Persian Gulf & Middle East Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
In the last few days the rebels have been seen using ATGM, Obamas support has already reached the rebels

250 Russian built METIS-M Systems have been used against Assads forces, they have arrived in the last we days via Turkey

It is also thought that Saudi Arabia is over seeing the supply of MANPADS

Two weapons which will change the course of the war, it is said that the systems have some sort of GPS trackers which allows them to be only used only inside Syria don't know how credible this is though
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
24 June 2013 Last updated at 06:01 ET
Lebanon clashes: At least 16 soldiers killed in Sidon
At least 16 Lebanese soldiers have been killed in clashes with Sunni militants in the port city of Sidon.
Fighting broke out after supporters of a radical Sunni cleric opened fire on a checkpoint on Sunday.
Clashes continued overnight as security forces tried to surround the cleric's supporters, local media say.
Sectarian tensions in Lebanon have risen since the country's Shia movement Hezbollah backed Syria's government in the civil war there.
Witnesses said machine gun and rocket fire shook Sidon, 40km (28 miles) south of Beirut, causing panic among residents.
The army blamed the violence on supporters of hardline Sunni cleric Sheikh Ahmad al-Assir.
The incident is a further stark reminder of how the violence in Syria is destabilising life in neighbouring Lebanon where a delicate equilibrium has prevailed amongst rival religious and ethnic groups since its own civil war ended more than 20 years ago, says the BBC's Kevin Connolly in Beirut.
Sidon has been on edge since violence erupted last week between Sunni and Shia fighters who have taken different sides in the Syrian conflict.
Lebanese officials have since been trying to quell the unrest and had restored an uneasy calm before Sunday's violence.
Fresh clashes broke out on Sunday after police arrested a follower of Sheikh Ahmad al-Assir at a checkpoint.
Some reports suggest the man was carrying unlicensed firearms in his car. Mr Assir's Salafist followers claim the man was beaten up and then released.
Other supporters of the cleric then attacked security forces in retaliation and called on their supporters to take to the streets nationwide, the sources said.
More than 100 soldiers were wounded in the clashes.
"The army was attacked in cold blood in an attempt to light the fuse in Sidon," a military statement said.
Smoke could be seen billowing over parts of the city and shells were reported to have hit central Sidon late on Sunday evening.
People in the worst affected areas - Abra and Hilaliya - called on the authorities to move them to safer places.
Last month, Lebanon's parliament voted to postpone elections due in June because of security concerns over the conflict in Syria.

this is why Syria is critical because as the fighting continues it's not just in the Syrian boarders it's without. We are seeing a regional conflict.
24 June 2013 Last updated at 11:26 ET
Qatari emir Sheikh Hamad 'to hand power to son'
The Qatari Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani is to announce he is ceding power to his son, reports say.
Rumours had been circulating for days that Crown Prince Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, 33, was being prepared to take over leadership of the Gulf emirate.
The Qatar-based al-Jazeera television station reported that Sheikh Hamad told a meeting of the "ruling family and top advisers" of his decision on Monday.
A formal announcement is expected on Monday evening.
Sheikh Hamad will address the nation at 08:00 local time (05:00 GMT) on Tuesday morning, according to the official QNA news agency. Tuesday has also been declared a national holiday.
A cabinet reshuffle is also expected as part of the changes in the government line-up.
Qatar has been dominated by the Al-Thani family for almost 150 years. Sheikh Hamad took power in 1995 when he deposed his father to become emir.
Since then he has introduced some liberalising reforms and in recent years has made Qatar a major player in regional diplomacy.
Analysts say Crown Prince Tamim is unlikely to deviate far from his father's policies.
He chairs the 2030 Vision project which outlines the development goals for the country and has a clear liberalising social agenda. The project has had significant input from his mother and Sheikh Hamad.

