WAR Regional conflict brewing in the Mediterranean

jward

passin' thru
Not familiar with Fuat, but war monitor seemed to find him credible, so- for what it is worth
...also, we're hip deep in another Mercury retro period, so the miscommunications, honest mistakes,
& phog o' war on steroids are all amped up and in play. Or so they would tell us of such periods.
<This cycle would have begun 16-17feb, will come to it's crux March 9/10, before well & truly exiting the cycle on 30th>


Fuat
@lilygrutcher

25m

Multiple reports of tense situation in Damascus. Tanks across the city. Rumors of coup.
----------------

EbU CeBeL

@ebcbl


Şam'da Şii milislerin darbe girişimi yaptığı şeklinde teyitsiz söylentiler var. Boyle bir girişim şu an için mümkün değil olsa da Rusya sert bastırır ve İran ciddi kaybeder. Ancak Rusya'nın bu günkü açıklamalarına karşılık ++
Translated from Turkish by
There are unconfirmed rumors that the Shia militias are attempting a coup in Damascus. Although such an initiative is not possible at the moment, Russia pushes hard and Iran loses seriously. However, despite Russia's statements today ++

 
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jward

passin' thru
Erdogan is urging US and NATO help to halt the Syrian-Russian offensive in Idlib, and elsewhere Libya is also turning into a full-blown major conflict involving external powers, notably also Turkey which is providing military support to Tripoli against Gen. Haftar's offensive. Turkey and Syria are currently downing each other's aircraft over Idlib province in a major escalation.


And now the Marine Traffic maritime information portal has identified along with other international reports that the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (or "Ike") crossed through the Strait of Gibraltar and entered the Mediterranean Sea late Friday into Saturday, accompanied by multiple support ships.


So far the White House has remained cool toward pledging military support to Turkey, however, if the carrier strike group eventually moves closer to the Syrian coast this week, it could be a worrisome sign of Washington's intent to once again get involved militarily against Russia and the Syrian Army.

Social media image purportedly showing the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower entering the Mediterranean via the Strait of Gibraltar this weekend.



This also as Russia's Interfax news agency reported additional Russian warships currently en route to the eastern Mediterranean, including the frigate “Admiral Makarov” and “Admiral Grigorovich” which have consistently participated in operations off the Syrian coast.


The US carrier group's movements are ostensibly in support of a large US-European military exercise, being described as the first of its kind since the Cold War.


The following ships passed through the Strait of Gibraltar into the Mediterranean Sea last night

USS Dwight D. Eisenhower(CVN-69)
USS San Jacinto(CG-56)
USS James E. Williams(DDG-95)
USS Truxtun(DDG-103)
USNS Robert E. Peary(T-AKE-5) pic.twitter.com/xCDbZJOLm7
— Nick Morse (@n_morse9927) February 29, 2020

The strike group's main role thus far was to clear a path through the "contested" Atlantic for a group of cargo ships en route to Europe.


Business Insider described the joint naval build-up as follows:


The Defender-Europe 2020 exercise will be the largest deployment of US-based forces to Europe in 25 years, with some 20,000 soldiers deploying from the US to join another 17,000 troops from 17 other countries.
The exercise will take place in April and May, and to get some of those soldiers and their gear to Europe, the US Military Sealift Command cargo ship USNS Benavidez, US-flagged merchant vehicle carriers MV Resolve and MV Patriot, are already sailing across the Atlantic, escorted by guided-missile cruiser USS Vella Gulf.

However, analysts are interpreting its quick entrance into Mediterranean waters after its Atlantic mission as likely in response to escalating events over Idlib.



Crucially there's also an emerging refugee crisis as Erdogan has announced Turkey has "opened the gates" on Syrian refugees fleeing Idlib and wishing to make it to Europe.

Last week the US Navy issued a press statement about Ike's movements and operations, noting the strike group was “conducting operations in the US 6th Fleet to support maritime security operations in international waters, alongside our allies and partners.”


On Sunday US European Command reiterated its ongoing European operations in a new statement. Vice Admiral Lisa Franchetti, commander of the Sixth Fleet, earlier underscored that “The deployment will also serve to demonstrate commitment to our allies and partners in Europe and Africa.”


