cryptocoiner (OP)
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May 29, 2015, 01:31:28 PM |
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Why ISIS is winning, and how its foes can reverse that success (CNN)A combination of Iraqi forces has converged on Ramadi in an effort to reverse ISIS' stunning success in seizing the city. The Iraqi Prime Minister, Haider al Abadi, promised a counter-attack "within days" as Baghdad seeks to address the most humiliating episode in its war with ISIS since the fall of Mosul nearly a year ago. ISIS -- in both Iraq and Syria -- has had a successful month. Its capture of Ramadi and Palmyra in Syria are due to its tactics and structure, and the weakness or exhaustion of opponents, as well as support or acquiescence among enough Sunnis in both countries. It may also have benefited, according to some analysts, from cynical power-plays in Baghdad. Even so, taking Ramadi and holding it are two different things. Evidence from previous battles suggests that ISIS doesn't 'do' defense as well as offense, and it is still vastly outnumbered by Iraqi forces. But the longer ISIS fighters are entrenched anywhere the more difficult they are to expel, and the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) clearly aren't capable of the task alone. In Syria, the seizure of Palmyra gives ISIS access to the main roads to Homs and Damascus, and nearby gas fields. It also confirms a shift by ISIS to focus on territory held by the Assad regime in west and central Syria, after a series of defeats at the hands of Kurdish forces supported by coalition airpower in the north. 'Shock and awe' The term was coined in 2003 to describe the technological power of the U.S. invasion of Iraq. But it can equally be applied to the way ISIS behaves on the battlefield, striking the enemy with massive explosive force. Back in February, Kurdish commanders near Mosul told CNN how ISIS had sent more than a dozen fuel tankers converted into massive vehicle-borne suicide bombs against their positions. A similar tactic was used to break the resistance of Iraqi security forces (ISF) in Ramadi. Michael Knights, an analyst with the Washington Institute for Near East Policy who has spent much time in Iraq, says it's "unsurprising that the ISF in Ramadi finally cracked when struck with a hammer blow -- namely, twenty-eight suicide car bombs in three days, including at least six massive fifteen-ton armored truck bombs in a single attack." There were also rumors that thousands of ISIS fighters had come to Ramadi from Syria, likely spread by ISIS' adept use of social media to sow fear. There is another psychological dimension to ISIS' threat: enemy soldiers know that they will be killed in cold blood if captured -- probably in gruesome fashion. At Tikrit last June, around Hit earlier this year, in Palmyra in Syria last week, enemy soldiers and other adversaries have been mercilessly dealt with. Summary executions -- en masse -- are part of its mode of warfare. After seizing a Syrian military base near Raqqa last July, it beheaded dozens of Syrian soldiers, posting videos of the barbarity. According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, it has now begun a similar reign of terror around Palmyra, executing hundreds of captured soldiers and regime sympathizers. http://edition.cnn.com/2015/05/28/middleeast/isis-how-to-stop-it/
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Aggressor66
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May 29, 2015, 01:51:36 PM |
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Obama is solely responsible for ISIS and it's murderous rampage. Obama causes misery and despair wherever he ventures whether at home or abroad. Spreading and enabling murder, strife and hate wherever his effeminate petty self inserts himself.
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RodeoX
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The revolution will be monetized!
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May 29, 2015, 01:58:37 PM |
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They are winning because they have the more compelling narrative. We don't like to admit it, but there is a huge movement toward Islam. We think we can shoot a powerful idea to death, but the people we are fighting are more committed than we are, and actually believe in the morality of what they are doing. By comparison the rest of the world has no consistent position or policy. Those who know war could see this coming when we announced we were going to "liberate" Iraq.
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bryant.coleman
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May 29, 2015, 04:47:21 PM |
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The ISIS is winning, because the CIA and the NATO want it to oust Bashar al Assad. If the NATO is serious about defeating ISIS, then it can be achieved by one small step. Just seal the Syria-Turkey border. ISIS is getting its Jihadi reinforcements through that border. If the Syria-Turkey border is sealed, then ISIS will run out of manpower in a few months and will be easily defeated, as it is not that successful in recruiting local Sunni Arabs. But the defeat of the ISIS will indirectly help Assad, and therefore the CIA will never allow it.
