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Tuesday, 9 December 2014

Dominant ravens sabotage others' relationships


If we're lucky, this is behavior we haven't seen since high school. The coolest individuals can't stand to see others gaining social status, so they cut down any peers who are starting to elevate themselves. Ravens have to live with this behavior all the time. When the top-dog birds see others building new relationships, they attack these birds or put themselves in the middle. They may as well be spreading rumors or defacing each other's lockers.

Wild ravens living in Austria were the ones to reveal this behavior to scientists. The ravens, a group of about 300 birds in the Austrian Alps, have discovered that a local zoo is a convenient source of food. So the wild birds hang around the captive animals year-round (they especially like the wild boar enclosure) and steal their provisions. Because of this, they're used to seeing humans nearby.


For years, scientists have been capturing these birds, marking them with colored leg bands, and studying their social behavior. Now University of Vienna cognitive biologist Jorg Massen and his coauthors asked whether the most dominant birds might be sabotaging those lower down in the group.


The raven social ladder goes like this: at the top are breeding, male-female pairs - the power couples. Just below them are couples that don't have their own breeding territory yet. Below them are birds that are still trying to solidify a relationship with a mate; these are called "loosely bonded" pairs. Single ravens are at the bottom of the ladder.


For six months, researchers spied on this raven population. They monitored the flirtatious, bond-forming interactions between ravens: sitting shoulder to shoulder, touching each other's beaks, grooming one another's feathers, playing. They saw that 19 percent of these interactions were interrupted by another bird. The intruder would either attack the couple or just plop itself in between them.


This kind of interruption halted the canoodling a little more than half the time. But in another quarter of cases, the couple fought back at the intruder and chased it off. "[We] were wondering why they would do such a thing," Massen says. "What's in it for them?" In other words, why did these third-wheel ravens care enough about what the others were doing to risk their own safety breaking it up?


To find out, the researchers looked at the social status of both the couples being interrupted and the birds interrupting them. They found that loosely bonded individuals - those ravens still trying to build a relationship with a mate - were interrupted most often. And the birds jumping in between them usually belonged to a strongly bonded couple. It seemed that the most dominant birds were trying to keep new couples from forming.


Massen thinks this is powerful ravens' strategy for staying on top. By preventing new pairs from forming, they reduce their competition. They can keep more territory for themselves and more food for their own babies. Single birds apparently aren't worth their attention, and other strongly bonded couples might be too difficult to break up. But by focusing on the pairs that are just starting out, the powerful ravens target their effort where it serves them best.


The researchers haven't yet seen how these machinations benefit the dominant ravens (if they do). Massen says he's now gathering data to find out whether the interruptions truly prevent other birds from forming pairs. The bullies seem to think it's worth it, anyway. For ravens at the bottom of the social ladder, it means finding a partner is going to be even more life-changing than finally getting those braces off.



SOTT EXCLUSIVE: Match made in Sheol: Israel working with terrorists in Syria (says UN), Mossad training ISIS (says Putin aide)


© PressTV

Alexander Prokhanov: Mossad training ISIS.



On Sunday, December 7, Israel reportedly bombed Syria, yet again, this time striking the area near the Damascus international airport and the town of Dimas, close to the border with Lebanon. While the U.S. continues to bomb Syria under the shaky pretense of "fighting ISIS" (while supporting 'rebels' who ally themselves with ISIS in order to bring down Assad, which is what the U.S. really wants to do), Israel forgoes all that liberal 'bleeding heart' pretense and simply gets down to business: targeting locations under Syrian military control, and which involve supplies and food for the Syrian population that really needs them. But that's not all they're up to (more on that below).

Israel must really be having a laugh at the U.S. -- when Bibi and his merry bunch of war trolls want to bomb Syrian civilian and military infrastructure, they just do it, world opinion be damned. For the pansies in the U.S., it's always a 'mistake' -- they really meant to target the 'terrorists'. Grow a spine, guys, and drop the Columbo routine! No one takes a bumbling superpower seriously these days. If you really want to strike fear into the hearts of your enemies, honesty is the best policy. Just tell them: do what we say or we will unleash our trained terrorists on you. Or we'll blackmail you. Or we'll stage a coup in your country, and have you killed in the streets. Or we'll just bomb your country until you submit. That's the way Israel rolls. So take notes, America! Don't be afraid to show the world your true self.


