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

ShahryarHedayat

Junior Member
Re: Islamic Republic of Iran Armed Forces

Another news about Iran's missile program as Iran and P5+1 talks failed to meet a deadline

Finally there has been some information about the project ''gha-em''
that General Tehrani Moqadam was working on , And ultimately led to his death

, it is a solid fuel SLV with four stages and TVS(Thrust vector control),
it's first stage has a diameter of 3.5 meters and length of 20 meters.
all stages passed the test sucessfuly
It will place satellites in 1000km orbit.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 
Last edited:

ShahryarHedayat

Junior Member
Re: Islamic Republic of Iran Armed Forces

IRIAF SU-24

18514_1398169184.jpg


MIRAGE F-1

2477592.jpg

qspkesq160nu3uc1u2ry.jpg


F-4

ShowPicture.aspx
 

ShahryarHedayat

Junior Member
Nemesis: The Shadowy Iranian Training Shia Militias in Iraq


BY JANINE DI GIOVANNI / NOVEMBER 27, 2014 7:57 AM EST
Nemesis Cover
SIPA PRESS/REX


2rfdifa.jpg



Down a dusty backstreet in the Baghdad neighbourhood of Karada this month, I met Sheikh Raad Al Kafaji, a former Iraqi Army officer specialising in artillery, and a veteran fighter from the days of the Iran-Iraq war. He is head of the al Kafaji tribe and a commander in the Kata’ib Hezbollah militia, one of the Shia militias at the forefront of the fight against ISIS in Iraq.

After the fall of Mosul in July, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani issued a religious edict (fatwa) calling on Iraqi “citizens to defend the country, its people, the honor of its citizens, and its sacred places”. That is, to come defend their religion in a holy war against ISIS.

Sheikh Raad says that in the initial days after Sistani’s fatwa, men as old as 60 came to his small offices begging to fight to hold back ISIS and Sunni-led insurgents.

Subscribe to Newsweek Today: Christmas Offers

According to Iraqi Deputy National Security Adviser, Dr Safa Hussein al-Sheikh, the Kata’ib Hezbollah militia, founded in the months leading up to the 2003 American invasion, is known for being smaller and more organised than the other Shia militias – and is considered highly secretive and adept, even by Iraqi intelligence standards.

“In the past, they had focused more on American targets – sophisticated, lethal, organised attacks that were not penetrated by the American or Iraqi intelligence,” Al Sheikh says.


When I visit, the 58-year-old Sheikh Raad sits wearily in his office wearing battle fatigues and several jewelled garnet and turquoise rings. With him is his young fourth wife, who surprisingly has her dark hair uncovered, and is heavily made up, dressed in tight trousers and high heels. She wants to film his conversation on her cell phone.

The Sheikh sees no irony in the fact that his current financial backer, Iran, was his former mortal enemy.

“Saddam imposed that war (the Iran-Iraq war) on the Shia people in Iraq and Iran,” he says. “It was Saddam’s fault. Not the fault of Iran.”

He says Kata’ib Hezbollah has about 4,000 fighters (Iraqi intelligence puts the figure closer to 1,000) that are “experienced from fighting in Amerli, Samara, but also have past experience fighting with Hezbollah in Syria”.

He himself goes back and forth to Syria, largely to protect Shia shrines near Damascus. Much of it is done around the town of Sayyidah Zaynab – “Lady Zaynab” – a southern Damascus suburb that has a Shia shrine of the same name.

11_28_IranIraq_01
Sadr City residents carry weapons as part of a local auxiliary militia to defend Baghdad, June 14, 2014. AYMAN OGHANNA/THE NEW YORK TIMES/REDUX

Some of his men, he says, were paid up to $700 (£446) a day by Iran to fight in Syria, but in Iraq they are getting far less, although he says Iran is arming his men with weapons – AK-47s, 12.7 mm heavy machine-gun and PKCs, a lighter, 7.62 mm, machine-gun used in many of the *former-Soviet Bloc and Middle Eastern countries.


“Here, we are fighting for justice – for our faith – not for money,” he insists. “And don’t forget there is a big difference between Hezbollah in Iran and Hezbollah in Iraq. Philosophically, we have the same enemy – Daish (ISIS) and Israel – but we are fighting here for justice.”

To understand the presence of Shia militias in Iraq today, and the increasing sway of Iran, you have to go back to the legacy of the mass graves.

Shortly after Saddam Hussein, a Sunni who had systematically repressed the majority Shiites for decades by cracking down on their political parties and crushing Shia movements, fell from power in April, 2003, human rights workers and US investigators began exhuming graves where thousands of Shiites and ethnic Kurds had suddenly disappeared.

