Photo Credit: Basal Awidat / Flash 90
An Iron Dome anti-missile system is deployed on the Golan Heights to protect northern Israel. (Archive 2015)

Da’esh then conquered the northern border city of Raqqa’a and there created for itself a new capital, along the border with Turkey.

Oddly, no one has bombed its headquarters there – not Assad, nor the U.S.-led coalition forces who publicize daily the number of air strikes visited upon ISIS.

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With all that bombing, one would have thought that somehow by now, the Allied Forces might have managed to hit the ISIS Headquarters, even if only by mistake.

Especially since it’s so close to Turkey, a member of NATO and clearly a nation that could provide the coordinates to the U.S. and its allies if it chose to do so.

Have these players colluded in allowing ISIS to continue spreading its venom across the region to menace their other allies instead, and might that have something to do with the terror group’s control over nearly all of Iraq’s vast oil fields, and most of those in Syria as well?


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Hana Levi Julian is a Middle East news analyst with a degree in Mass Communication and Journalism from Southern Connecticut State University. A past columnist with The Jewish Press and senior editor at Arutz 7, Ms. Julian has written for Babble.com, Chabad.org and other media outlets, in addition to her years working in broadcast journalism.