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Iraq, Syrian, Turkey, Daash, ME news & update; Related articles, videos and photos
Topic Started: Dec 22 12, 1:10 (60,189 Views)
Brendar
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Iraq accuses the PKK of committing crimes in Nineveh, 14 dead

I was watching Alsharqiya TV some MP's claim that PKK controls vast majority of Nineveh (Rabia border crossing) and aims to form an emirate called "Jazira" region. The Yezidi force that is formed by PKK has demolished more than 5 villages in Shingal area.

Does anyone else have any idea about this operation?

Aljazeera
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kurdishpatriot
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secular sheikh

Brendar
Jan 27 15, 8:24
Iraq accuses the PKK of committing crimes in Nineveh, 14 dead

I was watching Alsharqiya TV some MP's claim that PKK controls vast majority of Nineveh (Rabia border crossing) and aims to form an emirate called "Jazira" region. The Yezidi force that is formed by PKK has demolished more than 5 villages in Shingal area.

Does anyone else have any idea about this operation?

Aljazeera
If it are arab villages , great job.
#PROMOTEWOMENRIGHTS
"shengal bo ezdi ya", Ezidi namerin, HATA ARAB NAMAYEN NEK SHENGAL!
"A society can never be free without women's liberation" - Abdullah Ocalan
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UKurd
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Interesting article:

How Iran Is Making It Impossible for the US to Beat ISIS

It was August 2007, and General David Petraeus, the top commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, was angry. In his weekly report to then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Petraeus wrote: “I am considering telling the President that I believe Iran is, in fact, waging war on the U.S. in Iraq, with all of the U.S. public and governmental responses that could come from that revelation. … I do believe that Iran has gone beyond merely striving for influence in Iraq and could be creating proxies to actively fight us, thinking that they can keep us distracted while they try to build WMD and set up [the Mahdi Army] to act like Lebanese Hezbollah in Iraq.”

There was no question there and then on the ground in Iraq that Iran was a very dangerous enemy. There should not be any question about that now, either. And the failure of the Obama administration to come to grips with that reality is making the task of defeating the so-called Islamic State more difficult—indeed, more likely to be impossible—every day.

There are lessons to be learned from the experience of the last decade, and of the last fortnight, but what is far from clear is whether Washington, or the American public, is likely to accept them because they imply much greater American re-engagement in the theater of battle. As a result, what we’ve seen is behavior like the proverbial ostrich burying its head in the desert sand, pretending this disaster just isn’t happening. But at a minimum we should be clear about the basic facts. In Iraq and Syria, as we square off against ISIS, the enemy of our enemy is not our friend, he is our enemy, too.

In 2007, there were 180,000 American troops in Iraq. Under Petraeus’s oversight, U.S. Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), the elite forces responsible for hunting terrorists around the world, was divided into two task forces. Task Force 16 went after al Qaeda in Iraq, the group that eventually would spawn ISIS, while Task Force 17 was dedicated to “countering Iranian influence,” chiefly by killing or capturing members of Iraq’s Shia militias—though in some cases, it even arrested operatives of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps-Quds Force (IRGC-QF) who were arming and supervising those militias’ guerrilla warfare against coalition troops.

At one point, in the summer of 2007, Petraeus concluded that the Mahdi Army, headed by the Shiite demagogue Muqtada al-Sadr, posed a greater “hindrance to long-term security in Iraq” than al Qaeda did. As recounted in The Endgame, Michael Gordon and Bernard E. Trainor’s magisterial history of the Second Iraq War, two-thirds of all American casualties in Iraq in July 2007 were incurred by Shiite militias. Weapons known as explosively formed penetrators, or EFPs, were especially effective against the U.S. forces. They were Iranian designed and constructed roadside bombs that, when detonated, became molten copper projectiles able to cut through the armor on tanks and other vehicles, maiming or killing the soldiers inside.

