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Tag: War

  • War in Syria: Nation Suffers 3-Way Divide

    After over two years of intense infighting, the nation formerly known as the Syrian Arab Republic has virtually ceased to exist.

    The AP reports that the three territories are suffering their own microcosms of the greater civil war, religious and ideological struggles giving way to turf war. The one thing we know for certain: the longer the fighting lasts, the less likely it will be for Syria to reemerge as a cogent nation.

    Charles Lister, an analyst at IHS Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Center, has said that “There is no doubt that as a distinct single entity, Syria has ceased to exist… Considering the sheer scale of its territorial losses in some areas of the country, Syria no longer functions as a single all-encompassing unitarily-governed state.”

    Assad’s regime has control over lands near the southern border with Jordan reaching up through Damascus and up to the coast of the Mediterranean Sea. Free Syrian Army rebels, made up of mostly Sunni Muslims, control parts of the territory in Aleppo and Idlib provinces headed down to the Euphrates towards the Iraqi border. The far Northeastern corner of Syria holds the Kurdish minority, who control their territory with semi-autonomy.

    The rebels use the rural countryside to their advantage while Assad loyalists fight to maintain control over regional urban centers, having already lost Raqqa city and most of Aleppo. Loyalist bases scattered throughout the countryside find themselves under siege by guerrillas, and supplies must be airdropped to avoid losing ground.

    To paint the Syrian civil war as “loyalists against opposition” would be to carelessly neglect the spectrum of fighting taking place. Al-Qaeda extremists have recently been reported as engaging with moderate rebels as well as Kurds and other radical Islamist groups. The AP believes that such violence would be more than capable of escalating minor skirmishes into all-out war between rebel factions.

    For the moment at least, the more peaceful areas of Kurdish Syria are celebrating their culture more openly than ever before permitted. Where the Baathist Assad regime would have previously suppressed public expression of Kurdish cultural identity, Kurds are now printing their own license plates, appointing their own police, and even teaching their schoolchildren their native tongue.

  • Bagram Air Base Attack Leaves Four Dead

    Four U.S. troops died in an attack on Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan on Tuesday.

    According to an Associated Press report, the soldiers were killed by “indirect fire,” such as a mortar or rocket. The report cites anonymous officials who could provide no more detail on the attack or deaths.

    Bagram Air Base was originally an airport, built during the 1950s. The site was used by the U.S.S.R. during their invasion of Afghanistan in the 80s. After the war, the airport was a heavily contested site between Northern Alliance and Taliban forces. With the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, the site was quickly secured for the use of NATO troops. The airport’s runways have since been repaired, and even more runways have been constructed for the use of larger aircraft.

    According to the AP, the attack came just as U.S. troops were handing over control of Afghanistan security to the Afghan army and police. U.S. troops will not, however, be fully withdrawing from the country just yet. They will be staying on to consult with Afghan troops, as well as to provide back-up, training, and air support.

    (via AP)

  • France: Sarin Gas Attacks Confirmed in Syria

    French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius this week confirmed that the nerve gas sarin has been used during the ongoing Syrian civil war.

    According to a Guardian report, both the British and French governments claim to have found evidence for sarin in urine and blood samples smuggled out of Syria by French journalists. Fabius stated that the French government has provided its findings to a UN investigation into chemical weapon use in Syria. Though it is still unclear whether the Syrian government or rebels used Sarin gas first, Fabius stated that there is now some proof that it has been used by the Syrian government. He said that France would be talking with the U.S. and U.K. about possible reactions to the news.

    Sarin is a nerve agent that has been classified as a weapon of mass destruction by the UN. As a chemical weapon, sarin can be inhaled and absorbed through the skin. Contact with the gas can cause loss of muscle control, including the muscles involved in breathing, leading to asphyxiation.

    Syria has been embroiled in a civil war since 2011, when government forces began firing on “Arab Spring” protesters. The protesters soon organized into armed militias, and a sporadic war has continued to be waged across the country. The UN estimates that around 80,000 Syrians have died during the civil war.

  • TV Correspondent Killed in Syrian Fighting

    With the fighting in Syria showing no signs of slowing, those covering the civil war are now finding themselves in more danger than ever. According to a report from the Associated Press, a Syrian TV correspondent was gunned down on Monday during fighting near the border of Lebanon and Syria.

