ISIS/ISIL conflict in Syria/Iraq (No OpEd, No Politics)

SampanViking

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al Qaryatain has been recaptured by the Government.
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Strategically rather more significant that see-saw positions in Southern Aleppo or the Idlib Latakia borders.
On this subject, RT is reporting that the Russian position is that the rebels in South Aleppo are now under Al-Nusra leadership and as such not covered by the Ceasefire Agreement. The Russians claims are being accredited to the Russian reconciliation negotiators working in Syria.
By all accounts Russian aircraft have not been active so far around Al-Eis. Given however that al-Qaryatain (where they have been busy) has now been retaken and the official reclassification of the South Aleppo rebels, I suspect this is all about to very dramatically change.

The dynamic of the conflict may also have taken another turn yesterday with the upsurge of violence between Azaries and Armenians in Nagorny Karabakh. The fact that Erdogan has so publicly backed Baku shows how toxic this situation could easily become.
 
finally pro-Government maps appeared; they acknowledge loosing at-most-two-miles-long stretches, but all over the area: ...
... and here's ТАСС
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my quick translation of the respective part (it's the fifth paragraph if you wanted to check on me :)
"In the area of checkpoints Al-Eis, Abu Ru'ayl (that's what I believe they meant) and Khan Tuman in Aleppo Province, Al-Nusra Gangs (illegal in Russia) after half of an hour of the artillery barrage attacked, and as a result the Government Troops, which had been ordered not to respond to provocations, left their positions in Al-Eis area and retreated in the NW direction."
 
found this overall view, dated yesterday:
mkowb5n5wpp9e7szg.jpg
should be "clickable"; the link:
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yesterday
in the morning:
  • according to a Twitter of the Russian journalist on location in Syria, counter-attack hasn't been mounted yet (plus Iranian press will brag about it once it starts, I guess)
...
... here it comes
Syrian Army begins counter-offensive in southern Aleppo as Russia pounds al-Eis
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I like Propaganda LOL ... I noticed "Cassad" was not that happy:
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(that blog collects pictures, videos from recent fights, also what I think is a rare footage of Government TOW-attack:
OK almost all filmed TOW-attacks in Syria I saw were anti-Government)
 
Saturday at 3:26 PM
...
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pushed yesterday toward Al-Eis
...
... and I don't mean to be glib, but since then one of their Warlords has been iced by reportedly Syrian/Russian/US air-strike, depending on what you read :) including Western sources:
  1. Syria's Qaeda spokesman, 20 jihadists dead in strikes: monitor
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    "It was not immediately clear if the raids were carried out by Syrian regime warplanes or their Russian allies."
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    "He was killed on 3 April 2016 by a suspected U.S. drone strike, northwest of the city of Idlib."
    (plus there are numerous Tweets "pronouncing him dead")
so I wouldn't be surprised if he was laughing now:
CfI5EFkUEAEIK1c.jpg
 
some time ago
Sep 11, 2015
... but was it true??
Pentagon chief demands honest war intelligence

source is pretty official:
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and here's sorta continuation:
Intel Analysts: We Were Forced Out for Telling the Truth About Obama’s ISIS War

The growing scandal over cooked ISIS intelligence just got much worse. Now, analysts are saying they’re being forced out for not toeing the Obama administration’s line on the war.

Two senior intelligence analysts at U.S. Central Command say the military has forced them out of their jobs because of their skeptical reporting on U.S.-backed rebel groups in Syria, three sources with knowledge of their claim told The Daily Beast. It’s the first known instance of possible reprisals against CENTCOM personnel after analysts accused their bosses of
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about the U.S.-led campaign against ISIS in order to paint a rosier picture of progress in the war.

One of the analysts alleging reprisals is the top analyst in charge of Syria issues at CENTCOM. He and a colleague doubted rebels’ capabilities and their commitment to U.S. objectives in the region. The analysts have been effectively sidelined from their positions and will no longer be working at CENTCOM, according to two individuals familiar with the dispute, and who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The analysts’ skeptical views put them at odds with military brass, who last year had predicted that a so-called moderate opposition would make up a 15,000-man ground force to take on ISIS in its self-declared caliphate. An initial $500 million program to train and arm those fighters
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. And until the very end, Pentagon leaders claimed the operation was more or less on track. Lawmakers called the plan a “joke” when Gen. Lloyd Austin, the CENTCOM commander, finally testified last September that there were just “four or five” American-trained fighters in Syria.

Earlier allegations from CENTCOM, the military command responsible for overseeing the Middle East, had focused on leaders there fudging intelligence reports about U.S. efforts to attack ISIS and undermine its financing operations. That analysts are now raising red flags around reporting on Syrian rebel groups suggests that, at least from the analysts’ perspective, there is a broader systemic problem than was previously known.

The Pentagon inspector general and a congressional task force are investigating allegations of doctored intelligence reports about ISIS.