So it came as a surprise to many veterans of the war when Secretary of State John Kerry, asked in December what he made of the news that Iran was conducting airstrikes against ISIS in Iraq, suggested “the net effect is positive.” Similarly, Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin Dempsey—formerly the commander of the 1st Armored Division in Baghdad—told reporters last month, “As long as the Iraqi government remains committed to inclusivity of all the various groups inside the country, then I think Iranian influence will be positive.”

Whatever the Iraqi government says it is committed to, “inclusiveness” is not what’s happening on the ground.

Iran’s influence in Iraq since ISIS sacked Mosul last June has resulted in a wave of sectarian bloodletting and dispossession against the country’s Sunni minority population, usually at the hands of Iranian-backed Shia militia groups, but sometimes with the active collusion of the Iraq’s internal security forces. Indeed, just as news was breaking last week that ISIS’s five-month siege on the Syrian-Turkish border town Kobane finally had been broken, Reuters reported that in Iraq’s Diyala province at least 72 “unarmed Iraqis” —all Sunnis—were “taken from their homes by men in uniform; heads down and linked together, then led in small groups to a field, made to kneel, and selected to be shot one by one.”

Stories such as these out of Iraq have been frequent albeit under-publicized and reluctantly acknowledged (if at all) by Washington both before and after Operation Inherent Resolve got underway against ISIS.

For instance, 255 Sunni prisoners were executed by Shia militias and their confederates in the government’s internal security forces between June 9 and mid-July, according to Human Rights Watch. Eight of the victims were boys below the age of 18. “Sunnis are a minority in Baghdad, but they’re the majority in our morgue,” a doctor working at Iraq’s Health Ministry, told HRW at the end of July. Three forensic pathologists found that most of the victims in Baghdad were shot clean through the head, their bodies often left casually where they were killed. “The numbers have only increased since Mosul,” one doctor said.

On August 22, 2014, the Musab Bin Omair mosque in Diyala—the same province where last week’s alleged executions occurred—was raided by officers of the security forces and militants of Asaib Ahl al-Haq (the League of the Righteous), which slaughtered 34 people, according to HRW. Marie Harf, the U.S. State Department spokeswoman, said at the time: “This senseless attack underscores the urgent need for Iraqi leaders from across the political spectrum to take the necessary steps that will help unify the country against all violent extremist groups.”

Since then, however, U.S. warplanes have provided indirect air support to Asaib Ahl al-Haq and Kataib Hezbollah, a U.S.-designated terrorist entity, both of which were at the vanguard of the troops that ended ISIS’s months-long siege of Amerli, a Shia Turkomen town of about 15,000, in November 2014. These militias have also been seen and photographed or videoed operating U.S. Abrams tanks and armored vehicles intended for Iraq’s regular army, which means that there are now two terrorist organization, Sunni ISIS and Kataib Hezbollah, armed with heavy-duty American weapons of war.

The Hezbollah-ization of Iraq’s military and security forces has been overseen by the IRGC-QF, another U.S.-designated terrorist entity, which is headed by Maj. Gen. Qassem Suleimani, a man personally sanctioned by the Treasury Department for his role in propping up Bashar al Assad’s mass murderous regime in Syria.

In Iraq and Syria the enemy of our enemy is not our friend, he is our enemy, too.
Suleimani is the same Iranian operative Petraeus once called “evil” because of his well-documented role orchestrating attacks on U.S. servicemen. The most notorious episode happened in Karbala in 2007—in a raid that was carried out by Asaib Ahl al-Haq and resulted in the death of five G.I.s One of the founders of this militia and a main perpetrator of the attack, Qais al Khazali, was captured by coalition forces and subsequently released in a prisoner swap for a British hostage in 2009. Today, al Khazali moves freely around Iraq, dressed in battle fatigues, commanding Asaib militants.

