state,
describing it as a "corral." Lawyer Mahmoud claimed this insult
undermines the reputation of Egypt and weakens its status among the
international community. He thus called on the Interpol to arrest Nada
quickly for his involvement in the financing of the Brotherhood and its
terrorist operations which seek to destabilize Egypt. Mahmoud noted that
Nada has already been convicted in absentia of several provisions,
including inciting to violence and serving as one of the main financiers
of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Al
Nusra Front
Russia
Today: 100 Anti-Aircraft Missiles (Delivered) To Al Nusra Front During
The Truce!
Roughly 100 anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles as well as an
unspecified number of tanks have been obtained by Syria's Al Nusra Front
group over the past three months, i.e. in the midst of the cessation of
hostilities agreement, which went into effect on February 27th.
This information, which was divulged by a diplomat who has been
monitoring the hearings of the international working group overseeing the
cessation of hostilities agreement in Syria, was later confirmed by
Russian sources. The diplomatic source disclosed that Alexander Zorin,
Russia's representative at the meeting, had provided the international
community with clear information about how the terrorist organization had
obtained modern tanks, anti-tank missiles and 100 anti-aircraft missiles.
He claimed that the Front will not use these new weapons until it gets the
signal from what he called "a big country on the northern border of
Syria," an obvious reference to Turkey.
Iranian
Revolutionary Guard
Radar:
Why Do The Syrians Join The Iranian Revolutionary Guard?
There are numerous reasons for young Syrians to join the ranks of the
Iranian Revolutionary Guards. Among them is that many of those young
people are facing prolonged service in the Syrian regime's army. Another
reason relates to enticements including a salary, food, vacations, and so
on. For instance, Abu Ahmed, had served in the ranks of the Syrian regime's
forces since 2010. He was not discharged despite completing his service,
which included deployment in Sayyidah Zaynab district, then in Jdeidet
Artouz and Daria in the rural areas of Damascus. In 2013, he went AWOL
and hid in the Masyaf mountains of central Syria for a year, until an
amnesty decree was issued in 2014. Abu Ahmed decided at the time to join
the Revolutionary Guard, which gave him an unqualified exemption from
serving in the ranks of the regime's army and a salary of 45,000 Syrian pounds
($205) per month.
Houthi
Gulf
Eyes: Houthi Militias Loot 25 Billion Riyals Per Month From The Coffers
Of The Central Bank Of Yemen
A recent Yemeni government report exposed the Houthi militias' crimes
of looting public coffers. It claimed that the Houthis continue taking 25
billion riyals ($100 million) per month from the Central Bank in Sana'a
under the guise of "supporting the war effort." A report
presented by the Yemeni Minister of Finance Munser Al-Quaiti and Minister
of Planning and International Cooperation Dr. Mohammed Al-Maitami, in the
middle of the current month in Riyadh, pointed to the Central Bank's
failure to supply its branches in the various provinces of the republic
with the necessary liquidity.
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