    The Syrian government has reported that Yara Abbas, a correspondent for the Syrian government-owned Al-Ikhbariyah TV station, was killed by rebels near an air base in the Homs province. Two other station employees were also injured, a cameraman and an assistant.

    The incident reportedly took place near the town of Qusair, where heavy fighting between Syria’s government and rebels has taken place this month.

    The Syrian civil war grew out of protests that begain in 2011 during the so-called “Arab Spring.” Protesters in the country demanded the ouster of President Bashar al-Assad, and the Syrian military was soon called in to end protests. After the military fired on protesters, opposition groups formed into armed militias, igniting a sporadic war with flash points occurring throughout the country. The United Nations has estimated that around 80,000 Syrians have died during the conflict.

  • U.S. Jets to S. Korea Amid Rising Tensions

    As North Korea continues to release inflammatory statements about joint U.S.-South Korea military exercises on its border, tensions between the two Koreas are rising higher than they have in recent years.

    North Korea has stated that it is now at war and will now no longer abide by the Korean Armistice Agreement, which ended the Korean war in 1953. The country has gone so far as to cut off communication with South Korea, including hotlines meant to stave off war. Communication with U.S. and U.N. forces have also ceased.

    U.S. officials have been playing down Pyongyang’s rhetoric in recent weeks, likening it to the past posturing that North Korea is known for. However, chances are not being taken that the nuclear-armed country is merely bluffing.

    According to a Reuters report, the U.S. has now deployed F-22 stealth fighter jets to South Korea. The jets will become a part of ongoing military drills, as well as a show of force to North Korea. The deployment of F-22s follows the deployment of B-2 stealth bombers to the Korean peninsula last week.

    U.S. and South Korea have made it clear that any provocation by the North will result in a swift military response.

    According to the Reuters report, North Korea this week convened a meeting of the Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea. At the meeting, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un is reported to have stated that the country’s nuclear weapons will not be on the table for future negotiations.

  • This Extremely Close Call Is Your Holy Sh*t, War Is Terrifying Video of the Day

    One of the more fascinating and terrifying things to come out of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are the self-made videos posted by soldiers. The were the first two wars to occur in the YouTube age, and thus the first two wars that were able to be broadcast thousands of miles across the world into people’s living rooms – uncut.

    Today, we have an example of that in the form of raw POV footage from Afghanistan.

    On reddit, the poster claims that the soldier manning the POV camera is his friend who “almost got capped on camera.” Yeah, I’d say that’s a pretty accurate description. This Halloween, it’s good to remember that real life is often scarier than any monster from a work of fiction.

    Check out the soldier’s near-death experience below:

  • Taliban Using Blonde, Buxom Beauties to Gain Intel on Facebook

    In many ways, it’s one of the oldest tricks in the book, but it’s being used in a very modern way. I’d like to think that most people realize that the super hot girl you meet on the internet is likely not super hot and probably not even a girl. But apparently, the Taliban is cleverly (?) fooling Australian soliders into giving away intel with fake Facebook profiles tied to buxom blonde bombshells.

    The report comes from the Australian government, who says that Australian soliders have been tricked with “fake profiles – media personnel and enemies create fake profiles to gather information. For example, the Taliban have used pictures of attractive women as the front of their Facebook profiles and have befriended soldiers.”

    For the Taliban, creating the fake profile is easy. A quick Google image search for “pretty girl” and a few minutes signing up on Facebook and they’re in. All that has to be done is to send out a bunch of friend requests and hope at least a couple bite.

    Of course, it’s easy to see why being Facebook friends with the enemy can be dangerous. Not only does it allow access to confidential information that could jeopardize operations coming from the solider his/her self, but also private info from friends and family members of the soldiers.

    The Department of Defense report also warned about geo-tagging. Since Facebook posts (photo uploads, as well) can be tagged with a location, the chances of one soldier giving up the exact whereabouts of an entire troop is greatly increased through social media.

    “Most did not recognise that people using fake profiles, perhaps masquerading as school friends, could capture information and movements. Few consider the possibilities of data mining and how patterns of behaviour can be identified over time,” said the report.

    It’s not just Australians that are being warned about the dangers of social media use during combat. Earlier this year, the U.S. Army warned soldiers about geotagging, citing an actual example where geotagged photos led to an attack on a U.S. base in Iraq back in 2007.

    [via News.com.au]

  • Apple Keeps Rejecting App That Notifies Users Every Time There’s a U.S. Drone Strike

    You wouldn’t think that there would be a problem with an app that aggregates news that’s currently publicly available on the web, but apparently there is. At least according to Apple.