But it remains unclear the extent to which Washington is willing to go to bat for its "partner" and NATO ally Turkey amid Erdogan's adventurism in northwest Syria.

posted for fair use
comments at source
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Erdogan is urging US and NATO help to halt the Syrian-Russian offensive in Idlib, and elsewhere Libya is also turning into a full-blown major conflict involving external powers, notably also Turkey which is providing military support to Tripoli against Gen. Haftar's offensive. Turkey and Syria are currently downing each other's aircraft over Idlib province in a major escalation.


And now the Marine Traffic maritime information portal has identified along with other international reports that the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (or "Ike") crossed through the Strait of Gibraltar and entered the Mediterranean Sea late Friday into Saturday, accompanied by multiple support ships.


So far the White House has remained cool toward pledging military support to Turkey, however, if the carrier strike group eventually moves closer to the Syrian coast this week, it could be a worrisome sign of Washington's intent to once again get involved militarily against Russia and the Syrian Army.

Social media image purportedly showing the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower entering the Mediterranean via the Strait of Gibraltar this weekend.



This also as Russia's Interfax news agency reported additional Russian warships currently en route to the eastern Mediterranean, including the frigate “Admiral Makarov” and “Admiral Grigorovich” which have consistently participated in operations off the Syrian coast.


The US carrier group's movements are ostensibly in support of a large US-European military exercise, being described as the first of its kind since the Cold War.




The strike group's main role thus far was to clear a path through the "contested" Atlantic for a group of cargo ships en route to Europe.


Business Insider described the joint naval build-up as follows:




However, analysts are interpreting its quick entrance into Mediterranean waters after its Atlantic mission as likely in response to escalating events over Idlib.



Crucially there's also an emerging refugee crisis as Erdogan has announced Turkey has "opened the gates" on Syrian refugees fleeing Idlib and wishing to make it to Europe.

Last week the US Navy issued a press statement about Ike's movements and operations, noting the strike group was “conducting operations in the US 6th Fleet to support maritime security operations in international waters, alongside our allies and partners.”


On Sunday US European Command reiterated its ongoing European operations in a new statement. Vice Admiral Lisa Franchetti, commander of the Sixth Fleet, earlier underscored that “The deployment will also serve to demonstrate commitment to our allies and partners in Europe and Africa.”


But it remains unclear the extent to which Washington is willing to go to bat for its "partner" and NATO ally Turkey amid Erdogan's adventurism in northwest Syria.

posted for fair use
comments at source

I've got to wonder if the boomers with the "new" W-76-2s are in their "boxes" now?.....
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Russia and Turkey Drift Toward War
Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 17 Issue: 28
By: Pavel Felgenhauer

February 27, 2020 05:48 PM Age: 19 hours

Russian officials and the pro-Kremlin press have been praising the successful offensive against Idlib by troops loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. The northwestern Syrian province is the last stronghold of the anti-al-Assad opposition. All other such opposition-held areas across Syria have already been overrun and mostly devastated by forces loyal to Damascus, aided by Iranian-backed Shia militias and massive bombing campaigns carried out by the Syrian Arab Army (SAA) Air Force and the Russian Aerospace Forces (Vozdushno-Kosmicheskiye Sily—VKS). As “de-escalation” zone after “de-escalation” zone was retaken by the Syrian government and its on-the-ground allies, opposition fighters and civilians taking refuge there were given the option to surrender heavy weapons and be bussed into Idlib. Eventually, these wartime resettlements more than doubled the province’s estimated prewar population of 1.3 million. The al-Assad regime, with Russian support, is now pushing into the Idlib zone, taking over town after town, pressing the opposition against the Turkish border. In August 2019, the SAA captured Khan Sheikhoun, a settlement south of Idlib on the strategic M5 highway from Damascus; and on January 28, 2020, it took Maarat al-Numan—Idlib province’s second-biggest city, also located on the M5 (Kommersant, February 13).

