Syrian army has enough manpower and military equipment to defend the country for many years 1303133
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The conflict in Syria |
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Wednesday, March 13, 2013, 11:05 AM | |||
Syrian army has enough manpower and military equipment to defend the country for many years. | |||
The
Syrian army has enough manpower and equipment to
defend the country for many years to come, a pro-government paper cited
an official source as saying Tuesday, March 12, 2013, noting however that
the citizens should start to take part in defending their areas. |
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Quoting
well informed sources, al-Watan stressed that the Syrian army's condition
is very well. "The Syrian army has enough manpower and equipment
for many years to come in the war to defend Syria," the source was
cited by the paper as saying, noting however that "this doesn't mean
that Syrians should only be confined to watch the news of battles without
taking part each according to his ability." |
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The Syrian armed forces are equipped with the latest generation of Russian-made air defence missile system. (See Video) |
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The
source stressed that "Syria is in a state of a real war and the army
is doing its job perfectly, but now it's the citizens' turn to defend
their neighborhoods and areas as it happened in east of Aleppo, Hama and
Homs and other areas when the citizens, men and women, held up available
weapons and formed committees of national defense and armies whose mission
was to defend the land" with the help of the army. While the idea of general mobilization doesn't seem sound in the midst of the conflict that has been ripping Syria apart since two years, such move needs to be announced by the president himself to take effect. Such idea has come as the Syrian troops have become stretched out in urban battles in several Syrian cities as part of the war of attrition the western-backed rebels have been waging. Armed local committees have also been formed over the past months from local people who want to defend their areas against possible rebels' attacks. Yet, most of those committees were formed in areas of minorities who fear the threat of the radical Sunni rebels, particularly with the rising star of al-Qaida-linked Nusra Front that has become the striking rebel force against the government troops. A recent UN report has warned that the conflict in Syria "is becoming more sectarian," a claim which is totally rejected by the Syrian government. |
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