Iraqi troops suffer mass slaughter one mile from Baghdad: the general ISIS Chat thread

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MrSoutCity;c-10071131 said:
Where is the Kurdish brother that post in here? Bruh your people have no strategy what so ever. How you going to lose 20 year of progress in one week? Before the referendum I was telling coworker their timing makes no sense. Plus they were actively shooting themselves in the leg with Israel being their only supporter.
makes more sense if you attribute some degree of the fuck-up to internal beef

 
janklow;c-10086789 said:
MrSoutCity;c-10071131 said:
Where is the Kurdish brother that post in here? Bruh your people have no strategy what so ever. How you going to lose 20 year of progress in one week? Before the referendum I was telling coworker their timing makes no sense. Plus they were actively shooting themselves in the leg with Israel being their only supporter.
makes more sense if you attribute some degree of the fuck-up to internal beef

The Kurdish forces in Iraq knew they couldn't take on Iraq, Iran, and almost every other nation in the Middle East at the same time. The status quo is easier for them.
 
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kingblaze84;c-10087211 said:
janklow;c-10086789 said:
MrSoutCity;c-10071131 said:
Where is the Kurdish brother that post in here? Bruh your people have no strategy what so ever. How you going to lose 20 year of progress in one week? Before the referendum I was telling coworker their timing makes no sense. Plus they were actively shooting themselves in the leg with Israel being their only supporter.
makes more sense if you attribute some degree of the fuck-up to internal beef

The Kurdish forces in Iraq knew they couldn't take on Iraq, Iran, and almost every other nation in the Middle East at the same time. The status quo is easier for them.

If the Kurds had let the entire situation play out they had a fighting chance. They jumped the gun they needed to wait and see how things played out in Syria.
 
MrSoutCity;c-10094842 said:
kingblaze84;c-10087211 said:
janklow;c-10086789 said:
MrSoutCity;c-10071131 said:
Where is the Kurdish brother that post in here? Bruh your people have no strategy what so ever. How you going to lose 20 year of progress in one week? Before the referendum I was telling coworker their timing makes no sense. Plus they were actively shooting themselves in the leg with Israel being their only supporter.
makes more sense if you attribute some degree of the fuck-up to internal beef

The Kurdish forces in Iraq knew they couldn't take on Iraq, Iran, and almost every other nation in the Middle East at the same time. The status quo is easier for them.

If the Kurds had let the entire situation play out they had a fighting chance. They jumped the gun they needed to wait and see how things played out in Syria.

The problem with that part is that the Kurds lost a lot of money in the war against ISIS, a war that's technically still not over. And I heard the Kurdish groups are at bankruptcy levels in Iraq, so I don't think they could afford another war against a very tough Iranian military and Turkey's ruthless airforce which has already killed a ton of Kurdish soldiers the past few years, I can understand them being scared to change the status quo.

How long you think they should have waited?
 
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kingblaze84;c-10095936 said:
MrSoutCity;c-10094842 said:
kingblaze84;c-10087211 said:
janklow;c-10086789 said:
MrSoutCity;c-10071131 said:
Where is the Kurdish brother that post in here? Bruh your people have no strategy what so ever. How you going to lose 20 year of progress in one week? Before the referendum I was telling coworker their timing makes no sense. Plus they were actively shooting themselves in the leg with Israel being their only supporter.
makes more sense if you attribute some degree of the fuck-up to internal beef

The Kurdish forces in Iraq knew they couldn't take on Iraq, Iran, and almost every other nation in the Middle East at the same time. The status quo is easier for them.

If the Kurds had let the entire situation play out they had a fighting chance. They jumped the gun they needed to wait and see how things played out in Syria.

The problem with that part is that the Kurds lost a lot of money in the war against ISIS, a war that's technically still not over. And I heard the Kurdish groups are at bankruptcy levels in Iraq, so I don't think they could afford another war against a very tough Iranian military and Turkey's ruthless airforce which has already killed a ton of Kurdish soldiers the past few years, I can understand them being scared to change the status quo.