On February 6, opposition fighters abandoned Saraqib, a strategically important intersection of highways M5 and M4 (the latter links the Mediterranean port city of Latakia to Aleppo and further skirts the entire length of the Syrian/Turkish border). The Russian Ministry of Defense congratulated the pro-al-Assad forces for forcing the retreat of radical opposition Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) Islamist fighters out of Saraqib. The Syrian state is now close to establishing a secure connection from Damascus through Homs, Hama to Aleppo, and from Latakia to Aleppo using the M5 and M4 highways (Militarynews.ru, February 12).

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan denounced al-Assad’s offensive, which is being supported by the Russian VKS. The leader of Turkey demanded that forces loyal to Damascus withdraw from their positions in Idlib, as stipulated in the September 2018 agreement reached in Sochi between him and President Vladimir Putin. Turkey has begun to reinforce its own forces in and around Idlib, with Erdoğan threatening to push back the SAA and other pro-al-Assad units if Moscow does not compel them to leave voluntarily before the end of February 2020. The SAA and the Turkish military have already clashed with each other, resulting in Turkish casualties. The exact number of Turkish soldiers killed or wounded is not yet fully clear, but deaths during this past month could have exceeded 20. In retaliation, the Turkish military has been hitting SAA positions, reporting hundreds of Syrian fatalities. The pro-Kremlin online publication Vzglyad accuses Erdoğan of “hysteria” over the Syrian victories and the collapse of the HTS and other pro-Turkish armed opposition fractions. But, Vzglyad contends, Erdoğan’s saber-rattling will not help—the al-Assad forces will not retreat since they enjoy the support of VKS jets, which control the sky over Idlib (Vzglyad, February 13).

According to state TV channel Rossiya’s main news program “Vesti,” President Erdoğan and Turkey have been strategically defeated in Syria. With Moscow fully backing al-Assad and not ready to give any special consideration to Turkish interests in Syria, Turkey’s president is isolated within the Arab and Muslim world and suffers strained relations with the West. Erdoğan has no option but to recognize al-Assad’s regime under Russian auspices and withdraw from Idlib. According to “Vesti,” in mid-February Turkish and Syrian intelligence chiefs met secretly in Moscow under Russian patronage. After the Syrian civil war is over with al-Assad the victor, Moscow will sign a comprehensive cooperation (de facto alliance) treaty with Damascus, and Erdoğan will have no option, but to follow suit, the Russian news outlet asserts (Vesti, February 19).

It seems the Kremlin has seriously underestimated Erdoğan’s resolve to push back against pro-al-Assad forces while doing his best to avoid a direct clash with Russia (apparently mistaken by Moscow as a sign of Erdoğan’s weakness). The Turkish and Russian heads of state had at least two recent telephone conversations regarding Idlib—the last on February 21—with no success. Turkey continues to demand “a full implementation of the September 2018 Sochi accords,” meaning an unequivocal withdrawal of the pro-al-Assad forces. The Kremlin, in turn, insists, “Terrorist activity in Idlib is unacceptable” and “Syrian sovereignty and territorial integrity must be absolutely upheld.” In other words, the Russian view is that the SAA and VKS have the sovereign right to attack and destroy the HTS or anyone they consider “terrorists” anytime in any part of Idlib, and the pro-al-Assad forces will not be withdrawing from any sovereign Syrian territory (Militarynews.ru, February 21).

The Russian military accused Turkish forces of directly supporting the opposition fighters on the battlefield and of providing them with Stinger Man-Portable Air-Defense Systems or MANPADS (produced in Turkey on license) to attack VKS aircraft, which are now forced to fly combat sorties over Idlib at heights over 5,000 meters to avoid hits. During February 2020, Russian VKS attacks have hit and killed Turkish soldiers, while Russian military advisors embedded with SAA units routinely find themselves under Turkish artillery fire. But so far, both sides have avoided publicly acknowledging that they are already shooting at each other so as not to create a formal casus belli (Vedomosti, February 20). On February 27, the Turkish state-run Anadolu news agency reported from Idlib that Saraqib was retaken by “moderate opposition groups”—a major military setback for both al-Assad and the Russians (Anadolu, February 27). The Russian military countered: All attacks on Saraqib have been successfully repulsed (Interfax, February 27).