Speaking of truth telling, Russia has been doing a lot of that lately, and Assad himself too. He recently gave an interview to the French magazine (you can read it in full here), in which he called the U.S. airstrikes in his country an illegal intervention that violates Syria's sovereignty (d'uh!). He also shared his thoughts on the origins of ISIS, and the efficacy of the U.S. 'war on ISIS':



"Let's be honest: had Qatar not paid money to those terrorists at that time, and had Turkey not supported them logistically, and had not the West supported them politically, things would have been different. [...]" Assad said.


He explained that currently Syria is fighting against "not only gangs", but also states that support them with "billions of dollars."

...

"The truth is that ISIS was created in Iraq in 2006. It was the United States which occupied Iraq, not Syria. Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi [IS leader] was in American prisons, not in Syrian prisons. So, who created ISIS, Syria or the United States?"


Terrorism is an ideology which twenty years ago was exported to the West from Sunni Gulf states such as Saudi Arabia, Assad stated. He believes that the process has reversed with terrorists coming to the Middle East from Europe and "especially France".

...

Syria's president criticized the air strikes conducted by the US-led coalition targeting the militants in Syria saying that there strikes are "merely cosmetic" and "terrorism cannot be destroyed from the air."


"That's why, and after two months of the alliance's airstrikes, there are no tangible results on the ground in that direction," he said. "And that's why saying that the alliance's airstrikes are helping us is not true."



Assad's advisor Bouthaina Shaaban later told RT:

IS militants - formerly ISIS, also known by the Arabic acronym Daʿish - have "covert international support that enables to transfer weapons and give financial aid to terrorists," Shaaban admitted.


High-level experts work for these terrorists she stated, questioning from where they came.


"Therefore, in dealing with IS militants we will rely on our own capabilities, a new coalition that is being created between Russia, Syria, and countries" that stick to their statements and promises.


"At the same time, the West, in my personal opinion, pursues other objectives, participating in the [US-led] coalition. The West, above all, is trying to save the US military industry, attracting finances of the Gulf Arab countries in order to save relevant US companies," she said.



One of those objectives is to topple Assad. But besides the obvious hand of Washington and Brussels behind ISIS, where is ISIS getting its 'covert international support'? Two recent reports may provide the answer.

First, recently reported that UN observers in the disputed Syrian Golan Heights recently submitted reports of "regular contact" between the IDF there and armed Syrian terrorists at the border:



According to the UN report, a person wounded on 15 September "was taken by armed members of the opposition across the ceasefire line, where he was transferred to a civilian ambulance escorted by an IDF vehicle."


Moreover, from 9-19 November, the "UNDOF observed at least 10 wounded persons being transferred by armed members of the opposition from the Bravo side across the ceasefire line to IDF."

...

Israel initially had maintained that it was treating only civilians. However, reports claimed that earlier last month members of Israel's Druze minority protested the hospitalisation of wounded Syrian fighters from the al-Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front in Israel.


A statement issued by a group of Druze activists accused the Israeli government of supporting radical Sunni factions such as the Islamic State (ISIS).


Replying to a question by i24News on whether Israel has given medical assistance to members of al-Nusra and Daesh (the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State (ISIS), a Israeli military spokesman's office said: "In the past two years the Israel Defence Forces have been engaged in humanitarian, life-saving aid to wounded Syrians, irrespective of their identity."


The UN report also laid out instances where in Israeli army was seen interacting with armed rebels. In one incident, the report claimed that the IDF gave some boxes to the Syrian armed rebels.



[embedded content]




There's really no difference between al-Nusra and Da'esh/ISIS.

Then there's this: Mossad training ISIL terrorists: Putin aide



Alexander Prokhanov told Press TV that Mossad is also likely to have transferred some of its spying experiences to the ISIL leadership, adding that Israel's military advisors could be assisting the Takfiri terrorists.

...

"ISIL is a tool at the hands of the United States. They tell the Europeans that if we (the Americans) do not intervene, ISIL will cause you harm," he said, adding that Iran and Russia are the prime targets of the ISIL.