It is unclear how many Shias died during the Saddam years, but the figures range from 400,000 – 700,000 people. One grave near Baghdad alone held nearly 15,000 bodies. In another, near the southern city of Samawah, more than 72 were discovered, mainly women and children.

It is believed that up to 60,000 Shias disappeared from Baghdad during those years of terror, and ended up in pits of earth. Years later, when Saddam was finally gone, relatives would stand at the open graves, desperately tried to find something that could link them to their lost.

“I just wish I could feel him, touch him, see him,” said the sobbing mother of one of “the disappeared,” Hilu Issa, who went missing in 1980 at the age of 25. (I spoke to her in May 2003 just after the US-led invasion.)

The image of her vanished son remained *frozen in time. “I need to know what happened to him.”



Saddam’s men typically came at night, and took people away without warning. Hilu’s mother never saw him again.

The day after Saddam fell, with the city of Bagdad in chaos, it was finally possible to put together pieces of the puzzle. In al-Haakimiya, a notorious Mukhabarat (secret police) prison used during his reign, I and an Iraqi colleague found *evidence of brutal torture: restraints; blindfolds; torture instruments with hardened blood still on them; cells the size of bathtubs where desperate men had scrawled messages to the families they would never see again.

In post-war Iraq, the political tables flipped. After the American invasion, it was the Shias in power, the Sunnis who were being hunted.

When Haider al Abadi, a moderate Shia was designated prime minister last August, it was with the promise that his government would be more inclusive, and break the cycle of revenge and vengeance between Iraqi Shias and Sunnis.

But it is still hard to find any Shia family that has not, in some way, been touched by Saddam’s brutality and that does not still bear, in some way, a grudge or at least a quest for justice.


Last January, Nouri al Maliki, the former prime minister, and a Shia dissident under Saddam who held strong nationalistic ideals, launched a bombing campaign in Anbar Province, which is largely Sunni, apparently with the intention of driving out jihadists, aka, ISIS.

But human rights groups were concerned that the bombs were not just landing on the insurgents – but on civilian targets and neighbourhoods, in particular hospitals and residential areas. They saw the Anbar campaign as another widening of the endless sectarian conflict. As the bombing went on, it also became apparent that the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) were simply not up to handling the job of pushing back ISIS. This opened the door to the Shia militias.

“What happened then is that some smaller Shia groups proposed they would join the fight,” says al-Sheikh, the deputy national security adviser, at his office in Baghdad.

“That was their first operation. There were initially probably only a couple of hundred Shia militiamen fighting then, until the fall of Mosul. Then it went in a different direction.”

When Mosul fell on June 10 2014, a wave of terror rippled through Baghdad’s population. Rumours and truths flew through the crowded markets and streets: ISIS fighters were a mere 20km (12 miles) from the city; ISIS were killing Shia and raping Shia women; ISIS had come to destroy all Shia Muslims.

Then came what the Baghdad morgue director called a “spike” in the number of Sunni disappearances and murders in the capital: clear reprisals for the ISIS killings. One June morning, he showed me and other reporters photographs of the work of the Shia militias: Sunni men *tortured, beaten, murdered, their bodies thrown into fields, bloated and purple.

“It’s starting again,” he said, referring to the bloodiest period of the civil war, in 2006.


He also meant that the Shia militias were back in control, filling in the military vacuum the ISF had left. Now the Shias were back– but this time as protectors of the people, with the government heavily relying on them.

“They call themselves jihadists, not militias,” says al-Sheikh. “They learned their skills from fighting American occupiers before they left.” (The Shia militias are believed to be responsible for a large proportion of the American combat deaths during the occupation).

It also brings another element to Iraq – the increasing reliance and influence of Iran, the Shia regional giant. Ever since the Iranian revolution in 1979, governments inside and outside the Arab world have feared Shia fundamentalism. But today in Baghdad, the men who rose up to fight against ISIS in the wake of them overrunning Mosul are overwhelmingly Shia. And they clearly have a religious as well as a military agenda.

Their money comes largely from Tehran, as do their weapons and best trainers, according to various sources in the Iraqi government and *foreign analysts. The memory of a bitter war fought between Iraq and Iran from 1980-1988 in which nearly a million men died seems very far off in their memory.

Part of this resurgence of the Shia militias is the Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani’s potent call to arms in July, following Mosul’s defeat.

The rush of Shia men of all ages – some even in their 60s who had fought in the Iran-Iraq – was staggering. They crowded to three or four central recruitment centers in Baghdad, were *vetted, and about half of them were immediately dispatched to the belt of Baghdad. They then fanned out to ISIS fight alongside what was left of the demoralised ISF.


Five months on, with the American led *campaign to “degrade and ultimately destroy” ISIS, underway, the Shia militias are the backbone of the Iraqi military operation.

