Video: Female sniper laughs after ISIS bullet explodes into wall over her head

Syria seen through a high powered scope situated on a tower(Getty file photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

Credit: Chris McGrath

Credit: Chris McGrath

Syria seen through a high powered scope situated on a tower(Getty file photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

In the war for the Middle East, locals have been trying to take their homeland back from the Islamic State. Rebel fighters, often trained by Americans and using American-provided weapons, fight the battles. In a new clip that has surfaced online, we see the resilience of the local fighters battling for their homeland.

Sniper battle inside Raqqa city. Thank god the ISIS terrorist missed

🙏🙏

— Hemze Hamza (@Sergermed_)

According to Hemze Hamza, a journalist who uploaded the video to Twitter, the woman is a Kurdish fighter. He wrote, "Kurdish women have no fear." Hamza is embedded with the YPG (Yekineyen Parastina Jin, the People's Protection Units) in an all-female unit. Amazingly, after a bullet smashes into the wall inches from her head, she crouches down and laughs off the brush with death — she even sticks her tongue out. The footage was reportedly taken outside the ISIS-held city of Raqqa in Syria.

The West has become fascinated by the YPG, particularly their all-female forces. In 2014, a Kurdish fighter named Rehana went viral after a tweet claimed that she had killed more than 100 ISIS terrorists.

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The United States has been supporting the YPG in hopes of defeating ISIS. In May, the Pentagon announced that President Donald Trump had authorized an arms shipment to the YPG. That announcement came only days before President Erdogan of Turkey visited the United States. Erdogan has been strongly opposed to the Kurdish forces and repeatedly criticized Obama for propping up the Kurds, telling Al-Jazeera, "Obama deceived us," and calling the YPG a "terrorist group." But Erdogan's own visit was thrown into controversy after his personal security attacked protesters, a move that a bipartisan group of senators called "unacceptable."

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