
-
Alpine plant Langstrecken-Test mit Mick Schumacher
-
Streich begeistert von Philipp: "Klasse, super, top"
-
Koch trifft - und hofft auf DFB-Rückkehr
-
Trotz WM-Debakel und Kritik: DLV hält an Fahrplan fest
-
Popp über DFB-Zukunft: "Entscheidung noch nicht getroffen"
-
Red Bull wieder oben: Verstappen mit erster Suzuka-Bestzeit
-
Frankfurt: Rode fällt wohl erneut aus - Hoffnung bei Götze
-
CapitaLand Investment's Flaggschiff Core-Plus Privatfonds übersteigt S$1 Milliarde FUM mit der Akquisition einer Grade A Logistikimmobilie
-
Ein Teil nach dem anderen: Turnitin entwickelt interaktives KI-Schreib-Puzzle
-
Nach Farbanschlag auf Brandenburger Tor: Wissing warnt vor Radikalisierung
-
Bundestag berät über Migrationspolitik und Änderung des Klimaschutzgesetzes
-
Papstbesuch in Marseille: Franziskus will der Mittelmeer-Toten gedenken
-
Zefr erweitert die TikTok-Produktpalette, um Werbetreibenden in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Inventory Filter von TikTok Ausschlüsse der Tauglichkeit zu erm...
-
China bekräftigt in Rede vor UNO Anspruch auf Taiwan
-
Kanada bittet nach Tod eines Sikh-Separatisten Indien um Hilfe bei Ermittlungen
-
BRACCO IMAGING S.p.A. KÜNDIGT GLOBALE VEREINBARUNG MIT SUBTLE MEDICAL, Inc. AN
-
Baerbock verurteilt Baku und fordert Schutz von Zivilbevölkerung in Berg-Karabach
-
Liverpool mit Mühe - Ajax und Marseille trennen sich remis
-
Wichtiger Erfolg für Indigene in Brasilien in Prozess um Schutzgebiete
-
Magdeburg verliert erneut - nächster Kieler Sieg
-
Liverpool und Rom mühen sich zu Auftaktsiegen
-
Mit Mühe zum Sieg: Frankfurt knackt Aberdeens Abwehrbollwerk
-
Offensives Feuerwerk: Bayer überrollt Häcken zum Auftakt
-
Handball: Nächster Sieg für Kiel
-
Polens Präsident: Morawieckis Worte zu Waffen für Ukraine missinterpretiert
-
USA sagen Ukraine vorerst keine Raketen vom Typ ATACMS zu
-
Bulgarien weist obersten russisch-orthodoxen Geistlichen in Sofia aus
-
Deutsch-französischer Kampfpanzer MGCS kommt ein Stück voran
-
Aserbaidschan greift nach vollständiger Kontrolle in Berg-Karabach
-
Eckpunkte für Startchancen-Programm stehen: 20 Milliarden Euro für 4000 Schulen
-
Feuerwehr muss kollabierte Seniorin vom Alten Peter in München abseilen
-
Israel beschießt von Golanhöhen aus militärische Ziele in Syrien
-
Armenien bereit für die Aufnahme von 40.000 Familien aus Berg-Karabach
-
Xinhua Silk Road: Suzhou, Wiederbelebung der alten Stadt durch industrielle Modernisierung
-
Rupert Murdoch übergibt Führung seines Medienimperiums an seinen Sohn Lachlan
-
Anleger um rund 24 Millionen Euro betrogen: Prozess in Göttingen gestartet
-
Blindgänger am Düsseldorfer Flughafen entschärft
-
Razzia wegen Verdachts auf Drogenhandel gegen Berliner Polizisten
-
Selenskyj wirbt im US-Kongress in Washington um weitere Waffenhilfe
-
Grillabend von Gleisbauarbeitern legt in Thüringen zeitweise Bahnverkehr lahm
-
Popp weicht "MVT"-Frage aus: "Entscheidet der Verband"
-
Erstes in der Ukraine beladene Getreideschiff erreicht Istanbul
-
Charles III. lässt sich Restaurierung der Pariser Kathedrale Notre-Dame zeigen
-
Lindner für Verlängerung der Strompreisbremse und frühere Erhöhung von Gassteuer
-
Polizei Bremen ermittelt nach Tod von schwer verletzt aufgefundenem Mann
-
Parlamentswahl in Pakistan soll Ende Januar abgehalten werden
-
United Imaging Healthcare stellt auf der EANM mit der uMI-Panorama-Familie und der integrierten Molekulartechnologieplattform erstmals PET/CT-Systeme...
