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jollyjacktar
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Video of a Turkish Leo being taken out by Kurdish Female YPGs. The secondaries... ouch!
https://youtu.be/YafzmkvVRiI
https://youtu.be/YafzmkvVRiI
Declassified: How an Israeli operation derailed Syria’s nuclear weapons drive
By: Barbara Opall-Rome
TEL AVIV, Israel — Israel’s pre-emptive attack a decade ago on a plutonium reactor in the Syrian desert not only derailed Damascus’ drive for nuclear weapons, but spared the world the specter of mass destruction capabilities falling into the hands of the Islamic State group.
That’s the message behind Israel’s first-ever official account of its operation Outside the Box, the four-hour mission that began before midnight on Sep. 5, 2007, to destroy Syria’s top-secret and nearly operational al-Kibar nuclear facility just weeks before it went hot.
“Imagine if today there was a nuclear reactor in Syria, what kind of situation we would be facing,” said Israeli Air Force Commander Amikam Norkin, the man who led the planning and execution of the “precision, low-signature” strike mission when he was chief of operations.
“From an historical perspective, I think the Israeli government decision to act and destroy the reactor is one of the most important decisions that were taken here over the last 70 years,” he added.
***
“In 2007, I was very worried that the operation could trigger war with Syria,” recalled retired Israeli Air Force Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin, who was the head of military intelligence at the time. “Our mission was to eliminate an existential threat to the state of Israel, while minimizing the risk of a broader war.”
Here Is How Russia and America Could Go to War in Syria
...
The Washington national security community has largely forgotten the Cold War concepts of nuclear deterrence and managing confrontations with a nuclear-armed rival. Over the past twenty-five years or so, Washington has become accustomed to a world where there are no great-power challengers and the only real threat comes from terrorism.'
“People have sophomoric views on great power confrontation here,” Kofman said. “In fact a lot of people don’t even understand nuclear strategy and deterrence all that well anymore and the escalatory dynamics. And you can tell by the conversations—we have been in the terrorism/counterinsurgency game for way too long and people don’t understand what they are playing with at senior levels. I hear it all the time. That’s all a recipe for a 1950-1960s type interaction with another great power.”
Indeed, it might take a new version of the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis for the American foreign policy establishment to grasp how dangerous a confrontation with a rival nuclear-armed great power can be...
http://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/here-how-russia-america-could-go-war-syria-25292?page=show
latvia has no combat aircraft.GR66 said:Who would go to war over Serbia? Poland? Cuba?
Unplanned and unforeseen things can happen when bullets start flying.
I agree that Russia almost certainly wouldn’t plan to go to war over Syria, but when tensions rise things can happen.
Let’s say in retaliation for American strikes the Russians decide to buzz a USN ship in the Baltic and in a horrible low altitude accident the Russian fighter plows into the ship sinking it. Could that be misinterpreted as a missile attack? Then a Russian fighter strays into Latvian airspace due to navigational error and a jittery Latvian pilot shoots it down. Does that put us closer to the line?
Made up scenarios I know, but strange and unforeseen things do happen and events can change quickly when people are under pressure.
Altair said:latvia has no combat aircraft.
Altair said:latvia has no combat aircraft.
did I argue his point? No. I simply stated a fact, latvia has no combat aircraft. That's it, that's all, take it or leave it.YZT580 said:That is louse milking. GR66 makes a valid point. Wars have started over seemingly small incidentals. How about Jenkins Ear? Even WW1 started over what in retrospect was an insignificant assassination. However I don't believe that the use of chemical weapons in any part of the world should be ignored by the world community. Since it is unlikely that the U.N. would ever stand up and be counted it is up to each country that is a signatory to the treaties on chemical weapons , working in concert, to condemn all such attacks. And they should do so in such a way that there can be no obfuscation but by calling the shot: for instance, telling the Syrians that the global community will destroy one of their squadrons used to carry out the attack and then doing it with multiple nations participating. We shouldn't expect the Americans to go it alone nor should we sanctimoniously hide behind the U.N. security council vetoes.
I'm aware. Just thought you should know.GR66 said:Well I DID say it was a made up scenario! ;D
YZT580 said:Since it is unlikely that the U.N. would ever stand up and be counted it is up to each country that is a signatory to the treaties on chemical weapons , working in concert, to condemn all such attacks. And they should do so in such a way that there can be no obfuscation but by calling the shot: for instance, telling the Syrians that the global community will destroy one of their squadrons used to carry out the attack and then doing it with multiple nations participating. We shouldn't expect the Americans to go it alone nor should we sanctimoniously hide behind the U.N. security council vetoes.
Another interesting aircraft tracked online in the aftermath of the raid, is a Bombardier E-11A 11-9358 from 430th EECS stationed at Kandahar Afghanistan. The aircraft is a BACN (battlefield airborne communications) asset: BACN is technological “gateway” system that allows aircraft with incompatible radio systems and datalinks to exchange tactical information and communicate. By orbiting at high-altitude, BACN equipped air assets provide a communications link between allies, regardless of the type of the supporting aircraft and in a non-line-of-sight (LOS) environment. The BACN system is also deployed onboard EQ-4B Global Hawk UAVs. Although we can’t be completely sure, it is quite likely that the aircraft was involved in the air strikes as well, providing data-bridging among the involved parties