Another one of Suleimani’s major proxies, the Badr Corps, is headed by Hadi al-Amiri, who happens to be Iraq’s former minister of transport, in which capacity he was accused by the U.S. government of helping to fly Iranian weapons and personnel into Syria. Not only was one of al-Amiri’s Badr henchmen, the group’s intelligence chief Abu Mustafa al-Sheibani, the man chiefly responsible for importing explosively formed projectiles into Iraq from Iran’s Mehran province during the occupation, but another of his subordinates, Mohammed Ghabban, is currently Iraq’s Interior Minister. This gives the Badr Corps purview over all of Iraq’s internal security forces, including its federal police—that is to say, the men in uniform who have allegedly acquiesced or connived in the Shia militias’ anti-Sunni pogroms.

Indeed, Iraq’s Interior Ministry gained notorious reputation in the last decade for being a clearinghouse for sectarian bloodletting. During the civil war in the mid-2000s, its agents, nominally aligned with U.S. troops, moonlighted as anti-Sunni death squads that functioned with the impunity of officialdom. The ministry also ran a series of torture-prisons in Baghdad, such as Site 4, where, according to a 2006 U.S. State Department cable, 1,400 detainees were held in “in squalid, cramped conditions,” with 41 of them bearing signs of physical abuse. Ministry interrogators, the cable noted, “had used threats and acts of anal rape to induce confessions and had forced juveniles to fellate them during interrogations.”

Needless to add, Badr has hardly mended its ways with the passage of time and the exit of U.S. troops from Iraq. Today, the militia has been accused of “kidnapping and summarily executing people…[and] expelling Sunnis from their homes, then looting and burning them, in some cases razing entire villages,” in the words of Human Rights Watch’s Iraq research Erin Evers, who added for good measure that the current White House strategy in Iraq is “basically paving the way for these guys to take over the country even more than they already have.”

As if taunting the Obama administration’s, Suleimani has takento popping up, Zelig-like, in photographs all over Iraq, usually from a front-line position from which ISIS has just been expelled. It is hard to overestimate the propaganda value such images now carry.

Consider this week’s blockbuster disclosure that the CIA and Israel’s Mossad collaborated in the 2008 assassination of one of Suleimani’s other high-value proxies, Hezbollah security chief Imad Mughniyeh. In close collaboration with Iran, Mughniyeh coordinated suicide attacks ranging from the 1983 U.S. Marine barracks bombings in Beirut to the blowing up of the AMIA Jewish center in Buenos Aires in 1994. Mughniyeh also was linked to the kidnapping of several Europeans and Americans in Lebanon in the 1980s, including CIA Station Chief William Buckley, believed to have died in 1985 after months of torture by Iranian and Iranian-trained interrogators.

So it is not surprising that Langley wanted Mughniyeh dead. What is suprising is that according to the Washington Post the CIA and Mossad had “a chance to kill” the Iranian master-spy Suleimani as he strolled through Damascus with Mughniyeh in 2008, but passed it up because of potential collateral damage. No doubt U.S. satellite surveillance is currently tracking Suleimani’s plain-sight movements in Iraq and Syria, too.

Last month, an Israeli attack in the Syrian sector of the Golan Heights killed Mughniyeh’s son, Jihad, who was said to have been an “intimate” protégé of Suleimani.

While segments of the U.S. intelligence establishment and punditocracy believe Iran to be a credible or necessary force for counterterrorism, the fighters associated with Suleimani’s paramilitaries profess a different agenda entirely.

In October, ISIS was driven from Jurf al-Sakher, a town about 30 miles southwest of Baghdad. The operation was said to have been planned personally by Suleimani. It featured Quds Force agents and Lebanese Hezbollah militants embedded with some 7,000 troops form the Iraqi Security Forces.

Ahmed al Zamili, the head of the 650-strong Al Qara’a Regiment, one of the militias party to that fight, told the Wall Street Journal that he actually welcomed the invasion of Iraq by ISIS because this dire event would only hasten the return of the Hidden Imam, a religious prophecy which in Shia Islam precedes the founding of a worldwide Islamic state. Al Zamili made it clear that his notion of counterinsurgency was holy war. Meanwhile, 70,000 Sunnis were driven from Jurf al-Sakher, which means “rocky bank” and has now been renamed Jurf al-Nasr (“victory bank”). The provincial council told them they would not be allowed to return for eight or ten months.