"They launched their first terror attack against us just a few days back in Chechnya," he said, stressing that the ISIL ideology has got nothing to do with the Islam practiced in Iran and some other Muslim countries in the Middle East region.


Prokhanov said the United States and Israel are one and the same when it comes to supporting a terror organization like the ISIL.



[embedded content]




Now, despite giving vocal and even humanitarian support to the Palestinians, Russia has maintained a fairly neutral relationship with that hysterical banshee of the Middle East: Israel. So Prokhanov's statement here is significant. (Prokhanov is an author and activist, editor-in-chief of the right-wing newspaper, and member of numerous public councils in the Russian Federation. While it's hard to know what influence, if any, he really has with Putin, he's part of a group of thinkers that apparently has Putin's ear, which includes Sergei Glazyev.) Not only that, Russia has recently demanded an explanation for Israel's latest bombing of Syria:

"Moscow is deeply worried by this dangerous development, the circumstances of which demand an explanation," Russian foreign ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said.


In a letter to the United Nations, Russia complained about Israel's "aggressive action" and demanded that such attacks should not happen again, the spokesman said.


Syria also complained to the UN about the strikes, demanding that the Security Council "severely condemn the Israeli attack and impose punitive sanctions on Israel due to its support of Syrian terrorist organizations."


Israel has neither confirmed nor denied the reported strikes. "We have a firm policy of preventing all possible transfers of sophisticated weapons to terrorist organizations," Intelligence Minister Yuval Steinitz told Israel Radio on Monday.



Except when they're the ones doing it. What a lying bunch of psychopaths. And note the use of the word 'possible' here. Can we say "Minority Report"? Philip K. Dick, not to mention George Orwell, would certainly not approve.

The Damascus airport warehouses reportedly targeted by the Israeli air strikes on Sunday held Iranian missile systems destined for the Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah, DPA reported, quoting a Lebanese security source.


Al-Arabiya reported that two Hezbollah militants, one of whom was high-ranking, were killed in the strike.


A Syrian military source confirmed that the hangars at Damascus International Airport contained missiles but gave no details about their origin or destination.


The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group, described the target as an import-export warehouse in the military area of the airport.


The Lebanese official, who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media, said a Hezbollah convoy heading to Lebanon had been hit in another set of strikes at Dimas, approximately half-way between Damascus and the Lebanese border.

...

In Teheran on Monday, the Syrian and Iranian foreign ministers condemned the reported Israeli air strikes, calling them an act of aggression that proves Israel was "in the same trench" with extremist groups fighting the Syrian government.

...

Speaking on Monday at a joint news conference in Tehran with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Muallem said Israel was trying to compensate for losses incurred by Islamic extremist groups in Syria at the hands of the Syrian army. He did not elaborate.



Every day, it becomes more obvious that the U.S. and Israel (not to mention the EU and NATO) are the ideological blood brothers of terrorist groups like ISIS and al-Nusra. They share the same brutal, cynical, anti-human mentality. They rape, torture, and murder in their struggle for global domination and their psychopathic urge for the ultimate degradation of all human values. And sooner or later, it will become so obvious that only the most die-hard authoritarian follower will buy into the transparent mask of sanity these psychopaths project to the world. Unfortunately, sick bastards like the ones ruling Israel don't give up easily. They're willing to take the world down with them.

Animal Magnetism: How the magnetic field influences animal navigation


© Revwarheart.

The migration of the monarch butterfly seems like it’s magic, but it’s actually guided by the magnetic field.



Sometimes, ecology is quite visible. When an owl catches a mouse, we see that connection very clearly. When a river floods, we see how water shapes a landscape.

Ecology can also be less visible. The soil is a good example of this: There is so much life in that brown material beneath our feet, but since we live on top of it, soil life can be difficult for us to visualize.


Sometimes, ecology is invisible.


What forces guide monarch butterflies as they migrate to a place they've never seen? When animals interact with the Earth's magnetic field, these invisible influences play a big role in animals' behavior.