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Unbelive
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May 29, 2015, 07:28:10 PM |
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Obama is solely responsible for ISIS and it's murderous rampage. Obama causes misery and despair wherever he ventures whether at home or abroad. Spreading and enabling murder, strife and hate wherever his effeminate petty self inserts himself.
Ha ha. You are partly right. USA were training Iraq army 10 years. So all those ( US Army leadership) involved in that should lose their jobs and pay with their money reparation for their failure. I am sure this would never happen again. They will not enroll again to be something the cant provide. It is easy to play games with someones else money.
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maku
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May 30, 2015, 06:02:46 AM |
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Why is ISIS winning? Maybe because, US is stretchered out and cannot do more?" Maybe because there is no one else to fight them? Or maybe US government is deliberately waiting for ISIS to grow and become bigger threat so that other countries will put their money to fight against ISIS?
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Aggressor66
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May 30, 2015, 06:43:23 AM |
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With their biggest supporter occupying the White House, ISIS knows they can roll over Iraq unapposed. Obama has no intention of doing anything.
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."
Well, at least we know now that it also works when bad men do nothing too.
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Lethn
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May 30, 2015, 09:10:09 AM |
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Obama is solely responsible for ISIS and it's murderous rampage. Obama causes misery and despair wherever he ventures whether at home or abroad. Spreading and enabling murder, strife and hate wherever his effeminate petty self inserts himself.
Really? Just Obama? Can't think of anybody else with your partisan brainwashed mind? You don't think both presidents and the people who elected them both TWICE aren't responsible for this too?
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Aggressor66
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May 30, 2015, 09:26:55 AM |
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Bush started it an Obama did nothing to help the situation ... or how about putting the blame where in belongs, in the hands of all the countries in the middle-east who have failed to get involved in their own problems the last 20+ years.
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syuhide
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May 30, 2015, 12:33:15 PM |
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Why ISIS is winning, and how its foes can reverse that success (CNN)A combination of Iraqi forces has converged on Ramadi in an effort to reverse ISIS' stunning success in seizing the city. The Iraqi Prime Minister, Haider al Abadi, promised a counter-attack "within days" as Baghdad seeks to address the most humiliating episode in its war with ISIS since the fall of Mosul nearly a year ago. ISIS -- in both Iraq and Syria -- has had a successful month. Its capture of Ramadi and Palmyra in Syria are due to its tactics and structure, and the weakness or exhaustion of opponents, as well as support or acquiescence among enough Sunnis in both countries. It may also have benefited, according to some analysts, from cynical power-plays in Baghdad. Even so, taking Ramadi and holding it are two different things. Evidence from previous battles suggests that ISIS doesn't 'do' defense as well as offense, and it is still vastly outnumbered by Iraqi forces. But the longer ISIS fighters are entrenched anywhere the more difficult they are to expel, and the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) clearly aren't capable of the task alone. In Syria, the seizure of Palmyra gives ISIS access to the main roads to Homs and Damascus, and nearby gas fields. It also confirms a shift by ISIS to focus on territory held by the Assad regime in west and central Syria, after a series of defeats at the hands of Kurdish forces supported by coalition airpower in the north. 