As well as their American experience, their training also comes from the recent battlefields of Syria. Many were sent to help protect the Shia shrines from the Syrian Sunni rebels.

Iraqis insist there is nothing to fear from Iran’s heady presence in Iraq. They also say, in many ways, their allegiance lies with Iran.

“Who arrived here to save us three days after Mosul fell?” asks Dr Mowaffak al-Rubaie, a Member of Parliament and a former National Security Adviser (and best known as the man who led Saddam to the gallows and requested the guards loosen his handcuffs).

“Not the Americans. They only sent abysmal air strikes three months later when their citizens [the journalists James Foley, and later Steven Sotloff and Peter “Abdul-Rahman” Kassig] were beheaded. The speed of the Iranian response to Baghdad and Erbil was the next day.”



The Iranians sent 88 Russian-made Sukkhoi ground attack jets within weeks. They also sent their best fighters to train and advise – members of the elite Republican Guard. They sent pilots, weapons, and uniforms.

They also sent their military mastermind, Qasem Soleimani, leader of the Quds Force, whom many military leaders regard as an excellent, and highly strategic commander.

While usually secretive, *Soleimani allowed himself to be photographed last September on the battlefields of Amerli, clearly sending a message to the West that *Tehran was very present.

“He is here often in Baghdad, and Northern Iraq,” said one of Iraq’s leading Shia politicians who asked to remain anonymous. “Of course the Iraqi government knows about this. He is smart. He is also a man who loves war. He knows he is good at it.”

s5cj5t.jpg


Qasem Soleimani's name has become synonymous with the handful of victories attributed to Iraqi ground forces OFFICE OF THE IRANIAN SUPREME LEADER/AP

As to why Iraq would trust Iran with their bitter legacy and so many dead, al-Rubaie shrugs: “We are faced with an existential threat – ISIS. You use any means in this case. You use any means.”

Many Iraqis see the militias as crucial for their survival. Sajad Jiyad, a London-based analyst with the Iraqi Institute for Economic Reform (IIER), explains that: “The militias are very powerful – but post-June they became even more so because there was a vacuum. They have good resources and committed fighters,” Jiyad says. ”Most of the Shia communities that suffer from car bombs and suicide attacks are actually glad to have their protection.”

And the fact that they are backed by *Tehran? “The US has to reconcile with Iran,” says al-Rubaie. “With or without a nuclear deal. A US-Iranian reconciliation will be a huge contribution to the stability of the region.”

One of the main militias, Asaib ah Al-Haq, or The League of the Righteous, has leaders who have been jailed on terrorism charges during the US occupation. Asaib is the group most loathed by Sunnis who see it as a threat to their security. There is also believed to be a large criminal backbone at the heart of the militia, which is sometimes, but not always true.

“When anything bad happens in Baghdad, Asaib get blamed,” says al-Rubaie, making the militiamen sound more like naughty schoolboys than hardened killers.

Another is the Badr Brigades, formed in the 1980s during the Iran-Iraq war. A third is Sheikh Raad’s Kata’ib Hezbollah. Added to this are many other splinter groups that have risen up in various Shia neighbourhoods in Baghdad.

With the militias, however comes Iran’s *powerful political and religious influence. The question is, what will happen to Iran when ISIS is eventually destroyed? (which al-Rubaie reckons might be 3-5 years militarily, but 7-10 years *ideologically.)

Will the Iranians be willing, after this kind of investment, to pack it all in and go home?

Probably not, says al-Rubaie, but he says it’s time the West softened its “allergic” stance on Iran.

So what will be the end game? The fear is a Lebanese civil-war scenario, with militias from various sectarian divisions running riot throughout the country. Or that the Shias, tasting power now, and with Iran’s strong backing, are unlikely to give the Sunnis a fair hand when ISIS is eventually destroyed.

For Western diplomats, the concern is how the Shias see the future.

“Do they envision an Iraq that is completely Shia – where they are running little fiefdoms?” asked one.

Whatever their role in the future, for the moment, the militias are not going anywhere. They are crucial to ending the war against ISIS. One Western security adviser in Baghdad says that the Shias are “essential” to bolstering the flagging Iraqi Army.

“The truth is,” says Safa Hussein al-Sheikh, the Deputy National Security Adviser, “They prove to be more effective fighters than the Security Forces in many situations. They have experience from fighting the Americans, and from recently fighting in Syria. “

He pauses, and does not seem happy about his conclusion. “Fighting the Americans made them really experienced, really strong fighters.”