Many animals can sense the Earth's magnetic field


How do you navigate through your everyday life? You likely use landmarks such as street signs or buildings. If you're not relying on a device to keep time, you could use the sun's position in the sky to tell you the time of day, and unless you live near the Arctic Circle, the presence of light or dark tells you whether it's day or night.


Humans use many environmental cues to tell them when and where to move, and for a long time, scientists thought that animals relied on similar environmental cues to find their way around.


However, in 1957, a Frankfurt scientist named Hans Fromme noticed that the robins he'd placed in a cage were getting restless. It was fall, and they kept on moving to the southwest part of the cage. Why were they doing this? Yes, the robins in Germany migrate to Spain to the winter, but their behavior puzzled him: these robins were in a closed room, without the sun or the stars to guide them.


They could not tell that it was fall, and they could not use the position of the sun and the stars to tell where Spain was. He decided that they must be using the Earth's magnetic field to guide them in their attempted migration.


How animals navigate


Just as we might use street signs, a GPS, and a map to navigate our way around a city, animals use multiple means of navigation. They use environmental clues such as temperature, light levels, and the availability of food sources to trigger migration. They use the sun, moon, and stars to help them make their way to breeding grounds.


Some animals use landmarks to show where they should go, while others such as salmon use the smell of a particular river to guide them home. While they usually use it together with other navigational methods, animals also use the earth's magnetic field as their compass.



© Gracey.

What’s behind the amazing navigational abilities of birds? While they use the sun and the stars to navigate, birds also use the Earth’s magnetic field.



How does the magnetic field influence animal behavior?

Since Fromme's time, many experiments on animal behavior have determined that organisms as diverse as bacteria and hamsters can detect the intensity of the Earth's magnetic field and the angle at which it intersects with the Earth.


The most visible interaction between animals and the magnetic field comes every year as animals migrate from cold to warm climates and back again. To navigation-challenged humans, animal migration can seem almost magical.


How do animals like salmon, leatherback turtles, butterflies, and hummingbirds manage to migrate thousands of miles? It turns out that it's not magic at all: it's an invisible ecological interaction.


An inner compass is very important to migrating animals, particularly on days when it's overcast and hard to navigate using the sun or the stars.


In a 2014 study of monarch butterflies, researchers from the University of Massachusetts Medical School discovered that migrating monarchs orient themselves to the south - even in the absence of cues from the sun. This means that even when it's overcast, butterflies can continue moving southward to their winter home.


An alignment with the magnetic field can also help organisms move within their immediate environment. According to Kirschvink and Diaz-Ricci's work published in the , magnetotactic bacteria align with the Earth's magnetic field to seek out the area between mud and water in their aquatic environments. This is the best place for the bacteria to live.


Animal magnetoception: Where is this built-In compass?


When humans use a compass, it's visible in our hands. If animals have a compass, where is it? For a long time, studies of animal behavior showed animals aligning themselves with the earth's magnetic field, but no one knew exactly how they managed to figure it out. However, research has discovered that many species contain small quantities of magnetite, the same material used in the ancient lodestones that humans used to guide their journeys.


In 2012, research published in the discovered that rainbow trout have a good nose for figuring out directions. In their olfactory system, the trout have some cells that contain tiny quantities of magnetite. Researchers isolated these cells by looking for cells that aligned with the magnetic field and discovered that the cells contained magnetic components.


While people have not studied the magnetoreceptor anatomy of all animals that migrate, many organisms - including humans - contain particles of magnetite within their bodies. In the case of the magnetic bacteria, the bacteria contain magnetosomes, particles of magnetite or iron sulfide tucked into their cells.


It seems that animals that use the magnetic field to navigate may come with a built-in compass, but there may be more than one type of compass. The bodies of animals such as birds and the fruit fly contain proteins called cryptochromes. When these proteins are exposed to blue light, they form molecules with electrons that spin in specific ways depending on the earth's magnetic field. Researchers think that these cryptochromes could help some animals navigate.



© Muvuca.

Although it’s controversial, some scientists think that electromagnetic interference from humans could interfere with animal migration.



Human impacts on the Earth's magnetic field

Humans have an impact on so many aspects of the earth's ecology. While wrangling with the magnetic field might seem like an activity that is out of our reach, human-induced electromagnetic noise could be a concern for migrating animals.