'Shock and awe' The term was coined in 2003 to describe the technological power of the U.S. invasion of Iraq. But it can equally be applied to the way ISIS behaves on the battlefield, striking the enemy with massive explosive force. Back in February, Kurdish commanders near Mosul told CNN how ISIS had sent more than a dozen fuel tankers converted into massive vehicle-borne suicide bombs against their positions. A similar tactic was used to break the resistance of Iraqi security forces (ISF) in Ramadi. Michael Knights, an analyst with the Washington Institute for Near East Policy who has spent much time in Iraq, says it's "unsurprising that the ISF in Ramadi finally cracked when struck with a hammer blow -- namely, twenty-eight suicide car bombs in three days, including at least six massive fifteen-ton armored truck bombs in a single attack." There were also rumors that thousands of ISIS fighters had come to Ramadi from Syria, likely spread by ISIS' adept use of social media to sow fear. There is another psychological dimension to ISIS' threat: enemy soldiers know that they will be killed in cold blood if captured -- probably in gruesome fashion. At Tikrit last June, around Hit earlier this year, in Palmyra in Syria last week, enemy soldiers and other adversaries have been mercilessly dealt with. Summary executions -- en masse -- are part of its mode of warfare. After seizing a Syrian military base near Raqqa last July, it beheaded dozens of Syrian soldiers, posting videos of the barbarity. According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, it has now begun a similar reign of terror around Palmyra, executing hundreds of captured soldiers and regime sympathizers. http://edition.cnn.com/2015/05/28/middleeast/isis-how-to-stop-it/ ISIS are winning because of their determined belief towards wrong notions of quran. they call it JIHAD (to die for their rights/motherland) , now for each reason they think to die because wrong people (muslims) mis-interperate it to their fellows that their life is just for killing. i dont wanna be partial but it takes no time to think ... whenever you think of isis,terrorist,mother f***** you remember ofd MUslims. this is not generally true there are some of my friends that are muslims and they are do very good.. but the story for rest world is different.. so its better to not talk about isis or terrorists because when ever you say of oppose them you are felt as a thorn in the eyes of muslims(mass) not all, as there are few good ones.
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Unbelive
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May 30, 2015, 01:04:54 PM |
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With their biggest supporter occupying the White House, ISIS knows they can roll over Iraq unapposed. Obama has no intention of doing anything.
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."
Well, at least we know now that it also works when bad men do nothing too.
I really dont understand why should he do and his country do anything now? Why? USA have enough Oil, Middle east if of no interest for them now. Yes there was responsibility for Iraq since they attacked it yars ago. And should restore previous situation when leave. But right now why would bother? China on other hand needs Oil. China is taking care of most of Africa and will also of Middle East. Or in your case you may say China country president.
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HarryPotHead
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You are what you eat. PIZZA!
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May 30, 2015, 01:10:27 PM |
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Why is ISIS winning? Maybe because, US is stretchered out and cannot do more?" Maybe because there is no one else to fight them? Or maybe US government is deliberately waiting for ISIS to grow and become bigger threat so that other countries will put their money to fight against ISIS?
And maybe just maybe the US is ISIS meaning they have funded and created them just like they did with osama and the homies. cia do some crazy shit I would not put it past them. ISIS will be 'winning' for as long as the US and other countries want them to.
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maku
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May 30, 2015, 02:33:37 PM |
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Why is ISIS winning? Maybe because, US is stretchered out and cannot do more?" Maybe because there is no one else to fight them? Or maybe US government is deliberately waiting for ISIS to grow and become bigger threat so that other countries will put their money to fight against ISIS?
And maybe just maybe the US is ISIS meaning they have funded and created them just like they did with osama and the homies. cia do some crazy shit I would not put it past them. ISIS will be 'winning' for as long as the US and other countries want them to. I wouldn't go as far to say that US deliberately created ISIS but there might be some truth in what You are writing. Having constant threat means you can justify spending millions on military equipment, which will make "military group" happy and armaments plants will be busy. Also having a target lie ISIS allows to test some new toys.
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Spendulus
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May 31, 2015, 02:43:14 AM |
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With their biggest supporter occupying the White House, ISIS knows they can roll over Iraq unapposed. Obama has no intention of doing anything.
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."
Well, at least we know now that it also works when bad men do nothing too.
