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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

ISIS' secret network of tunnels discovered



ISIS hides from bombing campaign


(International Business Times)  -  Amid the wreckage of the town of Sinjar in Iraq, Kurdish peshmerga forces, which recaptured the town from Islamic State (Isis/Daesh) in November, have discovered a network of tunnels buried deep underground. 

Hidden from sight beneath the streets and shattered buildings, IS militants dug the tunnels, wired with electricity and fortified with sandbags, to protect themselves from coalition air strikes and prepare defences against the Kurdish onslaught.

"Months ago, we received information from reliable sources indicating they [IS militants] brought 700 prisoners and people from the villages of Tal Afar and other villages for 30,000 Iraqi dinars (£18, $27) per day," Wais Faiq, the head of Sinjar town council said.


"They dug so many [tunnels] to the extent that they completely destroyed the infrastructure of Sinjar. There is a tunnel under every alley, street and public building that remains intact. This is clear evidence the terrorist Daesh group is aware of Sinjar's geographical importance as it can link Raqqa to Iraq and for that reason they kept a tight grip on Sinjar."

Faiq said more than 70 tunnels had been discovered, many containing ammunition boxes, medicines and bombs. In one tunnel, more than 90 bombs were found. Kurdish forces retook Sinjar town from the Sunni militant group in a two-day offensive backed by air strikes from a US-led coalition. 

Evidence of the horrors that took place there is now being unearthed, with a grave containing the remains of more than 70 older Yazidi women among the discoveries. The excavated network of underground tunnels enabled the militants to move around the town undetected.

"The tunnels are not only in Sinjar, but in any place they take. They use them to hide from coalition air strikes. Their defensive plan is to go to these tunnels when the coalition drones come in," Sinjar's deputy operations commander, General Sami Mulla Mohammed Bosli, said.

Before it was overrun by IS, Sinjar and the surrounding villages were home to about 200,000 people, mainly Kurdish and Arab Muslims – both Sunni and Shi'ite – as well as Christians and Yazidis, a faith that combines elements of several ancient Middle Eastern religions. Now, following all the fighting, the town is largely deserted.

Read More . . . .

ISIS Tunnels
Underground tunnels and graves found in Sinjar.



ISIL militant surrenders to Peshmerga forces




German Panzer Division Near Moscow
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The Limits of Air Power
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For years in World War II the Allies had bombed German cities into rubble only to see German war production of tanks and other equipment actually increase.
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By late 1944 the Allies considered the Germans defeated.  But a "defeated" Germany, battered by air power, massed an army of 300,000 troops with nearly 800 tanks in Battle of the Bulge.  The "defeated" Germans inflicted some 89,500 casualties on American troops including 19,000 killed.
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So the next time a political hack or talking head general spews his BS about victory through bombing the Islamists just remember Germany in 1944.

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