The working environment at CENTCOM has been described as
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As The Daily Beast previously reported,
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have said that senior officials gave more scrutiny and pushback on reports that suggested U.S. efforts to destroy ISIS weren’t progressing. Analysis that took a more optimistic view of the war effort got comparatively less attention from higher-ups.

In a separate development, the head of Iraq analysis at CENTCOM, Gregory Hooker, is being reassigned to a position in the United Kingdom, three sources knowledgeable of the transfer told The Daily Beast. Hooker was
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last year by The New York Times as leading the group of analysts that raised objections about the ISIS reports.

There was no evidence that Hooker’s reassignment was a retaliatory move by his superiors, rather some suggested he had requested the change.

But for the analysts who have accused their bosses of improper behavior, the climate has become anxious, particularly as now some fear for their jobs.

“[They] are scared all the time,” one official told The Daily Beast.

The Syria analysts spoke out after Austin directed his subordinates last year
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against anyone who voiced concerns about political influence or bias being brought to bear on intelligence analysis, said one individual knowledgeable of their complaints. More than 1,000 analysts work at CENTCOM headquarters in Tampa, Florida, and their reports are meant to help senior U.S. officials and policymakers understand the facts on the battlefield.

Investigators from the congressional task force have met with analysts at both CENTCOM headquarters and, last month, in Washington, half a dozen sources with knowledge of the meetings said.

Spokespersons for the task force declined to comment.

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes previously told The Daily Beast that investigators were unable to obtain certain documents germane to the analysts’ allegations about altered ISIS reports, and that congressional staff had to interview the analysts in the presence of CENTCOM personnel, whom Nunes referred to as “minders.”

“They’re having a tough time talking to us,” Nunes said of the analysts whom congressional staff have interviewed in Tampa.

The Defense Department inspector general is also looking into the ISIS reports. The watchdog’s office has said the investigation, which is expected to be finished soon, “will address whether there was any falsification, distortion, delay, suppression, or improper modification of intelligence information,” as well as “personal accountability for any misconduct or failure to follow established processes.”

At CENTCOM’s intelligence unit, there’s growing anticipation for the results of the Defense Department inspector general’s investigation. Some have said they hope it will hold those they feel are responsible for altering reports, but there’s also concern that the findings will seek to downplay the severity of the problem and won’t lead to any significant changes.

At least one change is in the works. Last week, the Pentagon announced that Maj. Gen. Mark R. Quantock, currently the intelligence director of the U.S.-led military effort in Afghanistan, will take over as the head of intelligence at CENTCOM. Two officials described Quantock as a “straight shooter” who could help relieve tensions at the command headquarters.

Quantock, who is expected to arrive this summer, will replace Maj. Gen. Steven Grove, whom analysts have said is chiefly responsible for altering the ISIS reports. Grove and his civilian deputy, Gregory Ryckman, have also been
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from computer systems before the inspector general could examine them, three individuals familiar with the investigation told The Daily Beast.

Investigators from Capitol Hill and the Pentagon’s watchdog have pulled analysts away from work to ask them questions. Their colleagues try to glean insights about the course of the investigation by keeping note of who is being queried and for how long.

And in another sign of rising anxiety, some believe that that military leadership is trying to piece together which analysts have made allegations about Grove, and to whom, whether they be investigators or journalists.
source
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is the The Daily Beast, I know, I know, but the above NavyTimes story is based on their report
 

SampanViking

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If you look at the map, you will see that the colours are shaded in respect of the overall level of control being exerted.
The yellow down by the Jordanian border is in fact a light green of the rebels and indicative of it being largely desert or scrub with the Government forces are not really bothered yet to contend.
It works the same way as most of Central Syria being shown as under nominal ISIS control. In reality its just desert with some forces guarding key roadways, water wells and of course Oil Infrastructure. Away from such features it is simply "bandit country" where the movement of ISIS marauders is not contested, by the maintenance of large numbers by any side will be nigh on impossible, except on mass offensive transit, designed to rapidly pass through and occupy strategic space on the other side.

ISIS have indeed sent powerful offensive forces across the desert to try and disrupt Government supply lines, but their limited/temporary success does illustrate the difficulty of such operations and the vulnerability of all sides to interdiction by the other.
 
in Southern Aleppo area (where Spring Campaign started recently: https://www.sinodefenceforum.com/is...no-oped-no-policis.t6913/page-357#post-394460) a Syrian Su-22 downed around noon today; its Pilot bailed out, got caught, was brutalized (the blog of "Cassad"
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shows it) ... I'm going to update this post

EDIT
I've seen the coordinates of the crash site reported as
35.99412,36.992
which could make sense:
WIikh.jpg

as it would mean the outskirts of Al-Eis recently lost by Government:
https://www.sinodefenceforum.com/is...no-oped-no-policis.t6913/page-357#post-394471
(I used a single source so this info may turn out to be wrong, sorry then)
 
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