“Iran has used Iraq as a petri dish to grown new Shia jihadist groups and spread their ideology,” says Phillip Smyth, an expert on Shia militias. By Smyth’s count, there are more than 50 “highly ideological, anti-American, and rabidly sectarian” Shia militias operating in Iraq today, and recruiting more to their ranks, all with the acquiescence of the central government.

Some of Iraq’s Shia politicians have acknowledged the dismal reality that has attended Baghdad’s outsourcing of its security to “Khomeinists” — and the potential it carries for the kind of all-out sectarian bloodletting that nearly tore the country apart in the mid-2000s.

One unnamed Shia politician told the Guardian newspaper last August that groups of Shia extremists “equal in their radicalization to the Sunni Qaeda” are being created. “By arming the community and creating all these regiments of militias, I am scared that my sect and community will burn,” he said.

More recently, Iraq’s Vice President for Reconciliation, Ayad Allawi, a secular Shia who once served as the interim prime minister, told the same broadsheet that pro-government forces have been ethnically cleansing Sunnis from Baghdad. This is a starker admission of the atrocities being committed by America’s silent partner than currently is on offer by the State Department or Pentagon, and many Sunnis now suspect Washington of full collaboration with Tehran, whatever the protestations to the contrary.

When Michael Pregent, one of the authors of this essay, briefed a team of U.S. military advisors headed to Iraq recently, he warned them that they are now operating in an environment in which Iranian and Shia-militia targeting choices take priority over the recommendations of U.S. advisors and intelligence officers.

The consequence of this tacit collaboration with the Quds Force and its assets is obvious: the United States will be portrayed by ISIS propagandists as a helpmeet in the indiscriminate murder and dispossession of Sunnis.

Kerry and Dempsey would do well to pay closer attention to Iran’s air war, too. According to one Kurdish Iraqi pilot interviewed by the Guardian, Suleimani’s command center in Iraq, the Rasheed Air Base south of Baghdad, is where “the Iranians make barrel bombs” and then use Antonov planes and Huey helicoptetrs to drop them in Sunni areas — thus replicating one of the nastiest tactics of Assad’s air force in Syria.

The Anbar Awakening critical to stabilizing Iraq in the middle of the last decade was made possible by the presence of U.S. ground forces who represented to the influential Sunni tribes an impartial bulwark against the draconian rule of al Qaeda in Iraq.

Many in the Obama administration express the hope that another such awakening can be fomented, given the current political and military dynamics in Iraq. But how? ISIS has cleverly exploited the sensitivities and fears of Iraq’s Sunni tribes, offering those it hasn’t rounded up and murdered the chance to “repent” and reconcile with the so-called “Calihpate.”

ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror, a new book by the co-author of this piece, documents the tragic situation of those Sunni tribesmen who have risen up against ISIS only to be slaughtered mercilessly, sometimes with the help of their fellow tribesmen, whom ISIS had already won over. The rest of the constituents of this bellwether Sunni demographic are thus given a choice between cutting a pragmatic deal with ISIS or embracing Shia death squads as their saviors and liberators. Most have, predictably, opted for the former.

“The American approach is to leave Iraq to the Iraqis,” Sami al-Askari, a former Iraqi MP and senior advisor to former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, told Reuters last November. “The Iranians don’t say leave Iraq to the Iraqis. They say leave Iraq to us.”

For the White House, that ought to define the problem, not the solution.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/02/01/how-iran-is-making-it-impossible-for-the-us-to-beat-isis.html
Edited by UKurd, Feb 2 15, 9:56.
We live together, we are oppressed together, we fight together, we succeed together, we are free together.
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legalquestion
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I hope Israel kills as much as Iranian generals/high ranked officials as possible. The weaker they get, the better for Kurds.