Ankara has declared that the Turkish military is ready to go in and resolutely force the SAA out of Idlib. Russia has put forth “proposals and maps” to resolve the crisis by redrawing the Idlib “de-escalation” zone, thus legalizing the latest SAA advances; but Turkey refuses to accept such amendments (Izvestia, February 27). Erdoğan recently announced that he would hold a summit in Istanbul, on March 5, 2020, with Putin and possibly with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron, to try to resolve the crisis (Interfax, February 26). The Kremlin countered: Putin has other plans for March 5, and French/German participation is at any rate undesirable (RIA Novosti, February 27). Turkish-Russian expert-level consultations continue even as the confrontation in Syria escalates. But time is apparently running out for Moscow and Ankara to reach a modus vivendi.



Russia and Turkey Drift Toward War - Jamestown
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
  • fr.png
France to send warships to support Greece in Turkish standoff
Author: Thema Newsroom | Published: January 30, 2020

US president had also “highlighted the importance of Turkey & Greece resolving their differences in the east Mediterranean”
Related Stories
Greece’s prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, has welcomed a decision by France to dispatch war frigates to the eastern Mediterranean as a standoff with Turkey over regional energy reserves intensifies.
With tensions between Athens and Ankara causing growing international alarm, Mitsotakis described the vessels as “guarantors of peace”.
“The only way to end differences in the eastern Mediterranean is through international justice,” he told reporters after holding talks in Paris with the French president, Emmanuel Macron. “Greece and France are pursuing a new framework of strategic defence”.
Mitsotakis was in the French capital on a visit aimed at rallying EU support at a time when hostile relations with Turkey have eclipsed all other issues on the agenda of his near seven-month-old government.
Macron pledged France would step up its strategic bond with Greece, accusing Turkey of not only exacerbating regional tensions but failing to stick to its promised course of action in war-torn Libya.
“I want to express my concerns with regard to the behaviour of Turkey at the moment … we have seen during these last days Turkish warships accompanied by Syrian mercenaries arrive on Libyan soil. This is an explicit and serious infringement of what was agreed [at last week’s peace conference] in Berlin. It’s a broken promise.”
The Gallic-Greek alliance cements what officials in Athens are calling a renewed diplomatic push to counter Turkish belligerence in the Mediterranean.

Does Macron know that he will get France involved in a major war?
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
EndGameWW3

@EndGameWW3

·
1h

The USS Dwight D. Eisenhower aircraft carrier entered the Mediterranean Sea on Saturday night. Its escort consists of two Tomahawk-armed guided-missile cruisers, three destroyers, eight squadrons of F/A-18E fighter jets, maritime attack choppers and 6,000 sailors. -DF
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
US Will Not Provide Air Support to Turkey in Syria's Idlib - Pentagon Chief
Senior Airman Keifer Bowes
MIDDLE EAST
16:47 GMT 02.03.2020(updated 17:31 GMT 02.03.2020)