    New York-based developers Josh Begley is befuddled. Why does Apple keep rejecting his app?

    In the latest rejection email, Apple states that they “found that [the] app contains content that many audiences would find objectionable, which is not in compliance with the App Store Review Guidelines.” What objectionable content is Begley trying to push here? Porn? Hate Speech?

    Nope. Begley’s app Drones+ simply notifies users when the U.S. carries out an unmanned drone strike. Users can enable push notifications, so they receive a message whenever the news of another strike rolls in. The app also contains a map that plots all of the points where recent strikes have occurred – whether that be Pakistan, or Yemen, or anywhere else that the U.S. has an active drone campaign.

    Begley told Wired that the app doesn’t feature violent content in the form of photos of videos – just notifications based on news stories pulled from the UK’s Bureau of Investigative Journalism. These news stories are accessible to anyone online at any time, Drones+ simply aggregates them.

    This isn’t the first time that Apple has rejected Drones+, but it is the firs time that they’ve had a problem with the content. The first rejection was based on the feeling the the app was simply not useful. The second rejection had to do with an issue regarding a corporate logo.

    “If the content is found to be objectionable, and it’s literally just an aggregation of news, I don’t know how to change that,” Begley says.

  • Agent Orange Cleanup Begins in Vietnam

    37 years after the fall of Saigon, the U.S. is beginning a project to help reverse some of the devastation caused by the Vietnam War. The U.S. has begun a joint project with Vietnam to clean up toxic chemicals left behind during the Vietnam War. According to the Associated Press, the $43 million project will decontaminate a former U.S. air base in Denang. The site, which is now a Vietnamese military base, is contaminated with dioxin, a toxic byproduct left over from a chemical dubbed Agent Orange. It will take four years to decontaminate the 47-acre site.

    During the Vietnam War, the U.S. used defoliants to devastate Vietnam’s jungles, which were used for cover by guerrillas such as the Viet Cong. Chemicals were often dumped from helicopters, as seen in the photo above. Agent Orange is the most well-known of these chemicals, and its toxicity has caused lasting damage to Vietnam’s environment and population. 20 million gallons of Agent Orange were dropped on almost 18% of Vietnam’s forests during the war. The chemical has left behind a dioxin compound that has been shown to cause cancer and birth defects.

    The AP quoted U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam David Shear as saying, “We are both moving earth and taking the first steps to bury the legacies of our past.” Shear was also reported to have said the U.S. is looking at providing similar cleanup efforts at another site contaminated by Agent Orange, the former Bien Hoa U.S. air base.

    This is not the first measure taken by the U.S. to mitigate the environmental and health risks posed by Agent Orange. According to the AP, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency poured six inches of concrete over the site five years ago. The new plan for the Denang site is to dig up the soil contaminated by dioxins and heat it to 635 degrees Fahrenheit. This will break the dioxin down into harmless compounds such as oxygen and carbon dioxide.

  • Stuxnet Debate Continues: How Should Cyberweapons Be Used?

    When the revealing news regarding the Stuxnet computer worm came out, much controversy pursued as a result. David Sanger of the New York Times exposed the information as part of the much larger U.S. “Olympic Games” initiative and has now even written a book on it.

    Since that time, information regarding another form of malware called Flame has also been uncovered and is said to be connected to Stuxnet, which has sparked even more debate. Questions pertaining to cybersecurity, the threat of cyberwarfare, cyber laws, and many others related to the Internet and its capabilities have all risen of late, leaving many people fearful.

    Jon Lindsay, Research Fellow at University of California's Institute on Global Conflict and CooperationAccording to Jon Lindsay, a research fellow with the University of California’s Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation, Stuxnet and Flame both represent pieces of malware, but they are very different. Stuxnet, for example, is what he calls a cyber attack that was designed to destruct the normal operations of a uranium facility in Iran that has been suspected to be part of a nuclear initiative from the country.

    Flame, on the other hand, is a form of espionage that may use some of the same types of vulnerabilities as a cyber attack would, but the payload, or the amount of damage it causes, determines the difference. Lindsay told us that Flame could get into a targeted computer and essentially do anything the computer does but from a remote location.

    “Olympic Games wasn’t just Stuxnet,” he explained. ”Olympic Games was about creating a toolkit for both espionage and covert action, in this case employed against Iran.”

