>>559812
I always wonder why there are no videos of anybody recovering dead bodies in the Syrian/Iraqi war right now. Especially with ISIS you would think they would parade them around on wagons and display their enemies or whatever, or Kurds playing around with dead Turk Leo Crews.
I made the "After Action" thread ( >>547841 ) a while ago, asking about how modern armies deal with dead insurgents in Afghanistan and Mali, I wonder why we have next to no info on how these rebels or terrorists treat the dead. Obviously they try to recover their own, but has there been any info on what happened to the body of that Russian Su25 pilot, or the Turk helicopter crew that crashed recently? What happened to all the tankers, vehicle crews, or just the lonely infantry man in Aleppo?
We know from history that the recovery of bodies from destroyed cities (see Dresden, Berlin, Hamburg and "recently" 9/11) is a task that can take weeks or even months, even with modern equipment.