On Saturday, President Trump said the US had been speaking with President Erdogan of Turkey "a lot" over the situation in Idlib, and confirmed that the two countries were discussing Ankara's request for the temporary deployment of US Patriot anti-aircraft missile systems on Turkey's border with Syria.
The United States will not provide air support to Turkey in the wartorn Syrian province of Idlib, Pentagon Chief Mark Esper has said.
Speaking to reporters in Washington on Monday and asked if US assistance to Turkey in Syria would include air support, Esper responded "No."
"I should add that the the United States is looking at providing increased humanitarian aid for the persons in Syria. That's one thing I had a conversation with [Secretary of State Mike Pompeo] about that," Esper said.
The secretary of defence also confirmed that he has spoken to NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg about the situation in Syria, and that NATO was prepared for anything that might happen.
Commenting on Ankara's move to open its borders with the European Union, Esper said that this was Turkey's decision to make.
Asked what he told his Turkish counterpart Sule Akar during their recent phone call, Esper said the message was that "Russians aren't always good partners."
Also Monday, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley said there was "no clear, unambiguous intelligence on who was flying which planes" in the deadly attack on Turkish troops in Idlib last week. Earlier, Moscow stressed that the Russian air force was not involved in the strikes in the area of Behun, Idlib where the troops were killed. Later, the MoD-affilliated Center for Syrian Reconciliation clarified that the Turkish forces were hit by Syria as it retaliated to a Nusra* offensive, with the troops operating outside of their observation posts and in the same area as Nusra militants for some reason.
On Saturday, President Trump confirmed that he had discussed Turkey's request for the temporary deployment of US Patriot missiles in southern Turkey with President Erdogan, adding that the talks were ongoing.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu urged Turkey's NATO allies to assist the country with air defence and intelligence cooperation in relation to the Idlib situation.
Idlib tensions exploded in February after the deaths of Turkish military personnel in the course of a Syrian military offensive against Ankara's militant proxies. Damascus began an operation in the wayward province in December, after repeated attacks on Syrian troops by jihadist militants. US Will Not Provide Air Support to Turkey in Syria's Idlib - Pentagon Chief
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Soldier & equipment losses for Syrian Army are just the beginning – Erdogan
2 Mar, 2020 11:21 / Updated 5 hours ago
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Soldier & equipment losses for Syrian Army are just the beginning – Erdogan

Members of Syria's opposition "National Liberation Front" fire heavy artillery guns at government forces in the village of Talhiyeh near the town Taftanaz in northeastern Idlib province, from another position on February 28, 2020. © AFP / Abdulwajed HAJ ESTEIFI

The Syrian Army has allegedly lost over 2,500 troops as well as dozens of tanks and armored vehicles in numerous Turkish strikes, but this is “just the beginning,” as Turkey hasn’t yet shown its “true strength,” Erdogan warned.
“We are just beginning to show our true strength to those who see our sensitivity as [the unwillingness] to shed blood, to hurt or [make someone] suffer, or as weakness and timidity,” the Turkish president told members of his AK Party on Monday. “The human and equipment losses of the [Syrian] regime are just the beginning,” Erdogan said.
ALSO ON RT.COM‘Get out of the way, let us deal with Assad regime’, Erdogan says he told Putin regarding Idlib, Syria
Backing up his threat, Erdogan cited heavy losses ostensibly inflicted on the advancing Syrian government troops. He said Damascus has lost 2,557 soldiers and militia members, 135 tanks as well as dozens of cannons, multiple launch rocket systems, and pickup-mounted anti-aircraft guns.
While threatening Damascus with further attacks, Erdogan made an appeal to Moscow and Tehran, which have been supporting President Bashar Assad in his fight against terrorism. “I call once again to Russia and Iran,” the Turkish leader said. “We have no problem with you. We are struggling to solve the humanitarian crisis caused by millions of people heading to our country from Syria, and to ensure the security of our lands.”
ALSO ON RT.COMTurkish military shoots down 2 Syrian jets as Syria fends off Turkey’s drone attack
Syria has recently closed its airspace over the northwest of the country, including Idlib province, declaring any intruding aircraft an enemy target. Russia’s Reconciliation Center for Syria warned that its air defenses can no longer guarantee the safety of any Turkish aircraft under the circumstances
 

jward

passin' thru
Julian Röpcke
@JulianRoepcke

·
34m

#NewsMap Two more strategic towns were captured by #AssadPutin forces overnight - after #Turkey once again betrayed its allies and stopped all support operations for Syrian rebel forces in #Idlib. No more drone strikes, no air defense, no artillery, no MLRS, no ground troops.
ESKm_zSWAAAOBd-.jpg
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Reading, “but they shot down our drones”. FYI: 2% of Turkey’s 150 aircraft strong attack drone force and 0% of its 300 aircraft strong manned attack jet force have been destroyed over Idlib so far. Also 0% of its 100 pieces strong artillery/MLRS force inside Idlib were taken out.
 

jward

passin' thru




FRANCE 24 English
@France24_en

6m

Erdogan warns Europe to expect ‘millions’ of migrants after Turkey opens borders https://f24.my/6Eqi.t
View: https://twitter.com/France24_en/status/1234746220154781696?s=20


_________________________
Erdogan warns Europe to expect ‘millions’ of Migrants
after Turkey opens borders



Issued on: 03/03/2020 - 08:09Modified: 03/03/2020 - 08:09


Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned on Monday that "millions" of migrants would soon head for Europe, drawing accusations from EU leaders that he is trying to pressure them into backing his incursions into Syria.



