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CNN anchor tears up talking about shellshocked Syrian boy pulled out of rubble

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Oriel

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Only 2 weeks ago they were working with the same regime to break Aleppo.

Wait, what? The Kurds working with Assad?! Eh, no. The Kurds aren't in any way allied with Assad. They had, up until quite recently an unofficial ceasefire in Rojava where the SDF/YPG and Assadists wouldn't attack each other and focus on the common enemy of ISIS. That changed this week when Assadist forces began bombing SDF positions in Hasakah forcing the US, which has SOCOM units on the ground, to provide air cover for the region, effectively a no-fly zone.

I'll remind you that the SDF is not merely another name for the Kurds but an Arab/Kurdish coalition comprising units from both the YPG and FSA.
 
Wait, what? The Kurds working with Assad?! Eh, no. The Kurds aren't in any way allied with Assad. They had, up until quite recently an unofficial ceasefire in Rojava where the SDF/YPG and Assadists wouldn't attack each other and focus on the common enemy of ISIS. That changed this week when Assadist forces began bombing SDF positions in Hasakah forcing the US, which has SOCOM units on the ground, to provide air cover for the region, effectively a no-fly zone.

I'll remind you that the SDF is not merely another name for the Kurds but an Arab/Kurdish coalition comprising units from both the YPG and FSA.

Yes, they did in Aleppo.

And about that arab-kurdish union they are marketing everywhere, there are reports from Amnesty International of ethnic cleansing against arab population in YPG territory.
 

Oriel

Member

You do realise you're quoting an opinion piece by an AIPAC front lobby group, right? In other words, someone's own personal view, and not a particularly insightful one either. The idea that the Kurds are now fighting alongside the Axis (what the Assad alliance calls itself, look it up) is bordering on paranoia and something one would expect to see in a Russia Today/Sputnik News article. YPG units fighting other rebel groups is NOT a sign that the Kurds are now allied with Assad. They despise the Baathist regime nearly as much as ISIS.

Back to reality..........

Civilians fled a city in northeastern Syria where government warplanes bombed Kurdish-held areas for a second day on Friday, as the Syrian army accused Kurdish forces of igniting the conflict by trying to take over the area.

The fighting this week in Hasaka, which is divided into zones of Kurdish and Syrian government control, marks the most violent confrontation between the Kurdish YPG militia and Damascus in more than five years of civil war.

The YPG is at the heart of a U.S.-led campaign against Islamic State in Syria, and controls swathes of the north where Kurdish groups have set up their own government since the Syrian war began in 2011.

A Pentagon official said U.S.-led coalition aircraft were sent near Hasaka on Thursday to protect coalition special operation ground forces in response to bombing by Syrian jets, and additional combat air patrols were being sent to the area.

The government air strikes on Hasaka mark the first time the Syrian military has deployed its warplanes against Kurdish groups during the war.

YPG spokesman Redur Xelil told Reuters that Kurdish authorities had evacuated thousands of civilians from their area of control. "Whoever can bear arms is fighting the regime and its gangs," Xelil said. "Our situation is so far defensive but it will change all the while the regime escalates in this way."

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-hasaka-idUSKCN10U0YX
 

JaseMath

Member
When the boy reaches up and rubs the blood out of his eyes and wipes it on the chair...that was the hardest part for me to watch. I went and pulled my son out of bed just to give him a hug.
 
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