I really dont understand why should he do and his country do anything now? Why? USA have enough Oil, Middle east if of no interest for them now. Yes there was responsibility for Iraq since they attacked it yars ago. And should restore previous situation when leave. But right now why would bother? China on other hand needs Oil. China is taking care of most of Africa and will also of Middle East. Or in your case you may say China country president. That's correct. Always the conspiracy theorists blab blah blab "CIA, USA, da da da." But there are all the other countries of the world with all their selfish interests. And sure, no double some few of ISIS would have trained with US. Some few Al Queda, so FUCKING WHAT? That's not enough to generate a hugh conspiracy theory on top of.
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Possum577
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May 31, 2015, 06:42:28 AM |
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They are winning because they have the more compelling narrative. We don't like to admit it, but there is a huge movement toward Islam. We think we can shoot a powerful idea to death, but the people we are fighting are more committed than we are, and actually believe in the morality of what they are doing. By comparison the rest of the world has no consistent position or policy. Those who know war could see this coming when we announced we were going to "liberate" Iraq.
If killing innocent people = evil. And killing those that kill innocent people = good. How can a powerful idea, that is evil, ever attract more than the idea that is good? I don't think ISIS will ever win. Their advancements are over areas in the world that are susceptible persuasion, influence, and blind faith. These are areas that have week government, military, and infrastructure to begin with. Areas that don't subscribe (let alone are able) to ruling locally by force. It's not a surprise that ISIS has grown in Syria. Could it grow in the world? I don't think so. A world war, one with combined forces from a few countries, would put an end to it. There's a responsibility for the Middle East to control their own. The West has learned that through endless (decades of) intervention. That's why the world, largely, waits. Liberation is only possible if it's lead by the people that want to be liberated. The border of the control ISIS can have is limited to those that choose not to fight their direct oppression. Evil never wins. ISIS is evil. If they weren't evil they would believe what they believe without forcing the entire world to also subscribe to their ideology. ISIS is greedy, no different from "the evil corporations". That's probably the greatest irony of their reign.
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maku
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May 31, 2015, 07:18:15 AM |
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They are winning because they have the more compelling narrative. We don't like to admit it, but there is a huge movement toward Islam. We think we can shoot a powerful idea to death, but the people we are fighting are more committed than we are, and actually believe in the morality of what they are doing. By comparison the rest of the world has no consistent position or policy. Those who know war could see this coming when we announced we were going to "liberate" Iraq.
If killing innocent people = evil. And killing those that kill innocent people = good. How can a powerful idea, that is evil, ever attract more than the idea that is good? I don't think ISIS will ever win. Their advancements are over areas in the world that are susceptible persuasion, influence, and blind faith. These are areas that have week government, military, and infrastructure to begin with. Areas that don't subscribe (let alone are able) to ruling locally by force. It's not a surprise that ISIS has grown in Syria. Could it grow in the world? I don't think so. A world war, one with combined forces from a few countries, would put an end to it. There's a responsibility for the Middle East to control their own. The West has learned that through endless (decades of) intervention. That's why the world, largely, waits. Liberation is only possible if it's lead by the people that want to be liberated. The border of the control ISIS can have is limited to those that choose not to fight their direct oppression. Evil never wins. ISIS is evil. If they weren't evil they would believe what they believe without forcing the entire world to also subscribe to their ideology. ISIS is greedy, no different from "the evil corporations". That's probably the greatest irony of their reign. Well said. I'll just add that ISIS could be dealt with within a month by razing it to the ground, but Western nations wouldn't allow for that because of human rights, we don't know how many people in that area are civilians that couldn't escape from the terrorists. Also if everybody would be annihilated on ISIS terrains, then that would make more bad blood in the region.
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Daniel91
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May 31, 2015, 12:10:07 PM |
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At the moment it may seem to suck wins but long term I think it will lose this war. At present, their enemies are divided, Iran, Syria, America, Russia, Iraq and others but it will not last long. When all understand the gravity of the situation and finally achieve real agreement on military cooperation, ISIS will have no chance alone against all. Americans have underestimated the danger of Isis, as previously underestimated the threat from Saddam and Osama, but I think they now understand the seriousness of the situation. Each additional day of ISIS terror is a disaster for the region and the entire civilized world.
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