24 June 2013 Last updated at 04:45 ET
Israel hits back after Gaza rockets
Israeli warplanes have attacked targets in Gaza after missiles were fired into southern Israel on Sunday night.
At least six rockets had been fired from northern Gaza. Two were intercepted, the military said.
Hours later, Israeli aircraft hit at least three sites used by militants in the Gaza Strip, Israel said. No injuries were reported by either side.
The rocket fire followed a rise in tensions in Gaza after a militant died in a shoot-out with Palestinian police.
The Islamic Jihad faction says Raed Qassim Jundeyeih, a commander of its military wing, was killed on Saturday by police from Gaza's governing Hamas movement, while Hamas says Jundeyeih was killed by a bullet fired from his own weapon.
Islamic Jihad are believed to have been behind Sunday night's rocket attack on Israel, which came after a period of relative calm.
Sirens blared in a number of areas of southern Israel and Israeli media said two of the missiles, thought to be Grad rockets, were intercepted by the Iron Dome system in the Ashkelon area.
Israeli planes launched attacks in the early hours of Monday.
An Israeli army statement said "sites of terrorist infrastructure including two weapon storage facilities in the central Gaza Strip and a rocket launch site in the southern Gaza Strip" were targeted with "accurate strikes".
BBC reporter Rushdi Abualouf said the sites hit belonged to both Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
Israel has said it holds Hamas responsible for all attacks emanating from the territory.

23 June 2013 Last updated at 13:10 ET
Egyptian army 'ready to intervene to stop conflict'
The army in Egypt has warned it will not allow the country to descend into "uncontrollable conflict".
The comments by army chief Gen Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi came a week ahead of planned mass protests by opponents of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.
He said the army was obliged to stop Egypt plunging into a "dark tunnel".
The remarks are seen as one of the strongest interventions since the army handed over power to President Morsi last year.
Consensus plea
At a meeting with soldiers on Sunday, Gen Sisi, who is also the country's defence minister, said the army would "not remain silent as the country slides into uncontrollable conflict".
"There is a state of division in the society, and the continuation of it is a danger to the Egyptian state.
"There must be consensus," he stressed.
Gen Sisi also met the president on Sunday for what an army spokesman described as a "routine" consultation, according to Reuters news agency.
Gen Sisi's comments come as Egypt's secular groups plan mass rallies ahead of the 30 June anniversary of President Morsi coming to power.
The groups say they have gathered 13 million signatures on a petition calling for the Islamist leader to step down.
On Friday, thousands of Mr Morsi's supporters marched across the country - in a show of support for the president.
The crowds chanted their allegiance, pre-empting the opposition demonstrations.
Mr Morsi's first year in office has been marred by constant political unrest and a sinking economy.
Many analysts say the instability and a continuing threat of violence have frightened away foreign investors and tourists.
There is increasing unemployment, particularly among the young, fuel shortages and a drain on reserves of foreign currency.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
U.S. Ospreys and air tankers put Iran in Israel's reach
By Oren Dorell
USA Today
FILED UNDER
News
Military Technology
The United States plans to give Israel weapons that would enable it to send ground forces against Iranian nuclear facilities that it can’t penetrate from the air.

The deal includes air-refueling aircraft, advanced radars for F-15 fighter jets, and up to eight V-22 Ospreys, an aircraft that can land like a helicopter and carry two dozen special operations forces with their gear over long distances at aircraft speeds.

The Osprey “is the ideal platform for sending Israeli special forces into Iran,” says Kenneth Pollack, a former CIA analyst now at the Brookings Institution’s Saban Center for Middle East Policy.

The aircraft could help solve Israel’s inability to breach Iran’s uranium enrichment facility buried under a granite mountain at Fordow. It might be impregnable to even the heaviest conventional bunker-busting munitions in the U.S. arsenal, Pollack said. Israeli military planners have been brainstorming how to conduct an effective operation, Pollack said, citing conversations with senior Israeli military officers.

“One of the possibilities is (Israel) would use special forces to assault the Fordow facility and blow it up,” Pollack said.

The weapons deal would be part of a military aid package for Israel that includes $1 billion for up to eight V-22 tilt-rotors; $500 million to retrofit radars into F-15 fighters and another $1 billion for a variety of air-to-ground weapons. Additional details about the U.S.-financed deal were revealed during a visit to Washington by Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon on June 15.