In a 2014 study published in the journal , laboratory studies on robins showed birds that were exposed to background electromagnetic noise had trouble discerning which way was south.


While other studies have not seen the same impact from everyday background noise, it's prudent to be aware that human-induced electromagnetic disturbances could have an impact on some animals' highly-tuned sensory systems.


Animal navigation: Migration and the Earth's magnetic field


Animal navigation has long fascinated humans. We enjoy watching the geese migrate overhead as fall approaches, but for a long time, no one knew how they managed to find their way.


While it's not completely clear how all animals navigate using the Earth's magnetic field, recent investigations of animal anatomy have drawn us closer to the answer to this perplexing question.


Wrong time, wrong place: Rare bird found in Barrie, Canada


© Darlene Deemert

An ash-throated flycatcher is shown in a Barrie backyard Nov. 18.



If you were a bird, you may want to consider flying south in October and not returning to our area until next May. Many human snowbirds do just that. Many birds migrate south to warmer climates for winter, then return in the spring, but some seed-eating birds tough out the winter with us.

There is a family of birds called flycatchers that survives by hawking flying insects out of the air in mid-flight. There are not many insects flying around in winter, so a flycatcher that tried to overwinter instead of migrate would have little chance of survival.


Flycatchers mainly eat insects and other invertebrates, but also fruit.


One of the largest and most common species of flycatcher that nests in our area in summer is the great-crested flycatcher. It is a member of the Myiarchus genus and the second-largest flycatcher in our area, slightly smaller than the eastern kingbird. Great-crested flycatchers leave our area in late summer and early fall to fly south to southern Central America or northern South America. There are few records of this species staying around in late fall or winter in our area.


Great-crested flycatchers mainly eat insects but will also eat a good amount of fruit, which they swallow whole, then regurgitate the pits. The one member of the flycatcher family that leaves later than most and arrives back in our area in late March is the eastern phoebe. It winters in the southern United States and Mexico. It eats mainly insects, but survives long periods on small fruits and seeds when they are unable to find insects.


Imagine the surprise when Barrie resident Darlene Deemert saw a flycatcher drop from the sky into her small residential backyard near the Barrie Country Club at about 2 p.m. Nov. 18, in the middle of a snowfall.


The bird looked like a great-crested flycatcher, but smaller, and didn't have the grey throat and breast along with the deep yellow belly of a great-crested flycatcher. The throat and breast was white and the belly was a washed-out, light yellow colour. She checked her bird guide and the bird looked like an ash-throated flycatcher known only to nest as far north as northern California and winter in Mexico and Central America.


This is not a bird one would expect to see in Ontario, especially in the middle of a snow storm in mid-November. She then wondered if it could be a young great-crested flycatcher that did not migrate with the rest of the species a few months ago. She captured a few distance photos of the bird with her camera and posted her observation on my Simcoe Nature Board website.


Although still considered rare, they predictably appear on the East Coast from Florida north to the Atlantic provinces from early November to mid-December. In fact, during this season, one is more likely to encounter an ash-throated flycatcher on the East Coast than a great-crested flycatcher that departs from our area in early October.


This bird stayed in Deemert's backyard flying around a low burning-bush shrub loaded with berries in company with a small flock of juncos that were visiting a feeding station and millet and sunflower seeds. She saw it flying up from the bush and catching snowflakes in midair like they were flies for about 30 minutes. Then, it flew away with a flock of juncos.


It was not seen again, but the following morning, a number of us checked the area unsuccessfully for signs of the bird since it would be a new species for our Simcoe County and even Ontario personal lists. There were no further reports received in the following days.


The ash-throated flycatcher is a rare but regular vagrant to the East Coast and individuals have been recorded nearly every year in all the coastal states and provinces, with inland sightings being less in the east and midwest.


Rare bird from Mongolia turns up in Wakefield, UK


© Mick Hemingway

Blyth's Pipit



A Blyth's Pipit was spotted late morning by birder Jonathan Holliday close to the Calder Wetlands site, which is across from Pugneys Country Park.


The bird, which breeds in Mongolia, is believed to be the first county record for Yorkshire.