-
Adidas und Geek+ eröffnen ein neues, hochmodernes automatisiertes Distributionszentrum
-
Selenskyj trifft in Washington Vertreter des US-Kongresses
-
Polen will Ukraine-Waffenlieferungen auf schon abgeschlossene Verträge beschränken

Russia tactics in Ukraine war mirror Syria testing ground: experts
Besieging cities, shelling civilian infrastructure and arranging "safe corridors": the tactics used by Russia in its war on Ukraine mirror those it tested and fine-tuned to drain resistance in Syria's conflict.
But unlike its Syria play book, the challenge Russia faces from a Western-backed army in Ukraine dwarfs that of Syrian rebels who lacked military might or broad international backing, analysts said.
Russia entered Syria's civil war in 2015 on the side of President Bashar al-Assad's regime, allowing Damascus to clock up decisive victories in the decade-long conflict.
Since President Vladimir Putin ordered an invasion on February 24, tens of thousands of Russian troops have swarmed into Ukraine, where they have shelled urban centres and forced people to flee, sparking international outrage.
Moscow denies targeting civilian areas in Ukraine, despite widespread evidence suggesting otherwise, with Western powers and rights groups accusing it of committing possible war crimes.
A French military source said Russia's operations in Ukraine marked a "change of scale".
"Syria was a small theatre," he told AFP on condition of anonymity.
But many of the tactics deployed in Ukraine draw from Russia's battles in Syria, where it tested weapons systems and gained vital combat experience.
"For Russia, Syria is a training ground for men and equipment," said analyst Fabrice Balanche.
- Strategy to 'terrorise' -
Russia has long been accused by rights groups of supporting Syria's regime in besieging civilian populations and bombing infrastructure to draw rebels out of key areas.
To bolster Assad, "Russia's first goal in Syria was to reconquer big cities," including the economic hub of Aleppo and rebel-held districts around Damascus, Balanche said.
In Ukraine, Russia's push towards major cities including Kyiv, Kharkiv and Odessa follows a similar pattern but is meant to strip legitimacy from authorities there, he said.
Balanche said indiscriminate Russian bombing of hospitals and schools is another aspect of the Syrian conflict playing out in Ukraine as part of a strategy to "terrorise" civilians.
At least 270 medical facilities in Syria have been attacked by Russia and Assad's regime since 2011, according to the Syrian Archive, a non-profit organisation that archives digital material from the war.
Russia also targeted schools and markets during a blistering Aleppo offensive in 2016 and a devastating 2019-2020 campaign against rebels in neighbouring Idlib province, the country's last major opposition bastion, according to rights groups.
"Russia bombs military targets... then health and energy infrastructure to make life impossible for civilians and to push them to leave," Balanche told AFP.
"Once the civilians are gone, it is easier for the army to move forward."
Last month, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International accused Russia of using cluster munitions on a hospital and school in Kharkiv, saying the attacks could constitute war crimes.
On Wednesday, Russian forces reportedly bombed a children's hospital in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol that Kyiv says killed three people, including a girl.
That attack sparked international outrage with many global powers accusing Russia of committing an atrocity.
- Different battlefield -
In another parallel strategy, Russia has announced so-called safe corridors to allow civilians to exit Ukrainian cities it has laid siege to.
It is a strategy tried and tested in Syria, sometimes resulting in the death, injury and detention of civilians who try to escape besieged rebel districts without international guarantees, according to experts.
But Russia faces a different landscape in Ukraine, where it has deployed a much larger contingent, in a high-stakes intervention.
"In Syria, Russia primarily relied on its air power and certain specialised units to advise and assist the pro-Assad forces," said Nicholas Heras of the Newlines Institute in Washington.
"Whereas in Ukraine the Russians are the (main) fighting force," he added.
Another key difference, according to Heras, concerns the capabilities of Russia's opponents.
In Ukraine, Russia is confronted by an army that is armed and supported by Western nations, Heras said, flagging its anti-air and anti-armour capabilities.
Meanwhile, "Russia was involved in a minor league war in Syria where it had total dominance," he added.
According to Anton Mardasov, a non-resident expert at the Russian International Affairs Council, Moscow now has a sharper sense of its weapons systems.
It has "corrected many of the shortcomings of high-precision ground, sea and air-based weapons that were identified during the use of missile systems in Syria," he told AFP.
"In Ukraine, high-precision weapons are used quite actively and accurately."
C.Kovalenko--BTB