Syrian war enters new phase, no end in sight

Syrian war enters new phase, no end in sight – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Syrian army building forces around Aleppo, as rebels look to relieve pressure with counter attacks; Iraqi Shiite fighters seen entering Syria

Reuters

Published: 06.10.13, 18:29 / Israel News

Forces loyal to President Bashar Assad are massing around Aleppo in preparation for an offensive to retake the city and build on battlefield gains that have swung the momentum of Syria’s war to Assad and his Hezbollah allies.

Rebels reported signs of large numbers of Shiite Muslim fighters flowing in from Iraq to help Assad end the civil war that has killed at least 80,000 people and forced 1.6 million Syrians to flee abroad.

The move to a northern front comes as Syria’s war is increasingly infecting its neighbors – Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan and Israel – and widening a regional sectarian faultline between Sunni and Shiite Muslims.

For the first time since the start of the uprising in March 2011, an Israeli minister suggested on Monday that Assad might prevail in the war, thanks in large part to support from Shiite Iran and the Lebanese guerrilla group Hezbollah.

However, efforts to dislodge rebels in Aleppo will be a much tougher proposition than last week’s capture of the town of Qusair, with military analysts predicting that the conflict will probably drag on for months or years as Assad’s many foes are likely to be galvanized by recent rebel reversals.

Alarmed by Assad’s swift advances and hoping to turn the tide, Washington might decide later this week on whether to start arming the rebels, a US official said.

Assad’s army is preparing to lift sieges on areas close to Aleppo before turning its sights on the country’s second city, according to the semi-official Syrian al-Watan daily

“Any battle in Aleppo will be huge and most certainly prolonged,” said Charles Lister, an analyst at IHS Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Centre.

“You have large numbers of rebels in several areas of the city. There will have to be a lot of very close combat fighting that always takes a lot of time and leaves many casualties.”

Rebel brigades poured into Aleppo last July and have more than half the great merchant city under their control. The front lines are largely stable and a growing number of radicalized, Islamist foreign fighters have joined rebel ranks.

Pincer Movement

Opposition activists and military sources said the army was airlifting troops to Aleppo airport and to the Kurdish area of Ifrin behind rebel lines, as well as reinforcing two rural Shiite Muslim enclaves, Zahra and Nubbul, north of the city.

“The regime appears to be making a pincer movement to try and regain the major cities across the north and east of Syria ahead of the Geneva conference,” said Abu Taha, a northern rebel commander, referring to proposed international peace talks.

The United States and Russia hope to hold the conference in Switzerland next month, but Britain has warned that Assad’s recent success might make him reluctant to offer the sort of compromises believed necessary to end the bloodshed.

After appearing to seize the initiative in 2012, the rebels have suffered a series of setbacks this year, with Assad’s demoralized forces significantly bolstered by the arrival of well-trained fighters from the Shiite Muslim group, Hezbollah.

Rebels said these guerrillas had played a determining role in the emphatic victory last week in Qusair, which controls vital supply routes across Syria and into Lebanon.

A security source in Lebanon said Hezbollah would continue to assist Assad, but unlike the battle for Qusair, which lies close to its home turf, it might not dispatch its troops north to Aleppo, preferring instead to offer training.

Looking to relieve the growing pressure on Aleppo, rebels attacked two major military compounds on Monday in northern Syria – on the outskirts of the city of Raqqa and the Minnig airport in the adjacent province of Aleppo.

“The rebels have raised pressure … in the last two days to pre-empt any attack on Aleppo,” said Abdelrazzaq Shlas, a member of the opposition administrative council for the province.

Activists said the army had retaliated by bombing Raqqa, killing at least 20 civilians and fighters.

“There is a big loss of lives, but the aim is to deflate the morale boost that the regime received after Qusair and not allow it to go to Geneva as a victor,” Shlas said.

But in a worrying development for the rebels, Shlas said there were reports of militiamen loyal to Iraqi Shiite Cleric Moqtada al-Sadr streaming into Syria to bolster Assad‘s forces.

Their arrival would underline the increasingly regionalized nature of the war following Hezbollah’s entry into the fray.

Jihad

Lister, who monitors Sunni Muslim Jihadist forums, said it seemed a growing number of Sunni men appeared ready to take up arms in Syria with the mainly Sunni rebel forces.

“If you believe what you read in the forums, then there are a lot of people heading to Syria to take up the fight,” he said, adding that there were also a growing number of death notices for foreign fighters appearing on the web, including six in one day last week.