Turkey gave the green light to refugees and migrants on Friday to leave for the European Union and thousands have since massed at the Greek border, triggering fears of an influx like that which poisoned European politics in 2015.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel described Turkey's move as "unacceptable" and EU migration commissioner Margaritis Schinas said nobody could "blackmail or intimidate the EU".
But Turkey, which hosts roughly four million refugees, is trying to hold off another mass influx from Syria – where government forces backed by Russian air power are advancing into the last rebel stronghold of Idlib.
Erdogan further ramped up the pressure late on Monday, saying he had turned down an EU offer of one billion euros (£1.1 billion) in extra aid for migrants, adding to a six-billion-euro deal agreed in 2016.
"We don't want this money," Erdogan said at a news conference without specifying when the money was offered, or by whom.



His office later added that he had spoken to Merkel over the phone and warned once again that Europe must take a "fair share of the burden" of dealing with migrants.
He claimed the numbers of migrants at the Greek border – who include Afghans, Syrian and Iraqis – were far higher than figures provided by officials and reporters at the scene, saying "hundreds of thousands" were already there.
"There will be more. Soon, this number will be expressed in millions," he added.

Top EU officials to visit border
Ursula von der Leyen, the head of the European Commission, was due to visit Greece’s land border with Turkey on Tuesday, accompanied by European Council head Charles Michel and Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.
Greece says some 10,000 people were barred from entering the country over the weekend. Clashes broke out as police fired tear gas at the refugees, who responded by lobbing rocks.
A video shared by a Turkish official, which could not be independently verified, showed a boat of migrants being shot at and harassed by Greek coastguards.
Turkey accused Greek police of killing two migrants after a video was shared of a bloodied Syrian on the border, although Athens rejected this as "fake news".
In desperation, many have sought alternative routes and Greek port police said a young boy died when a makeshift boat capsized off the Greek island of Lesbos.



Athens said it would boost patrols and it suspended asylum applications by those entering illegally – a move denounced by the UN refugee agency as having "no legal basis".
The emergency at Greece’s border comes as Turkey has launched a military operation in Idlib in northwestern Syria in a bid to push back the regime's offensive against country’s the last rebel-held bastion.
Close to one million people have been forced to flee the Syrian government's assault in the biggest wave of displacement of the nine-year conflict, but they are not being allowed to enter Turkey.
Erdogan said he hoped for a ceasefire in Syria when he meets his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin later this week.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP, REUTERS)

posted for fair use
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
My understanding is that people who were settled in Turkey (some real refugees from the Syrian bombings and many economic migrants) have been "allowed" aka forcibly bused, trucked, trained and walked to the border where Turkish Troops cut the fences and pretty much order people to march into Greece (or try to).

They've also been putting people on unsafe rubber rafts, tiny boats and even having them try to swim the distance by sea.

I've been playing very close attention to the photos and in addition to the usual: conservative press showing all most all military-aged young men/liberal press showing nothing but Moms and small children; there also may be a division in who Turkey is pushing where.

You see a lot more babies, children and women on those boats than you do on the land march, I suspect the Turks realized that you might be able to force able-bodied men through barbed wire into the face of tear gas (and there were still a couple of babies who nearly died, so they did mix in some women and kids it just doesn't look like a large number - again from photos).

But that it would be a lot easier to pile them onto rafts, plus the media "events" showing Greek "Coast Guard" ramming the boats and capsizing people into the sea plays right into Turkey's hands (again a child has already drowned).

Personally I think this is Erdogan's way of waging war on Europe using civilians (or at least partly civilians) as essentially human targets.

He figures he's in the driver's seat - if Europe allows them all they continue to weaken Greece and other areas (also create internal conflicts) and if Europeans (or Greeks) shoot them and drown them on camera (especially those shots of women and kids) then he figures it will make the Greeks look like monsters.