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legalquestion
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Stalingrad Square After Battle (1st picture)

vs

Kobani, Azadi/Freedom Square After the Battle
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skyttens
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ALAN
Jan 15 15, 12:33
Dear Kurdistani these bunch of clones swearing at our president and say they will come occupy Hewlêr I didn't know iraqis had rambos too but since they are so dumb please if you see them in Kurdistan or if you suspect they have families residing in Kurdistan report it to Asaish immediately

https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=10152332039044159
Dear Alan, I sincerely thank you for putting this video into my life. I can't remember the last I laughed so hard at anything for so long.

They look like a rock/emo boyband with their cute matching black T´s and camo pants. At one point one of the "guys" manages to first point the gun to his head and then to his chest. One can only hope they were not loaded.

I don't know which one is my favorite though, the guy with the worlds most awesome unibrow och the other one with what we in Sweden like to call "p***y hairline" on his chin.

What a bunch of gimps. And these are the guys that are defeat ISIS? Man we ARE truly alone in fighting ISIS.
Siwar hatin, Pey cún.
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ALAN
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haha my please

Here is a NY bridge alike opening ceremony in Iraq - Basrah

doh
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Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time.
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ALAN
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With so much money they have this is all they can pull of yet they cry about sending 10% of their doomed budget to us in the past....
Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time.
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skyttens
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ALAN
Feb 2 15, 11:53
haha my please

Here is a NY bridge alike opening ceremony in Iraq - Basrah

doh
Well atleast they brought in a ninja which is cool.
Siwar hatin, Pey cún.
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ALAN
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This is the 10th time loser iraqis claiming Peshmerga victories as theirs, losers
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Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time.
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diako_ber
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ISIS burns jordanian pilot alive

ISIS published several photos Tuesday allegedly showing Jordanian pilot Muadh al Kasabeh being burned alive. A trail of gasoline leading to Kasabeh's cage is seen being ignited, then he is engulfed by flames. Kasabeh's family was informed of his death by the head of the Jordanian armed forces, a family memebr told Reuters.

Kasabeh was captured by ISIS in December after his F-16 crashed on the banks of the Euphrates River in Syria. ISIS said last month it would release Kasabeh (and Japanese hostage Kenji Goto) if Jordan freed Sajida al Rishawi, a failed suicide bomber in jail since the 2005 bombing of hotels in Amman. Jordan agreed to the prisoner exchange but wanted "proof of life" on al-Ksasbah first. When ISIS didn't offer such proof—and it's not immediately clear when this new execution was recorded—it executed Goto, who was forced to say al-Ksasbah would die next. Jordan promised to execute ISIS prisoners if Kasabeh was killed.
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Ghost
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diako_ber
Feb 4 15, 4:30
ISIS burns jordanian pilot alive

ISIS published several photos Tuesday allegedly showing Jordanian pilot Muadh al Kasabeh being burned alive. A trail of gasoline leading to Kasabeh's cage is seen being ignited, then he is engulfed by flames. Kasabeh's family was informed of his death by the head of the Jordanian armed forces, a family memebr told Reuters.

Kasabeh was captured by ISIS in December after his F-16 crashed on the banks of the Euphrates River in Syria. ISIS said last month it would release Kasabeh (and Japanese hostage Kenji Goto) if Jordan freed Sajida al Rishawi, a failed suicide bomber in jail since the 2005 bombing of hotels in Amman. Jordan agreed to the prisoner exchange but wanted "proof of life" on al-Ksasbah first. When ISIS didn't offer such proof—and it's not immediately clear when this new execution was recorded—it executed Goto, who was forced to say al-Ksasbah would die next. Jordan promised to execute ISIS prisoners if Kasabeh was killed.
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YAN KURDISTAN, YAN NAMAN
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diako_ber
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Disgusting... He was only 28, too young to die
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jjmuneer
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Merg û Şeref

What a suprise...