    As to whether or not either of these efforts was successful, Lindsay went on to say that Flame, in particular, is hard to determine simply because of the nature of espionage. Unless there is a leak in information, the extent of its impact will not likely be known for many years.

    Some data has been recovered on Stuxnet, but based on it, the impact does not seem to be too significant. As Lindsay explained, it’s important to distinguish between the centrifuges that were filled with hexafluoride gas and spinning, which means they’re producing, and those that are spinning and not filled.

    “The breakage data actually shows that it was those that were spinning but not enriching that were broken,” he said. “So, oddly enough… it [Stuxnet] seems to have not attacked the centrifuges that were doing the most work.”

    “Most experts that look at it,” Lindsay continued, “say the program was fairly well-recovered within a year, so [it was] really a minor effect.”

    Another issue with the Stuxnet worm was the reports that, due to an error, it had gotten loose giving practically anyone the opportunity to access it. In the April 2012 edition of Smithsonian, U.S. cybersecurity advisor Richard Clarke expressed his concern over this saying, “If I’m right, the best cyberweapon the United States has ever developed, it then gave the world for free.”

    Ralph Langer, who has been recognized for “solving Stuxnet,” has pushed this theory as well, but Lindsay believes that another interpretation could be that the worm proves just how hard it is to create such a weapon.

    “Stuxnet reveals to an attacker that you need to be really, really good to figure out how to do this,” he pointed out. “You can’t use any of the same tricks because all of those holes have been patched, so you’re going to have to find new tricks, which means you’re going to have to be as good as the people that put that together.”

    What’s more, there has been a lot of hype and fear surrounding cyberwarfare going forward. There has been talk of a “digital Pearl Harbor” occurring, which has many policymakers in Washington anxious to push through cybersecurity legislation. Senator Jay Rockefeller is one lawmaker that is aggressively advocating legislation, and in a hearing earlier this year, expressed the urgency of what could happen:

    “The threat posed by cyber attacks is greater than ever, and it’s a threat not just to companies like Sony or Google but also to the nation’s infrastructure and the government itself,” Rockefeller said at a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing.

    “Today’s cyber criminals have the ability to interrupt life-sustaining services, cause catastrophic economic damage, or severely degrade the networks our defense and intelligence agencies rely on. Congress needs to act on comprehensive cybersecurity legislation immediately.”

    We spoke with Jerry Brito of the Mercatus Center at George Mason University on this issue back in April, and according to him, a lot of the hype surrounding these cybersecurity concerns are being incredibly overblown. As he told us at that time, even though weapons such as Stuxnet could be dangerous, it didn’t result in mass casualties.

    “There really is little evidence for us to believe that we are on the brink of real calamity,” said Brito.

    There have also been some bills introduced to Congress that push for companies to have tighter security, but researchers such as Brito and Lindsay are skeptical of them. Also, on that note, the whole issue of cyberweapons being used at all has been questioned. Eugene Kaspersky of the security expert firm Kaspersky Lab and the man who reportedly discovered Flame suggested in a New York Times piece that an international treaty that would ban militaries and spy agencies from making viruses would solve the problems that these viruses cause.

    According to Lindsay, such a treaty would really be “unenforceable.” Furthermore, he told us that, at this point, there is simply not enough information available to make such judgments or policies. He does believe cyber attacks and cyber espionage will continue and, more than likely, even advance.

    “We will continue to see more and more cybercrime, but no cybercrime that massively brings down financial systems,” he said. “We will continue to see a rise in espionage, but it will continue to be like espionage always is – a very ambiguous instrument.”

    However, until information is able to reveal what type of real threats lie ahead and the hype and hypothetical situations settle, he doesn’t think any action should be taken.

    What’s your take? Are you fearful after the Stuxnet ordeal? Would you like the U.S. to take a more aggressive approach on cyber issues and even utilize cyberweapons more often? Let us know in the comments.

  • Israelis and Iranians Reach Out To Each Other On Facebook

    Some Israeli and Iranian citizens are reaching out to each other via Facebook, in light of recent sentiments that a war between their countries is not far off. While Israeli officials watch the Iranian nuclear program like a hawk, and President Obama vows to “have Israel’s back,” the people of the two Middle-Eastern nations are making posters that express their mutual desire for peace, harmony and understanding. They’re publishing the posters on the recently-created Facebook page of the Love and Peace Campaign.