The State Department said discussions of the arms deal are ongoing.

Secretary of State John Kerry on Thursday had a working dinner with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem and will visit with Israeli, Palestinian and Jordanian officials through Saturday, discussing broad regional issues and the peace process.

Jonathan Schanzer, executive director of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, said the arms package was part of an Israeli wish list including some items that were not discussed publicly to help it keep amilitary edge over other nations in the region and for possible operations against Iran.

Israel’s air force would be hard-pressed to cause lasting damage to the Iranian nuclear program because it cannot sustain long-term bombardment and has limited bunker-busting capabilities and limited air-refueling capabilities, said Kenneth Katzman, who co-wrote the 2012 report “Israel: Possible military strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities” for the Congressional Research Service.

When he first announced the deal during a visit to Israel in April, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said the Ospreys would provide Israel with high-speed maritime search-and rescue-capabilities.

Yaalon said the arms sale would send a message to Israel’s chief adversary in the region.

“Without a credible military option, there’s no chance the Iranian regime will realize it has to stop the militarynuclear project,” Yaalon said.

Other parts of the arms package include Boeing’s KC-135 “Stratotanker,” which can refuel Ospreys and other aircraft while airborne and extend the tilt-rotor aircraft’s 426-mile range almost indefinitely. The deal also includes anti-radiation missiles that are used to target air defense systems, and advanced radars for Israel’s fleet of F-15 fighter jets, according to a Defense Department press release.

That equipment would increase Israel’s capabilities against Iran, said Ely Karmon, a senior research scholar at the Institute for Counter-Terrorism at The Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya, Israel.

The refueling equipment would extend the reach of Israeli special forces, which could be used against Iran as they were in Israel’s attack on a Syrian nuclear facility under construction in 2007, Karmon said.

In the 2007 attack, at least one Israeli team was on the ground to provide laser targeting of sophisticated airmunitions, Karmon said. “The same would be done for Iranian sites.”

The Osprey also could be used for search-and-rescue operations if Israeli aircraft involved in a complex airoperation are shot down and pilots endangered, Karmon said.

Michael Rubin, an analyst for the American Enterprise Institute, said senior U.S. and Israeli bombers would do significant damage to Iran’s hardened sites by targeting the entrances, and Israel could use the Ospreys for missions other than Iran’s nuclear sites. Israel may want the ability to send troops to secure chemical facilities in remote regions of Syria or to block Iranian shipments bound for terrorists in the Gaza Strip, Sinai Peninsula or Lebanon, Rubin said.

“Sudan and Eritrea are floating the idea of building an Iranian naval base or shipping Iranian missiles to the Gaza Strip,” Rubin said, referring to the Palestinian territory controlled by the terrorist group Hamas. “If you wanted to disrupt such missiles in a convoy, you’d do it with an Osprey.”

The arms deal also sends a message to Iran and reassurance to Israel that the United States is serious about standing by the Jewish state, Karmon said.

Katzman said he doesn’t think the arms sale provides Israel with significant new capabilities that Israel did not already have. He said the overall defense package, which also includes advanced F-16 fighter jets for the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, Iran’s chief rivals in the Persian Gulf, is more “a symbolic move to show (American) resolve to Iran,” Katzman said.

Contributing: Barbara Opall-Rome of Defense News
Just a thought.
 

plawolf

Lieutenant General
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


One more reason not to trust Russian news. Do they honestly think Su-27 will do anything against Saudi Typhoons?

Somehow I doubt the accuracy of anything a clearly biased website would say. Something this big would be all over the news if true, yet, I cannot find this mentioned anywhere else.
 

delft

Brigadier
A contact of the BBC 4 news program now running is saying that a military coup is now underway in Cairo.
 

muddie

Junior Member
KxnB6VJ.jpg

This picture shows pro-Assad militiamen carrying a Chinese M99 .50 cal sniper rifle and an Iranian Sayad 2(?) sniper rifle.

Seems like Chinese weapons appearing frequently on both sides of the Syrian Civil war.
 
Top