How long you think they should have waited?

I think they should have waited until the war was completely over, and all the shia fighters went back home. I would have taken some years but tho.
 
MrSoutCity;c-10102439 said:
kingblaze84;c-10095936 said:
MrSoutCity;c-10094842 said:
kingblaze84;c-10087211 said:
janklow;c-10086789 said:
MrSoutCity;c-10071131 said:
Where is the Kurdish brother that post in here? Bruh your people have no strategy what so ever. How you going to lose 20 year of progress in one week? Before the referendum I was telling coworker their timing makes no sense. Plus they were actively shooting themselves in the leg with Israel being their only supporter.
makes more sense if you attribute some degree of the fuck-up to internal beef

The Kurdish forces in Iraq knew they couldn't take on Iraq, Iran, and almost every other nation in the Middle East at the same time. The status quo is easier for them.

If the Kurds had let the entire situation play out they had a fighting chance. They jumped the gun they needed to wait and see how things played out in Syria.

The problem with that part is that the Kurds lost a lot of money in the war against ISIS, a war that's technically still not over. And I heard the Kurdish groups are at bankruptcy levels in Iraq, so I don't think they could afford another war against a very tough Iranian military and Turkey's ruthless airforce which has already killed a ton of Kurdish soldiers the past few years, I can understand them being scared to change the status quo.

How long you think they should have waited?

I think they should have waited until the war was completely over, and all the shia fighters went back home. I would have taken some years but tho.

That's interesting, I think if they waited for that to happen, then Turkey and Iraq would still have given them problems.

Either way, I don't see the Kurds ever getting their own homeland now, this was their best chance and now it's gone.
 
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kingblaze84;c-10105724 said:
That's interesting, I think if they waited for that to happen, then Turkey and Iraq would still have given them problems.
i can see a scenario where Iraq is cool with the Kurds. i can't see one where Erdogan isn't trying to fuck them over as hard as possible for his benefit.

if Iraq ever breaks up (in, like, a reasonable, planned kind of way), i could see the Kurds getting a slice. same for Syria. but right now? eh...
 
janklow;c-10124347 said:
kingblaze84;c-10105724 said:
That's interesting, I think if they waited for that to happen, then Turkey and Iraq would still have given them problems.
i can see a scenario where Iraq is cool with the Kurds. i can't see one where Erdogan isn't trying to fuck them over as hard as possible for his benefit.

if Iraq ever breaks up (in, like, a reasonable, planned kind of way), i could see the Kurds getting a slice. same for Syria. but right now? eh...

In a 100 years from now? Maybe, but with climate change making resources in the Middle East more scarce, Turkey and likely Iraq will still do what they can to keep the resources (especially oil) in Kurdish land.

I could see Kurdish groups having more success in Syria but again, with climate change becoming more serious and worse in the future, resource wars will get more intense. I see nothing changing much.
 
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Rumor has it that Trump will declare Jerusalem the capital of Israel tomorrow or Wednesday, a move the Arab League said this weekend will increase recruitment for ISIS and other extremist groups. Let's see if Trump keeps his word, and how big a terror group ISIS will grow into once this announcement is made.

This will be an interesting week. The reaction in the region will be even more interesting.

 
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mohanica;c-10139681 said:
Mohanica

Hi,

I was really looking for a detailed step by step guide to do this because I was really confused about doing this.

Thanks a lot, buddy.

Keep posting good stuff. Cheers.

Thanks, but you're confused about doing what?
 
kingblaze84;c-10126024 said:
In a 100 years from now? Maybe, but with climate change making resources in the Middle East more scarce, Turkey and likely Iraq will still do what they can to keep the resources (especially oil) in Kurdish land.
"can see" doesn't mean it's likely, of course. it would definitely take some people acting like adults.

 

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