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TERROR WARS
'Terror backers' can't defeat jihadists: Syria's Assad
by Staff Writers
Damascus (AFP) Sept 30, 2014


US Marines crisis unit to deploy to Mideast
Washington (AFP) Sept 30, 2014 - The US Marine Corps plans to deploy 2,300 troops to the Middle East for a new unit designed to quickly respond to crises in the volatile region, the Pentagon said Tuesday.

It will include several aircraft and be prepared to move rapidly in the case of "contingencies," Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby told reporters.

The idea for the task force originated in 2013 -- before the current US air campaign against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria -- and was not related "to the ongoing operations in Iraq," Kirby said.

A senior Marine Corps officer said last week that the new task force for the Middle East region would be based out of Kuwait.

The "special purpose marine air ground task force" is part of a push by the military to improve its ability to respond to crises, including embassy evacuations, following a deadly attack on a US diplomatic post in the Libyan city of Benghazi in 2012.

The US Marine Corps has already set up a similar unit in Moron, Spain that is assigned to the Africa region.

Extremists cannot be defeated by countries that have "spread terrorism", Syria's President Bashar al-Assad said Tuesday in an apparent jab at members of the US-led anti-jihadist coalition.

Speaking during a meeting with a senior Iranian official in Damascus, the Syrian leader took aim at countries he said backed "terrorists," a term his regime uses for all those seeking his ouster.

"Fighting terrorism can never be done by those countries that helped create terrorist groups, giving them logistical and financial help and spreading terrorism around the world," state news agency SANA quoted Assad as saying.

He made the remarks during a meeting with Ali Shamkhani, secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, who arrived in Syria earlier Tuesday.

The comments appeared to target the United States and other members of the coalition now carrying out air strikes against the Islamic State (IS) group on Syrian territory and in Iraq.

Damascus has long accused Washington and Arab nations that back the Syrian uprising of "supporting terrorism" because of their support for the opposition to his regime.

SANA said Assad and Shamkhani warned that the United States was approaching the issue of defeating extremists with "covert agendas that do not serve the people of the region."

Syria has had a largely muted reaction to the start of US-led strikes on its territory, despite earlier insisting any such action should be coordinated with its government.

It has said Washington gave it prior warning of the strikes, but insists military action against the IS will not succeed unless the coalition is expanded to include the Syrian government and its key ally Iran.

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TERROR WARS
IS jihadists close in on key Syria border town
Damascus (AFP) Sept 29, 2014
Islamic State group fighters closed in Monday to within only a few kilometres of a key Kurdish town on Syria's border with Turkey, despite new air strikes by the US-led coalition. NATO member Turkey deployed tanks to reinforce its side of the border and said parliament would this week debate joining the coalition against the jihadists operating on the country's doorstep. The alliance car ... read more


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