Sunday 15 November 2015

French launch series of 'massive' air strikes on Isis targets in Raqqa including jihadi recruitment centre and training camp

French launch series of 'massive' air strikes on Isis targets in Raqqa including jihadi recruitment centre and training camp

  • French jets carried out 'massive' bombing in ISIS held city of Raqqa, Syria, in revenge for terror attack in Paris 
  • Ten fighter jets dropped twenty bombs destroying ISIS command centre and jihadi training camp in Syria 
  • French jets took off from air bases in Jordan and the United Arab Emirates  and targeted key ISIS sites in Raqqa
  • Heavy bombing raid comes just two days after horrific attacks in Paris which left as many as 128 people dead

We sympatizer with those that lost their loved ones to the recent attach in France by terrorist groups. May the souls of thoose who lost their lives in the series of terrorist activities in France, Kenya, Iraq and Nigeria rest in the bossom of the Lord in Jesus Christ's mighty name, Amen! 



These people are nothing but a bunch of devils incarnates, whose mission is to accomplish the work of their father (the devil, which is to kill, steal and destroy. May the wrath and judgment of God shall visit as many of them that are out there planning to penetrate evil in the name of Jihad in Jesus namE, Amen!

French fighter jets have carried out a series of 'massive' air strikes on Raqqa, destroying a key ISIS command centre and a training camp in Syria.
The heavy bombing raid comes just two days after the militant group claimed coordinated attacks in Paris that killed 128 people, the defence ministry said.
'The raid ... including 10 fighter jets, was launched simultaneously from the United Arab Emirates and Jordan. Twenty bombs were dropped,' the statement said. See more photographs and video after cut
Scroll down for video: 
One of the ten French fighter jets prepares to take off from an airbase in the United Arab Emirates
One of the ten French fighter jets prepares to take off from an airbase in the United Arab Emirates
France's strong approach to counter attacking ISIS in Syria has reportedly led to the destruction of a key jihadi recruitment centre and a training camp 
France's strong approach to counter attacking ISIS in Syria has reportedly led to the destruction of a key jihadi recruitment centre and a training camp 
The operation, carried out in coordination with U.S. forces, struck a command centre, recruitment centre for jihadists, a munitions depot and a training camp for fighters, it said. Activists inside Syria have suggested that no civilian casualties have been sustained in the Raqqa bombings. 
Water supplies and electricity have reportedly been cut as a result of the air strikes, with activists claiming there has been 'panic' inside the city.
The revenge airstrikes in Syria comes as French police broadcast the name and image of Salah Abdeslam, a 26-year-old born in Brussels, across Europe, warning that he is very dangerous. 'Do not intervene yourself,' his warrant says.
Salah Abdeslam is wanted in connection with the deadly Paris attacks on Friday, in which it is believed he played a key part in planning the operations.
His brother, Ibrahim, was one of the seven suicide bombers in the devastating terror attacks. Salah is thought to be on the run and was briefly stopped by French police near the Belgian border. 
The heavy bombing raid comes just two days after the militant group claimed coordinated attacks in Paris that killed 128 people, the defence ministry said 
The heavy bombing raid comes just two days after the militant group claimed coordinated attacks in Paris that killed 128 people, the defence ministry said 
Ten French jets were used in the secret mission in which 20 bombs were dropped on the ISIS city 
Ten French jets were used in the secret mission in which 20 bombs were dropped on the ISIS city 
The airstrikes have been carried out in revenge for the deadly Paris attacks in which 128 people were killed
The airstrikes have been carried out in revenge for the deadly Paris attacks in which 128 people were killed


Credit: Daily Mail

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