    “Love and Peace” is the brainchild of Israeli couple Ronny Edry and Michal Tamir, both graphic artists, who started the campaign over the weekend. Initially the project featured only messages from Israelis. Under a picture of the submitter — sometimes portrayed along with friends and family — read the message:

    Iranians
    we will never bomb your country
    We <3 You

    A caption attached to each message added:

      To the Iranian people
      To all the fathers, mothers, children, brothers and sisters

      For there to be a war between us, first we must be afraid of each other, we must hate.
      I’m not afraid of you, I don’t hate you.
      I don t even know you

    The photos include pictures of people, of human beings, doing very human things. Things anybody can identify with. Subjects pose with children, put arms around spouses, hug sisters, hold puppies, go to the beach, play guitar.

    The message is a simple one: We are people. You are people. We can understand each other. We mean you no harm.

    Participants in the campaign make it clear that they speak for themselves. “I’m not an official representative of my country. I m [sic] a father and a teacher,” continues the caption, written by Edry. But they add that their sentiments reflect the attitude of the people they know, that as unofficial representatives they are giving voice to the people of Israel: “I know the streets of my town, I talk with my neighbors, my family, my students, my friends and in the name of all these people …we love you. We mean you no harm. On the contrary, we want to meet, have some coffee and talk about sports.”

    These posters starting going up on Saturday. By Sunday, the site began receiving responses from Iranians, who had a similar message of peace for their Israeli counterparts. The most common message reads:

    Another poster expresses the maker’s desire for open discourse between the two nations.

    In their photos, Iranian participants depict themselves as likewise wholly, unabashedly human. One woman holds her cat on her shoulders, another shops at a market, a man plays the accordion, another climbs a mountain, and friends and lovers hold hands and smile. A few in the posters show their faces boldly, but the majority are at least partially obscured, for fear of retribution from their government. “[W]e can’t show that we are friend with anyone from Israel because it’s dangerous. I think all around the world and war is between governments. I wish a world free from war and hope we be good friends [sic]” is the message of another poster.

    Just three days old, the Love and Peace Campaign already has more than 1,500 likes (at the time of this writing) on Facebook, along with hundreds of photos and comments. It’s a touching message of mutual respect, friendship, and understanding that transcends international borders, political ideologies, and racial, cultural, and linguistic barriers. I hope their messages prove true, and that the governments of Israel and Iran can find peaceful resolutions to their disagreements. Whatever the outcome, the Love and Peace Campaign is a testament to the fact that the actions of governments do not always reflect the ideals of their citizens, and that in the hearts of most humans lies a strong desire, as one participant wrote, “To Live In Peace,&Health,&Happiness!”

  • Self-Guided Bullet Is The Future Of Warfare

    Self-Guided Bullet Is The Future Of Warfare

    It was only a matter of time before somebody made a self-guided bullet and that time is now.

    Two researchers at Sandia National Laboratories, Red Jones and Brian Kast, have invented a “dart-like, self-guided bullet for small-caliber, smooth-bore firearms” that have the ability to hit laser-designated targets from over a mile away.

    “We have a very promising technology to guide small projectiles that could be fully developed inexpensively and rapidly,” Jones said.

    The research lab is currently seeking a private company partner to complete testing and bring the guided bullet to the marketplace.

    The researchers have found initial success testing the bullet in computer simulations and prototypes built with commercially available parts.

    The design of the four-inch-long bullet is equipped with an optical sensor in the nose to detect a laser beam on a potential target. The sensor sends collected information to an 8-bit processor that uses an algorithm to steer tiny fins that guide the bullet to the target.

    handbullet

    The researchers claim that the bullet flies straight due to its aerodynamic design. The bullet has a center of gravity that sits forward with tiny fins that enable it to fly without spin.

    Computer simulations showed a normal bullet missing a target from more than a half-mile away by more than 9.8 yards. The guided bullet could get within 8 inches according to the simulations.

    The inherent advantage over guided missiles is that the bullet can be over-steered and still hit its target. A guided missile must be controlled through very precise means. The person firing the guided bullet can make trajectory corrections 30 times per second.

    The bullet can currently reach speeds of 2,400 feet per second using commercially available gunpowder. The team feels that they can match standard military speeds with custom gunpowder.

    The researchers filmed the bullet equipped with an LED and fired it at night to test its ability to move throughout the air after being fired. They found that the bullet became easier to control the longer it stayed airborne. This greatly increased accuracy over long distances and allows the bullet to perform trick flying as seen in the lead image.