Israel, which shares a tense border with Syria, has regularly predicted the fall of Assad. But on Monday, Minister for Intelligence Yuval Steinitz offered a very different view.

Speaking to foreign reporters in Jerusalem, he said Assad’s government “might not just survive but even regain territories.”

Western nations, including the United States, have said Assad must stand down, but have thus far refused to arm the rebels, worried the weaponry might fall into the hands of radical elements, including groups tied to al Qaeda.

On a visit to Aleppo earlier this month, a Reuters correspondent saw a marked increase in the number of hardcore Islamist groups, who seemed to have gained ascendancy over the more moderate Free Syrian Army that led the initial combat.

Rebels in the city also seemed more focused on resolving day-to-day issues, rather than taking the fight to Assad.

“The biggest problem we have is thievery. There are thieves who pretend to be rebels and wear rebel clothes so they can steal from civilians,” said Abu Ahmed Rahman, head of the Revolutionary Military Police in Aleppo, an organization set up to resolve disputes between rebels and civilians.

But there were also signs of anti-Assad forces digging in, preparing for an eventual army onslaught.

“This conflict has no discernable end-point at the moment,” said Lister.

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12 Comments on “Syrian war enters new phase, no end in sight”

  1. GREEN LANTERN's avatar GREEN LANTERN Says:

    Enter the Maelstrom, around and around she goes, where she ends up nobody knows!

  2. Luis's avatar Luis Says:

    It seems to the majority of us that Assad gains momentum and is ready for a big encirclement battle which will rage around and into the second big city of Syria, Aleppo. The militants (jihadists forces) will not give up this city easily, so a new Stalingrad, 2013 style, may be developing there.
    But we didn’t start these lines for telling our readers things they easily can get elsewhere. We want to make an assertion here, for the first time as we know so far, in comparison with other sources of information.
    We think that the militants are preparing a very big move against Hezbollah bases in Lebanon, Bekaa Valley included. The militants will use this strike for a number of purposes :

    1.To take the war into the enemy territory.
    2.To lower the pressure which is build near and around Aleppo.
    3.Hezbollah is now the open foe of the militants; after the calls to jihad from their clerics, the sunnis fighters have card blank to deal with the shiite militia.

    In the following weeks we are going to see the war extending to Lebanon in a form we didn’t saw until now.

    • Justice for Israel's avatar Justice for Israel Says:

      its worse something about to happen in golan the USA state departments telling Americans to leave the areas close to Golan and specifically route 88,i think the shits about to hit the fan,as there is no way russia is going to get to post troops to golan take a look at debka,the usa state department is telling somethings up yet nothing in Israel,that smells of fog

    • artaxes's avatar artaxes Says:

      Seems like good news to me.
      Even if Assad ‘wins’ the fire will continue to burn and cannot be extinguished.
      It maybe burn a little slower but it cannot be put out,
      The jihad is not going to end, which means that Syria sucks a lot of the jihadis away from Europe and sucks a lot of money from the sunni muslim world.

      • Justice for Israel's avatar Justice for Israel Says:

        I knew you would say that,but is see the very worst about to happen and i dont just mean Israel for all of us this is about to develop into a massive war,Israel and nato wont cede the middle east to russia and russia is making a move,the usa has a huue number of troops in Jordan along with nato its a lot more than has been announced,the Russians are about to make a move and there are secret red lines one of them is about to be crossed,and the stuff being said in the background is bad we may be luck to avoid ww111,there is stuff flareing up with the Chinese too thats unreported and its very worrying,

  3. artaxes's avatar artaxes Says:

    Debka: Moscow sets up Russian Golan brigade, warns Israel Sunnis plus al Qaeda are bigger threat than Assad

    http://www.debka.com/article/23034/Moscow-sets-up-Russian-Golan-brigade-warns-Israel-Sunnis-plus-al-Qaeda-are-bigger-threat-than-Assad

  4. artaxes's avatar artaxes Says:

    Debka, Breaking news: Israeli minister: Iran is weeks away from nuclear red line

    http://www.debka.com/newsupdatepopup/4675/

  5. Luis's avatar Luis Says:

    As we already wrote, the rebels will try to create a diversion by striking in the very heart of the Hezbollah establishment, Bekaa Valley. Its not the action that we anticipated, but its the beginning:
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Politics/2013/Jun-11/220038-syrian-shells-fall-near-east-lebanon-border.ashx#axzz2VuSEAq8b


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