Showing posts with label Syrian army. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Syrian army. Show all posts

Friday, November 27, 2015

Expanded capabilities of Iran-backed Lebanese Hezbollah observed in Syrian conflict

RuAF Su-24 and Mi-8 aircrew rescued with assistance by Iran-backed military special forces

According to ABNA:
While the Russians were planning for another operations to free the pilot immediately, General Soleimani contacted [Russian forces] and proposed a special task force unit be formed of Hezbollah's special forces and Syrian commandos who have been trained by Iran and are fully familiar with the geographical situation of the region to be tasked with the ground operations and Russia provide them with air cover and satellite intelligence.
Soleimani promised them to return the Russian pilot safe and sound; a promise that was kept in the end, according to the Syrian officer.
After tracing the place of the Russian pilot using his GPS, it was revealed that the pilot was being kept in a place 6km behind the frontline of the clashes between the Syrian army and the opposition.
Six fighters of Hezbollah's special operation unit and 18 Syrian commandos approached the frontline to carry out the operations and the Russian air force and helicopters concurrently created hellfire in the region and destroyed the terrorists' headquarters in a way that most of the enemy forces deployed in the region fled the scene and the ground was paved for the special unit's advance.
The Syrian officer added that every move of the special units was monitored and covered precisely by the Russian satellites in a way that the slightest moves made 100 meters away from the area of operation was reported to them and every moment of the operation was reported to a very high-raking official in the Kremlin (that he thinks was president Putin) and it was clear that he was monitoring the entire operations through satellites from Moscow.
According to the officer who called for anonymity, the operation later turned into a hunt of the terrorists in the operation zone by the Russian air force from the sky and by Brigadier General Soleimani's operations units on the ground.
COMMENTARY: Some of the details of the ABNA report haven't been verified, however it has apparently been corroborated that an 18-member Syrian commando team linked up with a 6-member Hezbollah special operations team already sitting near a border crossing point to effect the rescue.

It has been pointed out by another observer that the Iran-backed Hezbollah special operations team was performing a SICTA (strategic intelligence collection / target acquisition) mission. Such teams are probably all along that border right up to Jarabulus. [see HERE]

While others have been pointing to the Syrian conflict as a drain on Iranian and Iran-backed forces such as Hezbollah, this writer has stressed the expansion of capabilities--particularly on offense--that the Syrian conflict has spawned during the course of the war.

According to Associated Press:
A Hezbollah TV station says a joint operation by the Lebanese militant group and Syrian security agents killed an Islamic State figure suspected of involvement in Beirut's deadly bombing earlier this month.
AL-Manar TV says Abdul-Salam Hendawi, also known as Abu Abdo, died in an ambush in an IS-held area in Syria's central province of Homs.
It says Hendawi was responsible for bringing into Lebanon two suicide bombers who carried out the Nov. 12 attack in southern Beirut. The attack killed 43 people and wounded more than 200.
COMMENTARY: If accurate, such a strike by Lebanese Hezbollah (LH) represents a successful counter-terrorism operation beyond the formal boundaries of said military force.

While the United States, Israel, EU and GCC consider Iran-backed LH a terrorist organization, Russia does not, as expressed at the Vienna II Syrian conflict resolution talks. This may be considered another point of contention beyond the fate of Syrian President Assad, between the U.S.-led coalition against ISIL on the one hand, and the R+5 (Russia, Syria, Iran, Lebanese Hezbullah, Iraqi PMF and Syrian NDF) on the other.

Monday, December 15, 2014

Syria: Idlib Military Bases Fall to Al-Nusra

Two important military bases in Idlib province fell on Monday to insurgents led by Al-Nusra Front, the Islamist militants aligned with Al-Qaeda. In a strategic loss for Syria’s military, its soldiers abandoned the bases, Wadi al-Daif and Hamadiyeh, after intense fighting that began Sunday morning. The two bases sit on a major highway - M5 - linking cities of Aleppo, Idlib and Damascus. (The New York Times, 15 December)

UPDATE: The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said nearly 200 combatants on both sides were killed in 24 hours during the battles for military bases. SOHR also reported that the Al-Nusra Front has captured at least 120 regime soldiers.

Photo credit: Al-Nusra Front tank being used in the battle at Wali al-Daif in Idbil province (Al-Nusra/longwarjournal)

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Israeli Jets Strike Sites Near Damascus - UPDATE

Israeli fighter jets launched an airstrike on two military sites outside Damascus, Syria’s official SANA news agency and Hezbollah’s al-Manar TV reported Sunday. (AFP, 7 December)

The targets were military sites at Damascus’s main airport and at Dimas on a key road near the Syrian-Lebanese border.

“The Israeli enemy attacked Syria by targeting two security areas in Damascus province, namely the Dimas area and the area of Damascus International Airport,” said SANA, adding that no casualties were reported. 

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the target at Dimas was a military position, and the strike near the airport hit a warehouse.

Comment: The Israeli attacks on a warehouse near the airport and a site in Dimas, half way between Damascus and the Lebanese border, probably point to attacks on a weapons storage warehouse near the airport and on a possible shipment of weapons en route to Hezbollah in Lebanon. Iran is believed to regularly ship its Fateh-110 ballistic missiles to Damascus airport for use by the Syrian military and the Hezbollah.

Photo credit: A fireball after an Israeli airstrike inside Syria; 7 December 2014 (Screen capture: Channel 2/The Times of Israel)

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Syrian military advances, reportedly with support from Shia fighting forces

 
Iraqi Shia fighters salute the shrine of Sayyida Zeinab in Damascus (photo: Reuters) 

According to Reuters:
Forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad captured the southern Damascus suburb of Hujaira on Wednesday, part of a broader advance that has brought him major gains south of the capital before proposed international peace talks.
[...]
Assad's military resurgence this year has relied to a great extent on support from Shi'ite Iran and fighters from Lebanon's Hezbollah and Iraqi militias, some of them based around a Shi'ite shrine southeast of Damascus.
They have helped turn the tide against the Sunni Muslim rebels, whose ranks are increasingly dominated by Islamist fighters and al Qaeda-linked foreign jihadists.
Earlier in the week, a rebel groups’ joint declaration said government forces backed by Hezbollah fighters, Iranian Revolutionary Guards and the Iraqi Abu al-Fadl Abbas militia had launched “a fierce offensive to reoccupy” Aleppo. Additionally, ISIS in Aleppo released a statement confirming that it had suffered many casualties during clashes with Syrian forces near the 80th brigade army base, Tal'aran town and al-Sfeira city.

The Syrian conflict may be entering a new stage, where Saudi support for Takfiri fighters comes up short against the resolve of Syrian and Shia fighting forces, and IRGC support/expertise.