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Month into Russia's Syria strikes, what has changed?
by Staff Writers
Beirut (AFP) Oct 30, 2015


German IS rapper killed in air strike in Syria: US
Washington (AFP) Oct 30, 2015 - A German rapper who joined the Islamic State group and publicly threatened President Barack Obama was killed in a US air strike in Syria, a defense official said Thursday.

Denis Cuspert, also known by his artist name Deso Dogg, used to rap in Berlin and was one of the most famous Western fighters for the IS extremist group.

"I can confirm that an October 16 strike near Raqa killed Denis Cuspert," US Defense Department spokeswoman Elissa Smith said.

Cuspert joined IS in 2012 and went on to appear in numerous videos from the militant group, including one in November last year "in which he appears holding a severed head he claims belongs to a man executed for opposing ISIL," the State Department previously said.

Cuspert had pledged an oath of loyalty to IS group leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and was a chief recruiter of German fighters.

According to Smith, Cuspert threatened Obama and US and German citizens, and had also encouraged Western Muslims to carry out IS-inspired attacks.

"Cuspert was a foreign terrorist fighter and operative for ISIL who used social media to take advantage of disaffected youth and potential Western recruits," she said, using an alternative name for the IS group.

IS prohibits music, but singing is allowed, and some of the jihadists' grisly videos are set to a vocal sound track.

Earlier in the day, a defense official speaking on condition of anonymity said that Cuspert "was not considered a high-value target (and) we were not specifically targeting him."

He also noted that other IS jihadists may have been hit.

Jihadist sources in April 2014 said Cuspert had been killed in Syria but they later retracted the claim.

Cuspert, who later went by Abu Talha al-Almani, was listed as an Al-Qaeda supporter by the United Nations.

Russia launched a campaign of air strikes in Syria in support of President Bashar al-Assad on September 30, providing air cover for government offensives in several provinces.

One month into the campaign, here are answers to some key questions:

Q: Where has Russia carried out raids?

A: Russia has conducted air strikes in 10 of Syria's 14 provinces, including the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group strongholds of Raqa and Deir Ezzor.

But most of its raids have been concentrated in Hama, Idlib, Latakia, Aleppo and Homs provinces, where the Syrian government has launched ground offensives largely targeting non-IS groups.

This week, Moscow for the first time reportedly hit the southern province of Daraa, in an apparent expansion of its campaign, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The only provinces without recorded Russian strikes are regime stronghold Tartus, majority-Druze Sweida, Quneitra on the ceasefire line with the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, and Hasakeh, much of which is administered by Kurdish forces.

In all, Moscow has hit 969 "terrorist" targets in 1,008 air strikes, according to an AFP tally based on statements from Russia's defence ministry and Russian officials.

Q: What capabilities is Russia using?

A: Russia has a long-standing military facility in the coastal regime stronghold of Tartus, but appears to be operating mostly from a base in Latakia province for the current operation.

Defence ministry statements have referred to air strikes carried out by Russian Su-24, Su-25, Su-30 and Su-34 warplanes.

The defence ministry has also said its military helicopters are present in the country, but they have not been mentioned in statements about air strikes.

And on October 7, Moscow said Russian warships had launched 26 cruise missile strikes against 11 targets from the Caspian Sea.

Russia has sent hundreds of paratroopers and marines to secure its facilities in Tartus and Latakia but says none are involved in ground operations.

Q: Which groups have been targeted?

A: Russia says its campaign is intended to target IS and other "terrorists," but the breadth of its strikes has led to accusations it is hitting moderate and Islamist rebels rather than jihadists.

In several of the provinces it has targeted, including Hama, Latakia and Idlib, there is little or no IS presence.

Moderate groups backed by the United States have accused Moscow of targeting them directly, including the Suqur al-Jabal group, which said in early October that Russian strikes had destroyed its weapons depot in Aleppo province.

However, Russia has also hit IS strongholds, including in Raqa province where the group's de facto Syrian capital is located, and Deir Ezzor, in the east of the country.

Q: What has changed on the ground?

A: Syria's army and pro-regime forces launched their first ground offensive backed by Russian strikes on October 7 in Hama province, targeting a series of villages and towns near a key highway.

In the initial days of the operation, they captured a series of towns and villages, but they subsequently lost ground.

In the Sahl al-Ghab region between Latakia, Hama and Idlib, the regime has taken some strategic hilltops, but not a key position that would give it line-of-fire power over a broad area.

And in southern Aleppo, government forces have taken some six villages as well as hilltops from rebel forces, according to the Observatory.

The army says it has taken 50 villages and smaller districts in the area, capturing some 120 square kilometres (45 sq miles).

But IS forces have severed the only road leading in or out of the government-controlled west of Aleppo city, effectively placing it under siege.

The Russian intervention has put the Syrian army on the offensive for the first time in months, after a series of defeats, particularly in Idlib and Palmyra.

Q: How many people killed?

A: According to the Observatory, 595 people have been killed in Russia air strikes from September 30 to October 29, two-thirds of them fighters.

The monitor says the other third, 185 people, including 48 children, were civilians.

It documented the deaths of 131 IS fighters and 279 members of Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front and other non-IS groups.

Russia has said at least 300 "terrorists" were killed in strikes in Aleppo and Raqa alone, with no further details. It denied killing any civilians.

By comparison, the 13 months of strikes carried out by the US-led coalition fighting IS in Syria have killed 3,649 people.

Of those, 226 or around six percent were civilians, including 65 children, according to the Observatory.


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Previous Report
WAR REPORT
Iran joins key talks on Syria's fate
Vienna (AFP) Oct 30, 2015
Major powers, including arch-rivals Iran and Saudi Arabia who back opposing sides in Syria, meet for the first time Friday in search of a political solution to the devastating war. Top diplomats from more than a dozen nations have gathered in Vienna to narrow differences over the fate of President Bashar al-Assad, who has defied Western demands to step down. In a sign of its growing dipl ... read more


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