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solarz

Brigadier
Iraq: who's surprised?

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Al-Qaeda now controls most of Anbar province, including Ramadi and Fallujah. The Iraqi government forces are getting pummeled by the Islamist militants. It's pretty much what most of us predicted a few years ago.

I don't believe the Islamists will be stopped short of a new foreign intervention. Afghanistan is not going to fare any better once the Americans complete their withdrawal.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
Re: Iraq: who's surprised?

I believe Afghanistan will be split in control between the Harman Karzai government and the Taliban groups. The country won't be split up but it will be control by certain clans controlling certain parts of the region, therefore can enforce their own kind of rules and laws but still abide by the constitution of Afghanistan in some ways. Will the same happen to Iraq? I can't say for sure.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Re: Iraq: who's surprised?

This is not a conflict in a vacuum. it's directly attached to the conflict in Syria. If a intervention did happen it would have to be regional, Iraq, Syria, Jordan and Lebanon.
 
Why the Taliban can't shoot

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Learned a lot of new stuffs too in the process, especially with the handling of ammunition. Good tips to keep in mind as we prepare for the next apocolypse.
 

solarz

Brigadier
Re: Iraq: who's surprised?

This is not a conflict in a vacuum. it's directly attached to the conflict in Syria. If a intervention did happen it would have to be regional, Iraq, Syria, Jordan and Lebanon.

The thing is, win or lose in Syria, the Islamists will come out ahead anyway. Even if the Syrian rebellion is put down, the Islamist militants will simply move to another theatre, likely reinforcing the ISIL in Iraq or the Taliban in Afghanistan.

I remember in another discussion, someone argued that Islamists can't win in the long run. Well, in the short run, it's looking like they can't lose!
 

delft

Brigadier
Ambassador M K Bhadrakumar on the increasing connection between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan and its significance for Syria and Iran:
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Saudis prioritize Pakistan ties

The Saudi Crown Prince and Defence Minister Salam bin Abdul Aziz’s visit to Pakistan will raise eyebrows. It comes hardly a month after the visit by the Saudi Foreign Minister Saud Al-Faisal to Islamabad. Evidently, Faisal came to prepare the ground for the Crown Prince’s visit.

Most certainly, something big is in the making in Saudi-Pakistan relations and, according to Pakistani reports, defence cooperation seems to be at the centre of it. Riyadh is boosting the ties with Islamabad against the backdrop of Saudi-Iranian tensions.
Interestingly, Tehran today virtually gave an ultimatum to Pakistan that unless the latter cracked down on cross-border terrorism, Iranian security forces might be compelled to act across the border. Senior Iranian military officials are talking tough. The Jeish Al Adl, which organized a deadly terrorist strike recently in eastern Iran bordering Pakistan is a Wahhabi group and conceivably, it works for Saudi intelligence, which would explain why Islamabad is reluctant to crack down on it.
The huge upswing in the Saudi-Pakistani ties is bound to set alarm bells ringing in Tehran. Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has mothballed the Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline project in accordance with Saudi wishes, apart from due to the US pressure. In all likelihood, Iran-Pakistan ties could enter a tense phase.
This of course would have implications for Afghanistan insofar as Tehran will be extremely wary about the Taliban’s return to power. However, the Saudi maneuvering would also be viewed in the context of the forthcoming visit by US President Barack Obama to Riyadh next month. A new proximity is developing between Washington and Riyadh over Syria. Jerusalem Post reported that Saudis will demand a robust American push for regime change in Syria.
Obviously, there is a military content to the Saudi Crown Prince’s current visit, which, reportedly includes the signing of a defence agreement. Clearly, Saudis are raising the ante in Syria and are planning to supply the rebels with sophisticated weapons. The big question is what role it is that the Saudis could be considering for Pakistan here.
One possibility is that Saudis count on Pakistani advisers and trainers to prepare the Syrian rebel force for the long haul. The sacking of the chief of the US-backed Free Syrian Army Selim Idriss underscores that things are really in bad shape out there.
 

asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
Pakistan is a nation founded by Muslims for the Muslims, historically Pakistan has never taken side when it comes to Muslims interference and should never take part in this game between Saudi and Iran both are playing the devil and both are wrong

Pakistan has no dog in this fight and must and will stay natural

20% of Pakistan is Shia and it also has a sizeable Christian community who are free to practice what they wish as is many other relations

If Saudis want weapons and do business great fine no problem but that's it don't expect anything that will put Pakistan on a collision course with Iran or any other country, Iran is Pakistans neighbour and regardless of thier government as our neighbours we want only friendly relationship with everyone

Pakistan keeps it nukes builds its militray has a stage in the international community takes part and leads many international militray excercises has a world standing and some very good time tested friends

It should stay that way
 

kwaigonegin

Colonel
The guy doing the interception is the boss of all the birds on the Nimitz no?

Yes, his callsign is CAG and his rank is Capt so most likely he is the CAG or Commander Air Group. VFA 137 is Strike Squadron 137 out of NAS Lemmore part of CVW 2 as designated by NE tailcode.
That photo is not recent because CVN 72 is now based out of Norfolk and CVW 2 is part of Ronald Reagan Strike Group which is West Cost.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
kwaigonegin is 100% correct. That overflight happened maybe in 2012. There was a thread about this at mp.net...

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Over flights by Iranian P-3Fs have been ongoing for years. I'm not really sure when the last one occurred.

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Originally Posted by no_name
The guy doing the interception is the boss of all the birds on the Nimitz no?

CAG may or may have not been flying that aircraft. CAGs name is on at least one aircraft of every Hornet squadron assigned to a CVW. It's for "show not for go".
 
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