[The obvious question that comes to one's mind is why they, the ISIS,
shout and scream about the capture of airdropped arms meant for their
enemies instead of coolly going about mopping up more and more arms?
***The evident sensible answer is that they desperately want to stop
such airdroppings*** and thereby, in fact, are acknowledging the
effectiveness of such operations.

That does not of course mean that such airdropping in a highly
embattled zone is without the risk of landing in the wrong hands.
Regardless of whether the video being circulated worldwide is fake or
genuine.]

http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/isis-terror/isis-weve-got-weapons-u-s-meant-kill-us-n230781

ISIS: We've Got the Weapons U.S. Meant to Kill Us With

Canadian Soldier, Driver Dead After Hit-And-Run
NBC News

A new ISIS video purports to show weapons airdropped by U.S. forces
intended for Kurdish fighters in the hands of the very militants the
munitions were meant to destroy.

The U.S. on Sunday said it had dropped weapons, ammunition and medical
supplies for the first time to Kurdish fighters defending the Syrian
town of Kobani from ISIS. A day later, U.S. officials said one of the
six airstrikes it carried out near Kobani intentionally struck a
bundle of supplies to keep it from falling into the wrong hands.

ISIS propaganda material in the past has shown fighters flaunting what
appear to be U.S.-made weapons, tanks and Humvees seized from
retreating Iraqi forces.

Still, the seizure of emergency arms dropped by the U.S. for Kurdish
forces would be a troubling development mixed with a dose of
embarrassment for the American-led anti-ISIS coalition. One of the
main sticking points against arming moderate rebels battling to unseat
Syria's President Bashar al-Assad was the idea weapons could fall into
the wrong hands.

A new video released Tuesday by Aamaq News -- an ISIS affiliated media
unit -- shows hand grenades and RPGs which a fighter in the video says
were dropped from U.S. aircraft.

Rifling through a crate, a fighter fiddles with rusty-looking
munitions and explains "this is some of the military equipment that
was dropped by American forces." A box with metal cannisters is opened
and the man cracks open the case: "These are the bombs that the
American forces dropped for the Kurdish parties," he says. "They are
spoils of war for the Mujahideen."

While the video could not be independently verified by NBC News,
analysts and experts said it appeared likely the arms on display came
from the U.S. airdrop. Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby told
reporters Tuesday analysts were still analyzing the video, but the
arms shown are the kind being dropped to Kurdish forces.
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"So it's not out of the realm of the possible in that regard. But,
again, we're taking a look at this, and we just don't know," Kirby
said. "We are very confident that the vast majority of the bundles did
end up in the right hands."

Reed Foster, head of the military capabilities desk at IHS Jane's,
told NBC News that the video featured what appeared to be disassembled
munitions from RPG-7 -- probably sourced from an eastern European
country -- and an older type of DM41 fragmentary grenades of German
origin.

"Unsurprisingly perhaps, many of these munitions are likely European
in origin," he explained. "Probably surplus stocks from NATO
countries, which would potentially be much easier to procure ... and fly
them into theater than sourcing all the way from the U.S."

A senior administration official told reporters earlier this week that
the weapons dropped by the U.S. had been provided by Kurdish
authorities, which would help explain the origins and why some of the
weapons in appearing in the video appear aged and/or Soviet.
IN-DEPTH

    U.S. Drops Weapons to Kurds Defending Kobani
    'Intense Clashes' Erupt as Battle for Kobani Escalates
    Turkey Waits, Watches as ISIS Pushes Toward Border

-- Ghazi Balkiz, Cassandra Vinograd and Courtney Kube

First published October 22nd 2014, 12:27 am

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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