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Terror in France: coordinated attacks

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  • #16
    Originally posted by UtwigMU View Post
    Look at map of Syria

    I googled up one

    See areas of control by Islamic state. Next to Turkish borders and Iraq. Not far from US airbase. What is Turkey doing about it? They leveled a few Kurdish towns and bombed Kurds. Kurds are one of few standing against ISIS. Next ISIS is next to Iraq where US is still present. If US and Turkey would seriously wanted to do something about ISIS they would have closed borders, bombed roads...
    The US presence in Iraq pretty much ended in 2011 when O'bummer precipitously pulled out all but minimal regular and special forces; SEALs, Rangers erc. A large tactical error.

    US aircraft have flying combat missions on IS from, at the least, Turkey's Incirlik air base since August 2015. Both US and Turk aircraft have been patrolling the border regions since before that. One of my relatives is stationed in the area flying an A-10 Warthog. F-16's are there, and F-15C Eagle and F-15 Strike Eagles arrive at Incirlik next month. Party Time!

    As to the Kurds; not all of them are good guys, and some oscillate between fighting IS and killing Turks in separatist raids so Turkey is understandably twitchy about them.
    Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 16 November 2015, 01:17.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

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    • #17
      You have to admit though that Turkey is against ISIS/ISIL and the Kurds basically.
      They're also the only ones with that mind in NATO
      Last edited by Evildead666; 16 November 2015, 12:32.
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      • #18
        Anyhow, they seem to know the identities of most, if not all the attackers.
        Piloted from/by a belgian based operative cell of IS.

        Again, apparently some were known to intelligence services.

        edit : First day at new work was not fun.
        Even some of the national radio stations had stopped some of the fun call-in games they had, in respect.
        My new boss was a few streets away when it happened.
        PC-1 Fractal Design Arc Mini R2, 3800X, Asus B450M-PRO mATX, 2x8GB B-die@3800C16, AMD Vega64, Seasonic 850W Gold, Black Ice Nemesis/Laing DDC/EKWB 240 Loop (VRM>CPU>GPU), Noctua Fans.
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        • #19
          Anonymous has declared digital war on IS. Good on them.

          Because the US and France have been stated to be #1 and #2 on the IS hit parade, and because of the large Detroit area Muslim population, which are largely Iraqi and many Syrians, we are taking extra precautions.

          It's no secret that me, my wife and our adult children & relatives have concealed weapons permits and have taken tactical classes. Not unusual in these parts; there are almost 460,000 concealed weapon permit holders, and more who carry unconcealed which doesn't require a permit.

          We are now carrying 2-3 backup magazines with high power tactical loads, and some of us backup weapons. We've also discussed and practiced improvised cover and other combat tactics.

          I'm carrying a SIG P320 compact in .40 and a Ruger LC9 supercompact 9mm, both with hot tactical loads.

          Better to have and not need than the reverse.
          Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 16 November 2015, 15:40.
          Dr. Mordrid
          ----------------------------
          An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

          I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

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          • #20
            Russia and France will coordinate action as Putin and Hollande have agreed. Russia added more planes inlcuding strategic bombers (Tu 160 Tu 95 Tu 22) carrying cruise missiles to their Syria operation.

            В борьбу с террористами из группировки «Исламское государство», запрещенной в нашей стране, вступило самое мощное стратегическое оружие России. Удар по убийцам, их базам и штабам нанесли тяжелые бомбардировщики. 34 крылатые ракеты поразили все заданные цели.

            Video from Russian command center coordinating operations. This isn't your grandfathers Soviet Union: widescreen monitors, big projectors, multiple teleconference live streams.

            Holland is coming to Moscow on 26th.
            Last edited by UtwigMU; 17 November 2015, 13:33.

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            • #21
              Originally posted by UtwigMU View Post
              Holland is coming to Moscow on 26th.
              No, we're not!
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              • #22
                Originally posted by UtwigMU View Post
                Here goes Schengen.
                Belgian newspaper: http://www.hln.be/hln/nl/960/Buitenl...Schengen.dhtml

                Summary:
                -
                Belgium and Netherlands are talking about a mini-schengen within schengen. Austria and Germany are also in on the talks, but it is going difficult still. The idea would be to have an area within the current schengen where border checks on their outside border would be possible. Part of the plan is also shared refugee camps from which refugees will then be distributed over the involved countries.
                -
                It does not say how they will fit this with the current agreements.
                pixar
                Dream as if you'll live forever. Live as if you'll die tomorrow. (James Dean)

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                • #23
                  Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.


                  Just watch the video. In France 20+% people have positive attitude towards ISIS. In France 2M support suicide bombing. If trends don't change we're one of last generations to have seen the cultural monuments and works of art of Europe. See what happened in Palmyra and Irak. This will happen to our castles, cathedrals and museums.

