But still very good. It shows the Rebels in aleppo are in a total
state of shock and with very low morale. Many wants to surrender
but their Alqaeda commanders does not allow them and kill anyone who does it.
calm wrote:IS back in Palmyra after night.
Situation is bad again in Palmyra. ISIS captures Officers Housing. Syrian Army was unable to retake Al-Amariyah and Jabal Tar.
t's worth noting that ISIS' offensive is nearly identical to their May 2015 offensive when they captured Palmyra.
Spoils at silos
video
http://video.jkikki.de/v/sh11122016-720.mp4
#SDF start 2nd Phase of #WrathofEuphrates Operation & to control W flank of #Raqqa
6 villages gain by SDF
Marwaniyah, Jub al-Karrajah, Humyrah Kabirah & Saghirah, Qarwadanah & Doraniyah
calm wrote:As usual a handful of IS fighters forced regime forces to flee en masse in the desert west of #Tadmor
IS photos
calm wrote:As usual a handful of IS fighters forced regime forces to flee en masse in the desert west of #Tadmor
IS photos
KiloGolf wrote:I'm still positive. SAA needs to clear the last neighborhood of Aleppo no matter what happens elsewhere.
KoTeMoRe wrote:Once again I don't believe that there was more than a battalion worth of troops involved on both sides of the fight, probably half a company of Russians, probably a company of SAA.
The main success of ISIS was that they managed to take down most NDF checkpoints and overran the tight defense lines around Tadmur.
This again shows the extreme precarity of manpower in Syria on pretty much both sides.
Militarov wrote:KoTeMoRe wrote:Once again I don't believe that there was more than a battalion worth of troops involved on both sides of the fight, probably half a company of Russians, probably a company of SAA.
The main success of ISIS was that they managed to take down most NDF checkpoints and overran the tight defense lines around Tadmur.
This again shows the extreme precarity of manpower in Syria on pretty much both sides.
Be careful, we have memebers who claim SAA has 130.000 men
zorobabel wrote:Wow... Sad to see Palmyra lost after all the effort Russia put into liberating it.
KiloGolf wrote:Militarov wrote:KoTeMoRe wrote:Once again I don't believe that there was more than a battalion worth of troops involved on both sides of the fight, probably half a company of Russians, probably a company of SAA.
The main success of ISIS was that they managed to take down most NDF checkpoints and overran the tight defense lines around Tadmur.
This again shows the extreme precarity of manpower in Syria on pretty much both sides.
Be careful, we have memebers who claim SAA has 130.000 men
SAA is barely 5 functioning Motorised Brigades and the rest is scattered motorised (read technicals) inf battalions. Mechanisation suffers and armor has eroded over the years of the war.
I'm very happy about Aleppo. Just wish they could've held Palmyra, too.KiloGolf wrote:zorobabel wrote:Wow... Sad to see Palmyra lost after all the effort Russia put into liberating it.
Gaining Aleppo to lose Palmyra. I'd take that deal any day.
calm wrote:SAA liberate Bab Al-Maqam
Militarov wrote:KiloGolf wrote:Militarov wrote:KoTeMoRe wrote:Once again I don't believe that there was more than a battalion worth of troops involved on both sides of the fight, probably half a company of Russians, probably a company of SAA.
The main success of ISIS was that they managed to take down most NDF checkpoints and overran the tight defense lines around Tadmur.
This again shows the extreme precarity of manpower in Syria on pretty much both sides.
Be careful, we have memebers who claim SAA has 130.000 men
SAA is barely 5 functioning Motorised Brigades and the rest is scattered motorised (read technicals) inf battalions. Mechanisation suffers and armor has eroded over the years of the war.
Best are those "SAA lost 200 men, its beans for the gains they achieved". Rightt... Toothfairy wants her wand back.