I feel sorry for this guy, but he seems to of been defiant looking there and GOOD. Those IS guys get no pleasure that way or little as possible.
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diako_ber
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I dont know man... I saw the video and it's sickening... The guy was screaming the whole time and trying to cover his face before falling down after what seems like an eternity :(

I'm speechless, this is just beyond horrible
Edited by diako_ber, Feb 4 15, 4:58.
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jjmuneer
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diako_ber
Feb 4 15, 4:57
I dont know man... I saw the video and it's sickening... The guy was screaming the whole time and trying to cover his face before falling down after what seems like an eternity :(

I'm speechless, this is just beyond horrible
Ye I'd imagine burning alive isn't a pleasant experience. Justice will soon be served to these demented demon like barbarians.
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Ghost
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When i saw the video my mouth was open until the entire video was done.... When i saw how he burned i felt sorry for his country and for his family.. May god welcome him in the paradise... RIP brave pilot..
YAN KURDISTAN, YAN NAMAN
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kurdishpatriot
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Ghost
Feb 4 15, 6:55
When i saw the video my mouth was open until the entire video was done.... When i saw how he burned i felt sorry for his country and for his family.. May god welcome him in the paradise... RIP brave pilot..
I couldn't find any video
#PROMOTEWOMENRIGHTS
"shengal bo ezdi ya", Ezidi namerin, HATA ARAB NAMAYEN NEK SHENGAL!
"A society can never be free without women's liberation" - Abdullah Ocalan
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kurdishpatriot
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secular sheikh

found one http://shoebat.com/2015/02/03/watch-horrific-video-isis-burning-pow-jordanian-pilot/ I hate the salafist fgts half singing half talking. It is not really the worst thing i have ever seen, but to see some kind of other thing than all those beheadings. Btw i think they have edited that scream in the background to make the situation worse.
Edited by kurdishpatriot, Feb 4 15, 8:18.
#PROMOTEWOMENRIGHTS
"shengal bo ezdi ya", Ezidi namerin, HATA ARAB NAMAYEN NEK SHENGAL!
"A society can never be free without women's liberation" - Abdullah Ocalan
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deso2409
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http://shoebat.com/2015/02/03/watch-horrific-video-isis-burning-pow-jordanian-pilot/

WATCH AT YOUR OWN RISK. IT’S PROBABLY THE WORST THING YOU’VE EVER SEEN. IT’S HORRIFYING.


My worst mistake ever... i should´ve never seen that! OMFG, i´m about to throw up! killing a isis-rat is not that horror, but the shizz that i just saw, wow.. May The Real God give him peace in heaven and bless the good jordanian majority!
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deso2409
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Game On, now that´s some good news!

https://twitter.com/salar_dd/status/563035172560732160?lang=no

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ALAN
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7000 iraqis prepared for Mosul retake

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4-YxGhC4yU
Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time.
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kurdishpatriot
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deso2409
Feb 5 15, 6:21
http://shoebat.com/2015/02/03/watch-horrific-video-isis-burning-pow-jordanian-pilot/

WATCH AT YOUR OWN RISK. IT’S PROBABLY THE WORST THING YOU’VE EVER SEEN. IT’S HORRIFYING.


My worst mistake ever... i should´ve never seen that! OMFG, i´m about to throw up! killing a isis-rat is not that horror, but the shizz that i just saw, wow.. May The Real God give him peace in heaven and bless the good jordanian majority!
Personally i didnt find this horrific compared to beheadings as watching it.
#PROMOTEWOMENRIGHTS
"shengal bo ezdi ya", Ezidi namerin, HATA ARAB NAMAYEN NEK SHENGAL!
"A society can never be free without women's liberation" - Abdullah Ocalan
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ALAN
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Basnews says this is Shingal

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TOo9FjjMGnE
Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time.
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Şirnex
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the whore Raghad saddam, husseins daughter is making propaganda for isis. she plans the rise to power through Daesh.
Why is she still alive? A kurdish special team, a death squad should assassinate this whore. should have happened long time ago

Edited by Şirnex, Feb 7 15, 1:53.
talabani = jash
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