He's the real monster, he could deport the economic migrants and settle the actual Syrian refugees until it is safe for them to go home (you can't live in a bombed-out building with live battles on-going in the ruins) but that isn't his goal here.

I keep hoping he gets deposed, sooner rather than later.
 

Rucus Sunday

Veteran Member
Erdogan is a cancer and NATO needs to figure out a way to put an end to him, soon. Fredo in Godfather 3.
 
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danielboon

TB Fanatic
Many Turkish soldiers killed or wounded in regime rocket attacks east of Idlib city
03/03/2020
Less than a minute

%D9%85%D9%82%D8%AA%D9%84-%D9%88-%D8%A7%D8%B5%D8%A7%D8%A8%D8%A9-%D8%B9%D9%86%D8%A7%D8%B5%D8%B1-%D9%85%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%82%D9%88%D8%A7%D8%AA-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AA%D8%B1%D9%83%D9%8A%D8%A9-%D9%88%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%81%D8%B5%D8%A7%D8%A6%D9%84.jpg

SOHR source say that regime forces fired several rockets targeting Turkish positions nearby Tranbeh, west of Saraqeb and Al-Mastumah. The shelling killed and injured several Turkish soldiers whom were taken by a Turkish helicopter to hospitals in Turkey.
On the other hand, Russian jets executed intensive raids on Al-nayrab, Sarmin, Afes and other places east of Saraqeb.
Meanwhile, fierce clashes are continuing on Afes frontline, west of Saraqeb city in the eastern countryside of Idlib, between regime forces and loyal Syrian and non-Syrian militiamen on one hand, and Turkish-backed rebels and jihadis. Regime forces are attempting to recover the village under the cover of Russian airstrikes.
Hours ago, SOHR sources reported that intensive Turkish bombardment renewed on regime position in Saraqib city and villages in its countryside. Meanwhile, Turkish drones targeted a regime military column in Ma’rat al-Numan area. Preliminary information on new casualties has been reported.
Since February 27, Turkish air and ground strikes have killed 119 regime soldiers and loyal Syrian militiamen. 20 other regime-backed militiamen of non-Syrian nationalities were killed in the same strikes, including ten militiamen of Hezbollah and four Iranians.
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Turkey shoots down third plane as Syrian forces retake town
Rebel commander says key Saraqeb city now under the full control of Syrian government forces after Russian air strikes.
by Linah Alsaafin
03 Mar 2020 16:45 GMT


Syrian army soldiers fire a heavy weapon as they advance on the town of Kfar Nabl [Reuters TV]

Syrian army soldiers fire a heavy weapon as they advance on the town of Kfar Nabl [Reuters TV]

Reyhanli, Turkey - Turkish forces downed a fighter jet flown by Syrian government forces over southern Idlib on Tuesday as a strategic town in northwest Syria fell under the control of President Bashar al-Assad's military.
It was the third such shoot-down in three days after Turkey hit two other Syrian aircraft on Sunday.
"Turkish regime forces targeted one of our warplanes, which led to its fall in the northwest area of Maarat al-Numan," Syrian state media reported.
More:
On Twitter, the Turkish defence ministry confirmed the news, saying "an L-39 plane belonging to the [Syrian] regime has been downed".