From Absolute Impunity – Militia Rule in Iraq – a report by published by Amnesty *International published this week
 
Last edited:

Tahiadidou

New Member
Registered Member
Nemesis: The Shadowy Iranian Training Shia Militias in Iraq


BY JANINE DI GIOVANNI / NOVEMBER 27, 2014 7:57 AM EST
Nemesis Cover
SIPA PRESS/REX

...

The Iranians sent 88 Russian-made Sukkhoi ground attack jets within weeks. They also sent their best fighters to train and advise – members of the elite Republican Guard. They sent pilots, weapons, and uniforms.
...

Sounds like a reference to SU-24s but i do not think Iran has as many in the first place, perhaps half, let alone operational. The author of the article has blown up figures all over the place. 400K to 700K killed by Saddam?? one mass grave with 15K dead?? Unless she has unknown intentions she is as gullible as too many journalists.
 

ShahryarHedayat

Junior Member
Iranian made Gyro LAB and Ejection Seat simulator


Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


[video=youtube;RmbcvhkGk9Q]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RmbcvhkGk9Q[/video]


please enable the subtitle option
 
Last edited:

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
ShahryarHedayat and all. Please do not:

1) Post any single line, single picture posts without any type of description.
2) Post any purely commercial/business posts or pictures.
3) Post anything that promotes or treats any terrorist group as normal.

All of the following:

Australia
Bahrain
The Gulf Cooperation Council
Canada
France
European Union
Israel
Netherlands
New Zealand
United Kingdom
United States

have identified Hezbollah as a Terror group. Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and others have also condemned their activities.

All such posts will be removed.

Read the SD Rules of Behavior

All of these items are covered there. Failure to follow the rules will elad to warnings and suspensions.

DO NOT RESPOND TO THIS POST

Jeff Head
SUPER MODERATOR
 

ShahryarHedayat

Junior Member
Iranian Phantom jet strikes the Islamic State in Iraq - IHS Jane's 360


An Iranian McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II jet has struck Islamic State targets in the eastern Iraqi province of Diyala, footage shot by regional media shows.

At least one F-4 is seen conducting a bombing run against ground targets in the footage shot by Al Jazeera , which erroneously identified the aircraft as an Iraqi fighter. Iran and Turkey are the only regional operators of the F-4, and the location of the incident not far from the Iranian border, and Turkey's unwillingness to get involved in the conflict militarily, indicate this to be an Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force (IRIAF) aircraft.

While the IRIAF is known to have contributed Sukhoi Su-25 'Frogfoot' ground attack aircraft to the fight against the Islamic State in Iraq (ostensibly donated to the Iraqi Air Force, but believed to be crewed by Iranian pilots), this footage is the first visual evidence of direct IRIAF involvement in the conflict.

The Al Jazeera footage, which was shot on 30 November, shows the IRIAF F-4 supporting Iraqi forces retaking the town of Sa'adiya in what was purported to be the government's largest operation against the Islamic State since June. Its release comes weeks after IHS Jane's reported growing evidence of Iranian involvement in the war in Iraq.

Video footage and photographs shown on social media sites have increasingly been showing Iranian military hardware in the hands of Shia militias fighting in Iraq. This hardware includes the 12.7 mm AM-50 anti-materiel rifle, at least one Iranian-made Safir jeep mounted with a 107 mm multiple rocket launcher (MRL), as well as an Iranian 122 mm HM 20 MRL.

COMMENT
While the US-led effort to combat the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria has been widely publicised by the Department of Defense (DoD) and its coalition allies, Iran's involvement has been altogether more opaque.

Iran was the first country to pledge and deliver military support to Iraq when the Islamic State began its offensive earlier in the year. At the time that the first IRIAF Su-25s arrived over Baghdad in late June, there was much speculation that Iran and the United States may come together in some form of joint operation against the Islamic State. However, the recent détente between the two countries is still in its very early stages, and neither side much relished the prospect of military co-operation to such a degree.

As such, there appear to be two parallel military campaigns being waged against the Islamic State, with the United States and its allies conducting their air campaign over Iraq and Syria, and Iran pursuing its own military agenda in Iraq at the same time. So far, this dual approach does appear to be working (at least in terms of de-conflicting the two military campaigns), but should they happen to cross paths over the coming weeks and months it would no doubt muddy still further an already complicated conflict.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


--------------------------------------------------
dxerms.jpg


Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 

Miragedriver

Brigadier
jv6WvhL.jpg

An Iraqi soldier secures an area from a helicopter carrying Iraqi Defense Minister Khalid al-Obeidi
Picture: AP


I will now get back to bottling my Malbec
 

navyreco

Senior Member
IDEAS 2014 in Karachi Pakistan
[video=youtube;-UopOcQTaKo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-UopOcQTaKo[/video]

[video=youtube;724BpR0we08]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=724BpR0we08[/video]
 
Top