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by UtwigMU View Post
                    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cjvPj7WAX7A

                    Just watch the video. In France 20+% people have positive attitude towards ISIS. In France 2M support suicide bombing. If trends don't change we're one of last generations to have seen the cultural monuments and works of art of Europe. See what happened in Palmyra and Irak. This will happen to our castles, cathedrals and museums.
                    And imagine what they would do to Italy and Greece..
                    paulw

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                    • #25
                      Oh puleeeze! How do you come up with guys like these? Boumediene never said that (7:34) for instance.

                      11:41 -> "This was a survey conducted..." not by whom, where, when, how, nothing. I think he means to say that 15% of his arse is has a postive attitude to IS. I am not wasting time on bs like this.
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                      • #26
                        Originally posted by Umfriend View Post
                        Oh puleeeze! How do you come up with guys like these? Boumediene never said that (7:34) for instance.

                        11:41 -> "This was a survey conducted..." not by whom, where, when, how, nothing. I think he means to say that 15% of his arse is has a postive attitude to IS. I am not wasting time on bs like this.
                        Fully agree. That guy is a nut-job, although I do respect his sense of comedic timing (e.g. when he talks about the graph depicting asylum seeker numbers: the rollercoaster (beat) perhaps to hell itself).
                        "Perhaps they communicate by changing colour? Like those sea creatures .."
                        "Lobsters?"
                        "Really? I didn't know they did that."
                        "Oh yes, red means help!"

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                        • #27
                          Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.


                          Here is another view you will disagree with. From Russia this time.

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                          • #28
                            Well, I would discuss views once we can agree, reasonably, on facts and rules of argument. And yes, the Russian writer misunderstands a lot as well about the asylum procedures and current issues as well. Granted, I did not take the 20+ minutes to listen to it all but, really, one thing he is saying we have abonded the basic rules of our asylum policy (i.e., we rant politcal asylum, not economical and the asylum seeker has to convince us he is the former) and that is really really simply false. There is no view, no argument on this, it is simply factually wrong. I'll not get into the "US is just another UK but far away" ROFL.
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                            • #29
                              Originally posted by Umfriend View Post
                              Well, I would discuss views once we can agree, reasonably, on facts and rules of argument. And yes, the Russian writer misunderstands a lot as well about the asylum procedures and current issues as well. Granted, I did not take the 20+ minutes to listen to it all but, really, one thing he is saying we have abonded the basic rules of our asylum policy (i.e., we rant politcal asylum, not economical and the asylum seeker has to convince us he is the former) and that is really really simply false. There is no view, no argument on this, it is simply factually wrong. I'll not get into the "US is just another UK but far away" ROFL.
                              Late to the party, but here's my view:
                              While in theory you may be right, in practice the immigration apparatus in Europe, on the receiving end of a massive influx of immigrants at the moment, are woefully unprepared and incapable of dealing with the amount of applications.
                              Some of the countries near the outer borders have given up completely on registering immigrants, and are just sending them to the border on their way to the country of preference (usually Germany, Sweden or the UK). For that part, I'd tend to agree with the Russian guy that is making these claims.

                              As Europe chose not to go the 'Australian' way of locking up / separating immigrants whose claims are being treated, in practice this means that only a small portion of immigrants whose claims get refused really are deported from the country they reside in.
                              (e.g. see: here or here or here ).
                              The vast majority choses to live in illegality until it becomes politically unfeasible / too unpopular to repatriate them. And if they lucky they get an official status after living X years in illegality.

                              The only way to prevent this situation is to deny access at the border and to only let in enough people that your system can deal with, and to keep immigrants seeking special status separated until their claims are validated and the status is granted (or denied). Obviously, this cannot be a too lengthy process for humanitarian reasons; too many possibilities for appeal actually work against the humanitarian aspect of keeping the period short.
                              In the end, if Europe would be serious in not trying to attract too many economical migrants, they should make it much harder to get through the external borders. Merkel did the opposite, and I suspect that German demographics and influx of bodies that want to compete at low labour costs have something too do with her past statements.

                              As for the guy's claims that it's the US organising this... a big claim to make without supporting evidence. It's probably the end result of many contributing factors, such as Erdogan being able to use the flux of immigrants to pressure the EU to get concessions, Greece's government being fed up as well as not having the money to play EU's border guard, Germany's demographics and need for cheap labour in combination with a post-war culture of guilt, etc.
                              Last edited by dZeus; 6 December 2015, 05:04.

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                              • #30
                                Well, that is not what the Russian said but yes, that is one of the problems with our asylum-process: refused seekers do not return / get deported. That, in itself, is hardly different from illegal aliens coming in without seeking asylum. And it is not easy to prevent that at all, look at Mexico-US. The Russians, of course have no such problem and that makes it somewhat hard for them to understand how difficult it is to keep people out when they do want to come in. No one wants to go to Russia.

                                Of course it is not about cheap labor for Germany. If that was what they wanted they could have gotten it cheaper and with less controversy.

                                Being a rich and safe area draws people. And you get them from the worst corners because it is quite a hurdle to leave ones' home.

                                If "we" want to solve this we can't do without radical measures (of which I think we are not willing and we probably should not be, to take).
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