Meanwhile, Syrian government forces overnight took over the key city of Saraqeb, which lies at the junction of the M4 and M5 commercial highways that connect the country's major cities.
Saraqeb has changed hands twice in the last month, but a dramatic escalation in fighting over the past few days saw armed opposition groups retreat to the villages of Nairab and Afis in the west, as Syrian government forces - under cover of Russian air power - secured the city.
Rashwan Abu Hamza, a field commander in Saraqeb belonging to one of the rebel groups, told Al Jazeera the battle against al-Assad's forces intensified on Monday night.
"Regime forces began to advance into the city at 2am and an hour later entered the neighbourhoods and began combing them," Abu Hamza said. "The shelling from Russian warplanes escalated and forced us to withdraw west of the city."
At 4am (01:00 GMT) on Tuesday, Saraqeb was under the full control of the Syrian forces, he said, but added a counteroffensive was imminent.
'Operation Spring Shield'
Since December, al-Assad's forces intensified their offensive to take control of Idlib province, the last rebel stronghold in Syria where Turkey backs some opposition fighters.
The operation has resulted in the internal displacement of nearly one million Syrians, the majority fleeing to the Turkish border, and killed at least 300 civilians.
Under the 2018 Sochi agreement with Russia, which designated Idlib as a de-escalation zone, Turkey set up several observation points throughout the province, but incurred heavy losses as Syrian forces targeted its troops.
Child dies as refugee boat capsizes off Lesbos
Turkey launched a military operation it called Spring Shield, its fourth and biggest intervention yet into Syria's nine-year civil war. It came in response to the killing of 34 Turkish soldiers in Idlib last week, the deadliest strike against the Turkish army in decades.
Turkey's defence ministry said so far more than 2,500 Syrian soldiers have been "neutralised" - a term that means wounded, captured or killed.
The head of Turkey's far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), Devlet Bahceli, said in Ankara on Tuesday the threat from across the border demanded military action.
"Turkey is not joking. The Idlib issue is directly related to the survival and protection of a homeland. Russia and Syria should not try Turkey's patience anymore," said Bahceli.
Return to Idlib
At the Reyhanli-Cilvegozu border crossing on the Turkish side, Ahmad Abeed stood near the gate smoking a cigarette.
The 22-year-old, who works in a hazelnut factory in Antakya, has been in Turkey for the past five years, but is now longing to return to Syria where his parents and siblings are.
"My family are from a village in Saraqeb's countryside," he said. "Two weeks ago they were displaced to Sarmada."
Abeed wants to enter Idlib to fight against the Syrian government forces.
"When I first came to Turkey, I thought the war in Syria would end after a year or two," he said. "I didn't support any side. But now the enemy is clear. I can't leave my younger sisters inside to die, so that's why I want to pick up arms."
A few metres next to him, Umm Asad stood facing the border crossing, her eyes full of tears.
"I've been trying to go back to Idlib for a while now," she told Al Jazeera, holding her one-year-old daughter Shams.
"I want to be with my children who are frightened out of their wits by the shelling. They need their mother," Umm Asad said.
Her husband and two other children are in the town of Binnish, some 6km (3.7 miles) from Saraqeb. Heavily pregnant at the time, Umm Asad left her family a year ago to accompany her six-year-old son to a hospital in Turkey's Hatay for a medical emergency.
Her son is now in a permanent comatose state, and she longs to return to Idlib.
"I don't have a house in Hatay," she said. "I gave birth to Shams here and rely on the kindness of my relatives here. But my children need me," she said.
 

Zagdid

Veteran Member

Egypt seeks to establish Arab security front against Turkey

March 2, 2020 at 3:49 am

Egyptian intelligence chief Abbas Kamel has started an official tour around a number of Arab countries, with the aim to sign security agreements on “countering the growing influence of the Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the region.
Local media quoted intelligence sources as saying that the Egyptian army was “retreating from Libya,” adding that it was “pressing Turkey to retract its influence in North Africa.”

In recent weeks, Kamel visited Sudan, Algeria and Morocco. In Sudan, he discussed “sending more Sudanese fighters to Libya.”

The Algerian government, led by its new president Abdelmadjid Tebboune, was recently reported to have risen alerts on the Libyan situation. On 5 February, the country’s foreign minister Sabri Bogadom met the Libyan commander Khalifa Haftar to discuss the country’s crisis.

Kamel discussed “Ankara’s friendly relations with the Moroccan Islamic movement Justice and Charity.” Kamel is yet to visit Tunisia.

Relations with Turkey have strained recently after Ankara has said it would establish a military base to support the Tripoli-based UN-recognized Government of National Accord (GNA) led by Fayez Al-Sarraj.

On 7 November, Ankara and the GNA reached two separate memorandums of understanding (MoU), one on military cooperation and the other on maritime boundaries of countries in the Eastern Mediterranean.
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