British
SAS Special Forces “Dressed Up as ISIS Rebels” Fighting Assad in
Syria
Stephen
Lendman
4
August, 2015
On
August 2, Britain’s Sunday
Express newspaper
headlined “SAS dress as ISIS fighters in undercover war on
jihadis,” saying:
“More
than 120 members belonging to the elite regiment are currently in the
war-torn country” covertly “dressed in black and flying ISIS
flags,” engaged in what’s called Operation Shader – attacking
Syrian targets on the pretext of combatting ISIS.
Maybe
covert US special forces and CIA elements are involved the same way.
During Obama’s war on Libya, Britain deployed hundreds of Special
Forces Support Group (SFSG) paratroopers – drawn from SAS (Special
Air Service) and SBS (Special Boat Service) personnel.
Around
800 Royal Marines and 4,000 US counterparts were on standby to
intervene on short notice if ordered.
The
latest revelation comes two weeks after learning Prime Minister David
Cameron last year approved British warplanes joining US ones in
bombing Syria despite parliamentary rejection in August 2013.
At
least part of its current covert ground operation is under US command
– so-called “smash” units traveling in pickup trucks able to
launch mini-UAVs to scan terrain for targets to attack.
Over
250 UK (and perhaps US) specialists are involved to provide
communications support, the Sunday Express explained.
British
Defense Secretary Michael Fallon said “(o)ur actions and
surveillance capabilities are freeing up other countries to strike in
Syria.”
UK
SAS forces are in Saudi Arabia training anti-Assad terrorists along
with US operatives doing the same thing – including in Turkey,
Jordan, Qatar and perhaps Israel.
US
and UK claims about training so-called “moderate” rebels reflect
smoke-screen cover for working directly with ISIS terrorists –
trained, armed and funded abroad, funneled cross-border into Syria to
fight Assad, now with US/UK and Canadian air support along with
covert commandos on the ground.
The
Express cited former British Army General David Richards saying
“tanks will roll” as part of UK operations in Syria.
A
separate article discussed US airstrikes defending ISIS terrorists
serving as US foot soldiers against Assad.
The Wall
Street Journal reported
what appears ominously like prelude to Libya 2.0 – falsely claiming
Obama authorized airstrikes against Syrian forces if they attack
(nonexistent) US-supported “moderate” rebels.
Separately,
Turkish media reported President Recep Tayyip Erdogan saying Putin
may have softened on Assad. (H)e may give up on” him.
Obama
said he was “encouraged by the fact that Mr. Putin called him (in
late June) and initiated the call to talk about Syria.”
I think they get a sense that the Assad regime is losing a grip over greater and greater swaths of territory inside of Syria and that the prospects for a (jihadist) takeover or rout of the Syrian regime is not imminent but becomes a greater and greater threat by the day. That offers us an opportunity to have a serious conversation with them.
Putin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov said both leaders discussed combatting
terrorism – especially the Islamic State.
“The
Russian view is well-known,” he explained. “(I)t was reiterated
by (Putin) during (his) conversation” with Obama. It hasn’t
changed.
Putin
opposes outside interference by any nations in the internal affairs
of others. He supports the sovereign right of Syrians and other
people to choose their own leaders and legislators.
Putin
aide Yury Ushakov said “the current leadership of Syria is one of
the real and effective forces confronting the Islamic State.”
Nothing
indicates less Russian support for Assad.
His
new book as editor and contributor is titled “Flashpoint in
Ukraine: US Drive for Hegemony Risks WW III.”
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to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the
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Special
Forces soldiers from Britain’s most shadowy military unit are
dressing as Islamic State militants and traveling deep into the
badlands of Syria to track and destroy enemy assets, according to
military sources.
It
is reported that up to two SAS squadrons of men, around 120 personnel
in all, are operating inside the borders of Syria as part of
Operation Shader, which aims to destroy equipment and munitions used
by the Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL)
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