Birders from across the region rushed to Denby Dale Road to see the "archetypal little brown job" after the news broke on social media and pagers. More twitchers are expected tomorrow.


Fellow birder Mick Hemingway, 50, managed to get pictures of the bird before it flew off towards the M1 at Durkar at about 3pm.


He said: "It's a rare vagrant, a first for Yorkshire. It's huge for an inland patch, you expect this sort of thing on the coast.


"I've been birding for nearly 30 years and it's my first one."


He believed the bird may still be in the reedy area and expects more birders to turn up at first light on Tuesday to try and relocate it.


Monday, 8 December 2014

Brutal police beating of model shocks Australia

Sydney police

© Reuters/Darren Whiteside



A video showing three Sydney police officers brutally beating a young woman has gone viral, with over 750,000 views on Facebook. During the clip, the victim is repeatedly hit with a police baton and appears to be kicked in the head by a male officer.

Police brutality has been hitting the headlines in the US , but now it seems the unfortunate trend has made its way to Australia. The woman in question, Claire Helen, who works as a model and actress and was on the receiving end of recurring blows from a police officer, said: "It was the most frightening and humiliating experience of my life."


Law enforcement officers allege that Helen punched a policewoman in the mouth, as well as resisting arrest - an action that the model stringently denies. "They pushed me down. They hit me and kicked me. They pulled my dress over my head," she said, speaking to Channel Nine. Onlookers could be heard shouting, "Let her go," and, "She's not resisting arrest."


[embedded content]




Helen, who is 1 meter, 60 centimeters tall and weighs 55 kilograms, insists she was just enjoying a quiet night out when she was accosted by law enforcement officers, who were much bigger than her.

"We weren't drunk. We'd been with people playing soccer and went out to have a few drinks. I'm not the sort of person who goes out getting pissed on a Wednesday night. I'm trying to make it as a model and actress. I can't go out every night getting wasted. I definitely don't ever get in circumstances like this," she told Channel Nine news.


The incident happened in the Kings Cross area of Sydney, which is home to a number of bars and nightclubs, after Helen and a group of friends haggled over a taxi fare, according to police. The law enforcement agency also added that a male member of the group punched the taxi driver in the stomach.


However, Helen alleges that the taxi driver had charged the group the wrong amount, which led to the trouble starting.


"He had the meter running before we got in, so we got out," she said. "He said something to us and we said something back, but then he pushed one of my friends and called the police. Then the police showed up and you saw what happened," she added, Channel Nine reported.


The video has taken the internet by storm and has already been viewed by over three quarters of a million people on Facebook. Many users criticized Helen and defended the police. One woman wrote: "She deserved it. You're supposed to respect your elders and respect the law," with another adding, "She's not resisting arrest?? Really... I thought that if you weren't resisting they would've had the cuffs on you 1 sec into the video... she got what she deserved.... hopefully that taught her a lesson."


Kings Cross Superintendent Michael Fitzgerald said he was satisfied police had used appropriate force, adding: "Police are not punching bags, neither are taxi drivers."


 Darlinghurst Rd, Kings Cross, Sydney

© wikipedia.org

Darlinghurst Rd, Kings Cross, Sydney



He added that police have reviewed CCTV footage of the incident, and they say it justified why they took such a heavy-handed approach.

"I have viewed the footage that has been uploaded on social media," Fitzgerald said. "But I've also had the opportunity to view the entire CCTV from the City of Sydney cameras which shows the entire incident. [It] clearly shows the female offender punch the female police officer in an unprovoked assault which caused the wrestle that you see on YouTube," Fitzgerald added, ABC News reported.


The officer who repeatedly struck Helen with a police baton will not face any charges, police said. Helen and three men have been arrested with a range of offences, including assaulting a police officer, assault, affray and resisting arrest. They have been granted bail until a court hearing on January 6.


Israel bombs Syria's infrastructure again and further assists ISIS


© Unknown

The Israeli air force reaping death and destruction in Gaza last summer during Operation Ethnic Cleansing 2.0 They are now just a hair-breadth's away from directly killing innocent Syrian civilians in the same way.



