SeagullinExile
Well-known member
No it's nothing like launching an attack on Iraq from Turkey.
Ok. So where did they come from? Thin air? And it's the Kurds they attacked, something the Turks would support.
No it's nothing like launching an attack on Iraq from Turkey.
Anyone yet think this is all manipulated by the same people?
Someone must be getting rich out of all this misery.
Ok. So where did they come from? Thin air? And it's the Kurds they attacked, something the Turks would support.
They didnt, they came from Syria where they have been fighting all sides in the civil war there.Here's something I'd like to know the answer to. How did ISIS manage to launch their attack on Iraq from Turkey, a NATO member - without NATO knowing?
Ok. So where did they come from? Thin air? And it's the Kurds they attacked, something the Turks would support.
They didnt, they came from Syria where they have been fighting all sides in the civil war there.
Can anyone tell me why it's not possible for the US with its sophisticated military equipment to take out most of the IS forces in one or two air raids. Surely they know from satellite pictures are where these scum-bags are situated. Just extinguish them all. No questions asked.
They may have been funnelled into Syria from Turkey as well as many other places with all the other anti Assad groups.
They have attacked kurds...yes..they have also attacked Al Nusra (al Qaeda), Iraqis, Iranians, Syrians.... your conspiracy theory is without much merit mate.
errr...you do realise that the Kurdish area involves Turkey, Iraq, Syria and Iran yeah?
So they just appeared from thin air did they?
Sigh. Yes Dave I do - Stop being patronising will you, no need for it mate!
My question remains, where did they arm and form up, if not Turkey?
What a strange question and you've asked it twice now. I'm not aware Syria is "thin air".
They formed up with the other rebel fighters in Syria, where they have been fighting Assads forces, and more recently, the rebel groups they originally joined.
In theory yes,.... they just formed from a mismatched group of largely Sunni fanatics who are Syrian/Iraqi at its core, but as is normal for these groups, are well supplemented by extremely motivated Sunni and other fanatics from all over the world, a sort of call to arms. Some probably drifted to the area through Turkey, yes, but the vast majority were already in the Sunni dominated regions of NW Iraq and NE Syria.So they just appeared from thin air did they?
OK - you destroy ISIS, then you are back to square one - a government in Baghdad whose writ does not even cover that city - essentially a power vacuum has been created which inevitably will lead to yet another extreme group trying to seize power - just as Al-Queida did after the western invasion. It's not the west's lack of intervention that is the root of the difficulties - it is the west's constant attempts to re-fashion the entire middle eastern region according to it's own prescription [which essentially is about trying to install 'democratic' pro-western governments who will sell us oil]. Trying to install democracy in a country which has no history of it is clearly a dreadful idea which has created utter chaos.
However shrinking reserves of oil mean that we will be soon dealing with the psychopathic despots of Central Asia who boil their opponents alive. Be interesting to see how our rulers deal with that particular situation. No doubt more 'regime change' will be on their minds again!
Oh ok. The same rebels the West has been supporting then?
They came from all over the place, the European ones went on vaction to Syria via Turkey.
ISIS are Sunni based and in Northern Iraq they are Sunni, and the Iraqi Government is Shia. Assad in Syria is Shia.
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Oh ok. The same rebels the West has been supporting then?