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Putin has sent the feared Spetsnaz special forces into Syria to bail out Assad
Mirror UK ^ | 5 Oct 2015 | Chris Hughes

Posted on 10/05/2015 5:08:54 PM PDT by amorphous

The move is a blow to Britain and America’s mission to wipe out Islamic State but maintain an opposition to brutal dictator Assad

Russia has sent its crack special troops into Syria to back up ­ President Bashar al-Assad’s bid to wipe out his opposition.

Vladimir Putin’s feared Spetsnaz unit and a covert para battalion ghosted into the war-torn country and are preparing for an all-out assault on rebels fighting the regime – including moderate units such as the western-backed Free Syrian Army.

A military source said last night: “Putin’s marines are there to guard the airbases they are using against ­sabotage by rebels. But Spetsnaz and air-assault troops are not there to provide security to static objects, they are extremely aggressive and highly trained.

“They are there to mop up after air strikes, call in air strikes, go on extremely covert missions against rebels and ultimately wipe them out.

(Excerpt) Read more at mirror.co.uk ...


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: assad; putin; russia; spetsnaz; syria
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To: amorphous

And Chinese Marines and Chinese SOF are on their way to help (if they are not already there).


61 posted on 10/06/2015 9:53:52 AM PDT by Thunder90 (All posts soley represent my own opinion.)
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To: Trumpinator
Elsewhere in your quoted article:

The announcement in 1988 by then-Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev that forces would be withdrawn from Afghanistan within a year was a political and diplomatic decision, not a military one. The "bleeding wound" that Gorbachev described was not primarily Russian but Afghan. During the nine years of fighting, more than 2.5 million Afghans (mostly civilians) were killed or maimed; millions more were displaced or forced into exile. By contrast, 14,453 Soviet troops were killed, an average of 1,600 a year. This was not a trivial number, but certainly sustainable for the Soviet army, which numbered more than 4 million.

This is similar to the US experience in Vietnam. The issue wasn't whether the US could continue killing Vietcong or NVA forces in far higher numbers relative to its losses. It was whether it could outlast them in its cumulative tolerance for friendly casualties.

62 posted on 10/06/2015 10:01:15 AM PDT by Zhang Fei (Let us pray that peace be now restored to the world and that God will preserve it always.)
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To: Zhang Fei

I am sure the war was expensive money wise for a broke USSR though - especially as oil prices collapsed.


63 posted on 10/06/2015 10:03:34 AM PDT by Trumpinator (You are all fired!!! TRUMP! TRUMP! TRUMP! TRUMP! TRUMP!)
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To: amorphous

Hope they kill lots and lots of Muzzie militants and terrorists.


64 posted on 10/06/2015 2:05:11 PM PDT by kaehurowing
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To: volunbeer

I guess we’ll find out...and we may well be SURPRISED, a bit.


65 posted on 10/06/2015 7:31:13 PM PDT by BobL (REPUBLICANS - Fight for the WHITE VOTE...and you will win (see my 'profile' page))
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To: Trumpinator

It wasn’t just a question of money. From the American introduction to The Bear Went Over The Mountain, a collection of essays that was part of the syllabus in the Soviet General Staff Academy at Frunze:


the inability of the Soviet military to win the war decisively
condemned it to suffer a slow bloodletting, in a process that
exposed the very weaknesses of the military as well as the Soviet
political structure and society itself. The employment of a draft army
with full periodic rotation of troops back to the Soviet Union permitted
the travails and frustrations of war and the self doubts of the common
soldier to be shared by the Soviet population as a whole. The
problems so apparent in the wartime army soon became a microcosm
for the latent problems afflicting Soviet society in general. The
messages of doubt were military, political, ethnic, and social. In the
end they were corrosive and destructive. As evidence, one needs
only review the recently released casualty figures to underscore the
pervasiveness of the problem. Soviet dead and missing in
Afghanistan amounted to almost 15,000 troops, a modest percent of
the 642,000 Soviets who served during the ten-year war. And the
dead tell no tales at home. Far more telling were the 469,685 casualties,
fully 73 percent of the overall force, who ultimately returned
home to the Soviet Union. Even more appalling were the numbers
of troops who fell victim to disease (415,932), of which 115,308 suffered
from infectious hepatitis and 31,080 from typhoid fever.
Beyond the sheer magnitude of these numbers is what these figures
say about Soviet military hygiene and the conditions surrounding
troop life. These numbers are unheard of in modern armies and
modern medicine and their social impact among the returnees and
the Soviet population, in general, had to be immense.


66 posted on 10/06/2015 8:00:54 PM PDT by Zhang Fei (Let us pray that peace be now restored to the world and that God will preserve it always.)
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To: BobL

I won’t be surprised that they are successful. These are the top-notch units of the Soviet military with full air superiority. Most importantly, unlike our forces, the Russians could care less about hearts and minds - they will be ruthless and that is what it takes to win. Commitment.

With that said though, my entire life (an Army brat then an officer) was dominated by the cold war. We always made their rank and file units out to be far superior than they actually were in hindsight. The same goes today for the bulk of the Russian military - poor equipment, poorly trained, and poor battlefield command.

Putin is simply representing their interests (as he should) in the vacuum this administration has created after they uncorked the bottle of Islamic extremism that the established governments mostly squashed. The Middle East is a far bigger mess now than it when we entered Afghanistan and I suspect history will show that we did little to address the biggest threat - Iran.

For Christians this is a very interesting time given Ezekiel 38 and 39. I am not a prophecy buff, but the stage is certainly being set for Israel to be surrounded by Islamic nations committed to her destruction (assisted by Russia and China) just like the good book predicted. When it happens is not known to us, but you can’t deny the appearance of the prediction coming to fruition.


67 posted on 10/06/2015 10:17:52 PM PDT by volunbeer
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