On Sunday December 7, Israel reportedly launched airstrikes inside Syria yet again, this time very close to Damascus in the area near Damascus International airport. Israeli airstrikes also took place in the town of Dimas which is located close to the Lebanese border.

At this time, Israel has yet to comment on the airstrikes.


Syrian state television has stated that "The Israeli enemy committed aggression against Syria by targeting two safe areas in Damascus province, in all of Dimas and near the Damascus International Airport."


State news agency SANA also stated that the strikes were a "flagrant attack on Syria."


Lebanese state news agencies have reported that Israeli jets "breached its airspace" on Sunday.


Reuters reports that "Residents in Damascus said they heard loud explosions and opposition activists posted photos online of jet streams in the evening sky and fiery explosions. Syria's army general command said on state television that there were "material losses in some facilities." It said the strike benefited al Qaeda."


Further reports suggest that the targets of the Israeli jets were an agricultural airport in Dimas and an import-export warehouse in Damascus. Both of these locations are under control of the Syrian military and involve supplies and food greatly needed for the Syrian people.




These targets, of course, fit in with the larger trend of both Israeli and American airstrikes in Syria in the past that have targeted civilian locations, Syrian infrastructure, Syrian oil refineries, and, particularly, food centers such as grain silos.

While airstrikes are conducted under the guise of defeating ISIS, the fact is that these airstrikes have done little to even inconvenience the terrorist organization which itself is funded, directed, trained, armed, and controlled by the U.S., NATO, and the GCC . The airstrikes have been largely aimed at Syrian military interests as well as necessities of the Syrian people.


The attacks come as the Western-backed forces of the Islamic State launched a major assault on the Syrian air base in Deir el-Zour. That attack was ultimately repelled and defeated by the Syrian army.


This is by no means the first time that Israel has attacked Syria in support of the Western-backed terrorists or even the first time that it has done so in coordination with them.


For instance, on October 30, 2013, Israel attacked and completely destroyed a Syrian air defense base in Snobar Jableh, Syria which is located near Latakia, a port city on the coast of the Mediterranean. The base was alleged to have housed a surface-to-air missile battery.


It is also known that Israel launched attacks against Syrian forces and military convoys at least four times prior to the October 30 attack.


As recently as June, 2014, Israel launched a series of airstrikes against Syrian military positions under the pretext of retaliation for a cross-border attack which was almost certainly initiated by death squad fighters whose logistical inadequacy spilled over into Israeli occupied territory in the Golan Heights. Given the questionable circumstances surrounding the justifying incident - the killing of an Israeli teenager by an alleged anti-tank missile - one would be justified in questioning the Israeli story.


While the occasional attack on Syrian territory is bad enough, the fact is that Israel has apparently coordinated these attacks with the death squad directors on the ground so as to provide cover fire and diversions for death squad "swarming" and jihadist invasions.


For instance, in May 2013, WABC host and best-selling author Aaron Klein stated that an Israeli airstrike in Syria was closely coordinated with Turkey which, in turn, helped coordinate the death squad attacks to occur at the exact same time as the Israeli airstrikes. The sources speaking to Klein came from Jordanian and Egyptian intelligence agencies.


Klein wrote,



Israel's air strike in Syria today was coordinated with Turkey, which in turn coordinated rebel attacks throughout Syria timed to coincide with the Israeli strike, according to Egyptian and Jordanian intelligence sources speaking to KleinOnline. The sources said the rebels did not know about the Israeli strike in advance but instead were given specific instructions for when to begin today's major assaults against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad. "Almost the moment the Israel Air Force departed was the moment the rebel advance began," added the Egyptian intelligence source. Multiple reports have noted how the Syrian rebels consist in large part of al-Qaida-linked jihad groups. The Egyptian and Jordanian sources described how immediately after today's Israeli air strike the jihadist rebels used access roads to advance toward Damascus and began heavy clashes with Syrian military forces throughout the country.



Some have speculated that Israel's continued incursions into Syrian territory is not only an attempt to weaken the military forces of the Syrian government and support the terrorists operating inside the country but to cause Syria's air defense system to light up and give away its concealed positions. Regardless, Israel has once again demonstrated how it is, in reality, the most volatile state in the Middle East despite its claims to the contrary.