ISIS and US-Backed 'Moderate' Rebels Join Forces, Attack Syrian Army in Southeastern Aleppo
It's time
to bury the 'moderate' rebel myth
Rudy
Panko
23
February, 2016
Leith
Fadel, editor-in-chief of Al Masdar News, is reporting that
"moderate" rebels (funded and armed by the United States
and its Arab client states) are now fighting alongside ISIS in an
attempt to push the Syrian army out of Southeastern Aleppo.
Your
tax dollars hard at work:
ISIS and the rebels are attacking the Syrian Arab Army together in southeastern Aleppo. I knew this day would come..
[T]he Islamic State of Iraq and Al-Sham (ISIS) is attacking the Syrian Arab Army (SAA) in southeastern Aleppo; however, they are not alone, thanks in large part to the joint effort from the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and Jund Al-Aqsa (Syrian Al-Qaeda group).
ISIS and the Islamist rebels share control over the small village of Rasm Al-Nafal, along with 2 other points on the Khanasser-Aleppo Road that they captured in a simultaneous assault on the National Defense Forces (NDF) last night.
Both the Islamist rebels and ISIS announced that they control Rasm Al-Nafal and they have yet to attack one another; instead, they are assaulting the Syrian Armed Forces, who just sent fresh reinforcements to this front in order to recapture the points they lost along this road.
And
just to remind our readers, the Free Syrian Army is openly
supported by the United States:
Some of the most powerful FSA groups have received military support from the United States. These groups have been regularly targeted in the Russian aerial campaign that got underway in support of Assad on Sept. 30, and have reiterated denials of receiving any help from Moscow.
Are
we going to continue to pretend that NATO isn't funding terrorism in
Syria?
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