Syria air strikes target rebel assault on
key bases, October 8, 2013
Syria air strikes
target rebel assault on key basesFrance 24, 08 October 2013
- 14H37
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File
picture shows smoke billowing from the site of a reported air strike by
Syrian government forces in the rebel-held northwestern Syrian province
of Idlib on September 5, 2013
- Syrian regime war planes on Tuesday launched strikes against rebels
in northwestern Idlib province after they began an assault against two
key military bases there, a monitoring group said.
"War planes carried out two air strikes on areas in the town of
Maaret al-Numan as clashes continued around the Wadi Deif military base
between rebels and regime troops," the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights said.
The group said regime forces also bombed the areas of Maarshamsha and
Deir al-Sharqi in the Maaret al-Numan region, causing casualties.
The strikes came a day after rebel fighters launched a major assault
against the two bases in Syria's Idlib province, which is largely
controlled by the opposition.
The offensive -- dubbed "The Earthquake" -- aims to seize the Wadi
Deif and Hamidiyeh bases, which rebels have laid siege to for almost a
year.
Wadi Deif, a garrison housing a large quantity of weapons, lies to
the east of Maaret al-Numan, and Hamidiyeh, the last military stronghold
in the region still in regime hands, lies to the south of the town.
Clashes continued overnight, and the Observatory said at least 10
regime troops and five rebels had been killed since the assault began.
On Monday, the Observatory said rebels had captured an officer and
three soldiers in a raid in Hamidiyeh.
Idlib and Maaret al-Numan activists Tuesday posted a picture on
Facebook of a man said to be a captured officer, giving his name as
Brigadier General Nasser Salah al-Din.
The photo showed the man, his face bloodied and a bandage wrapped
around his head, with his eyes clothes and his upper half naked.
Some 25 brigades and small, mainly Islamist groups are taking part in
the assault, including Liwa al-Umma, an Islamist brigade that includes
Libyan fighters, according to the Observatory.
Rebel fighters seized the town of Maaret al-Numan last October,
cutting off a key regime supply route running between the capital
Damascus and Aleppo in the north.
Regime forces have regularly tried to recapture the town, which is a
key rebel stronghold in the Idlib region.
Elsewhere in the country, the Observatory reported regime air strikes
on Moadamiyet al-Sham, a suburb in the southwest of Damascus, causing
casualties.
It also said the death toll in a Monday raid on the town of Shaddadeh,
in the northeastern province of Hasakeh, had risen to eight.
Anti-regime activists in Syria say government forces have
continued to shell civilian areas of Daraa, in the
southwest.
Video footage uploaded to YouTube appears to show rebels
firing on government positions and parts of the city being
shelled
In the Idlib region in Northwest Syria rebels launched a
major assault on two key military bases, killing 10
soldiers.
Syria’s main opposition group in exile, the Syrian
National Coalition, has been laying out its conditions for
taking part in the Geneva II peace conference.
The US and Russia want to bring together the opposition
and the Syrian government to talk about a possible
transitional government.
The SNC says Arab
countries must be present as negotiators and it rejected any
involvement by Iran.
Ahmad al-Jarba, the SNC
president said: “We have requested that before any
negotiation process, the Arab and Islamic states must be
present to oversee it, especially countries like Saudi
Arabia and Qatar, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and
Jordan.”
Meanwhile President Assad has been praised by the US for
starting to destroy his chemical weapons arsenal. The
opposition say the world is simply giving more time to Assad
to kill more people with conventional weapons.
Fighting Between Rebels Intensifies Over a Strategic Town in Syria
Dimitar Dilkoff/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
As Syrian refugees waited
for help at a Red Cross center in Sofia, Bulgaria, on Thursday,
fighting intensified between insurgent factions seeking control of a
town in Syria.
By
BEN HUBBARD
Published: October 3, 2013
BEIRUT, Lebanon — A group of powerful
rebel brigades in northern Syria is struggling to defuse an armed
standoff pitting insurgents against an affiliate of Al Qaeda for
control of a strategic town near the Turkish border.
Hussein Malla/Associated Press
A government tank was destroyed after Free
Syrian Army soldiers captured Azaz last year. Islamists took
control of the northern town two weeks ago.
Turkpix, via Associated Press
Free Syrian Army soldiers at the border town
of Azaz last year.
The conflict over the town, Azaz, has
shuttered a Turkish border crossing long used to supply the rebel
movement and heightened tensions between rebels who seek the ouster
of President Bashar al-Assad and extremists who want to erase
Syria’s borders and establish a transnational Islamic state.
The Qaeda group, the Islamic State in Iraq
and Syria,
known as ISIS, routed local rebels to take control of Azaz two
weeks ago and has since set up checkpoints around the town and taken
over the bases of other rebel groups.
Rebels who oppose the ISIS jihadists have
collected their forces at the Bab al-Salameh border crossing a few
miles away and are preparing to protect it should the jihadists
advance.
Turkey has kept the crossing closed since
Sept. 19 because of security concerns, a Turkish Foreign Ministry
official said.
Seeking to end the crisis, a group of six
powerful rebel brigades released a statement late Wednesday calling
for an immediate cease-fire.
In a jab at the strict ideology of the
ISIS jihadists, the statement told them not “to shed the blood of
Muslims and be hasty in calling them heretics and apostates.” It
also called on both sides to submit themselves to the Shariah
Commission, a rebel-run court in the northern city of Aleppo, within
48 hours to resolve the problem.
It was unclear if the ISIS fighters would
heed the call.
The rise of ISIS in rebel-held areas in
northern and eastern Syria has posed a problem for the broader rebel
movement. While many insurgents are deeply Islamist themselves,
their focus remains on toppling Mr. Assad, and they accuse ISIS of
prioritizing its own jihadist agenda over the fight against the
president. But the rebels hesitate to confront ISIS, saying their
resources are already stretched by fighting the government.
ISIS seized Azaz from the local rebel
group known as the Northern Storm that led the fight last year to
oust government forces from the town.
A Northern Storm commander reached by
telephone said that since taking over the town, ISIS had attacked
his group’s bases in nearby villages and that his fighters were
shooting back with heavy machine guns meant to down airplanes.
“This is all we can do until we find a way
to end this,” said the commander, who goes by the name Abu Yamen.
This week, a Qaeda spokesman accused the
Northern Storm of attacking first and said the rebel group had
struck a deal with Senator John McCain during his brief visit to
Syria this year to fight against ISIS “and hit the mujahedeen.”
Turkey’s Parliament on Thursday extended a
mandate for the army to launch military operations in Syria if
necessary, as the government argued that the use of chemical weapons
by forces loyal to the Assad government had aggravated Turkey’s
national security concerns.
Turkey’s president, Abdullah Gul, speaking
to reporters on his way to New York last week to attend the opening
session of the United Nations General Assembly, called radical
Islamist groups in Syria a serious security threat for his country,
and warned that the continuing civil war there “could produce an
Afghanistan in Eastern Mediterranean,” according to the daily
newspaper Hurriyet.
Karam Shoumali and Sebnem Arsu contributed reporting from
Istanbul.