    Potential customers for the bullet unsurprisingly include the military, law enforcement and recreational shooters.

    [Images courtesy of Sandia Labs]

  • Stephen Colbert Fights War on Christmas, With Santa & Guns

    The day is nearly upon us, when we all wake up early in the morning to exchange gifts and enjoy the company of loved ones. If you have kids, you might be waking up multiple times during the night because it technically is “Christmas morning”. In recent years, Christmas has been a hot debate among many. “Merry Christmas” has been replaced with “Happy Holidays”, trying to include everyone’s choice of celebration during this time of year.

    There are generally two camps when discussing this issue. One side makes the argument we need to include all forms of celebration and not let others feel left out, while the other side says they should lighten up. South Park has tackled this issue in one of my favorite episodes; masterfully stating that if we take out everything about this time of year which could potentially offend someone then we’re left with nothing.

    Stephen Colbert, another Comedy Central staple has now voiced his opinion on the subject, the only way he knows how – with comedy, guns, and clips from Raiders of the Lost Ark. Enjoy.

    Expanding on the video, I made a visit to the Scottsdale Arizona Gun Club website, to see if there’s more to the website and how they plan on getting into the spirit of the season. I wasn’t disappointed.

    Here you can see the full ad for the “Holiday Picture With Santa & His Machine Guns!” special. Where you and your family can get a photo with Santa with a plethora of various guns. Personally, I’d want the mounted machine gun in my photo.

    Santa & Guns

    Not only can you get a photo taken with Santa, and an assault rifle, but they have a 12 Days of Christmas sale as well. Where you can get that special loved one their very own “Machine Gun Adventure“.

    12 Days of Christmas Guns

    I hope everyone reading this has a Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays. Hopefully you wake up on the morning of December 25th and receive everything you want, with some egg-nog and fun times with family as well. For those who are looking for that last minute gift idea for me, a grenade launcher attached M16 would really put me in the holiday spirit.

  • NATO, Taliban Have Twitter Dust-up Following Kabul Attacks

    On Tuesday, Taliban forces launched an attack on the U.S. embassy and NATO headquarters in Kabul, Afghanistan.

    The attack started at about 1 pm local time, with the attackers launching RPGs from a 9-story building that stands within striking distance of the embassy and HQ. During these attacks, suicide bombers took to other government structures across the city.

    What resulted was an standoff between the Taliban and Afghan police forces, backed by NATO soldiers. The standoff lasted overnight, ending on Wednesday morning. According to reports, 27 people were killed, including police, civilians and insurgents.

    When the real fighting ended, the battle on the internet began as NATO and the Taliban sparred on Twitter. That’s right, the Taliban has an official Twitter account. More than one, actually – and two particular accounts were involved in this social media dustup.

    Yesterday, NATO’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) tweeted about the attacks, blaming the Taliban for the loss of civilian life –

    Re: Taliban spox on #Kabul attack: the outcome is inevitable. Question is how much longer will terrorist put innocent Afghans in harm’s way? 1 day ago via HootSuite · powered by @socialditto

    Insurgent activity has killed 11 #Afghan citizens, to include 3 children. Their actions continue to harm innocent Afghan civilians. #Kabul 1 day ago via HootSuite · powered by @socialditto

    One Taliban account, @ABalkhi, responded –

    @ISAFmedia i dnt knw.u hve bn pttng thm n ‘harm’s way’ fr da pst 10 yrs.Razd whole vllgs n mrkts.n stil hv da nrve to tlk bout ‘harm’s way’ 1 day ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    NATO hit back –

    Really, @abalkhi? UNAMA reported 80% of civilians causalities are caused by insurgent (your) activities http://t.co/3LiZWa5 1 day ago via HootSuite · powered by @socialditto

    The Taliban struck back, referencing the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) –

    @ISAFmedia UNAMA is an entity of whom? mine or yours? 1 day ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    NATO turned their sights on another known Taliban account, @alemarahweb.

    Here’s the linked video, showing an ISAF commander checking in on his troops following the Kabul attacks.

    Even in this age of social media, it is still strange to see this sort of war posturing on a service like Twitter. It just goes to show the incredibly wide range of topics and issues that social media can address. On one side, you’ve got folks talking about Justin Bieber vs. The Jonas Brothers and on the other side you have squabbles that have life and death consequences.

    Heavy, man.