Fears
for Syrian city of Aleppo after Hezbollah fighters bolster Assad’s
forces
16
June, 2013
Syrian
rebels fought back against forces loyal to Bashar al-Assad in Aleppo
on Sunday after losing territory to government forces in recent days.
Having been driven out of the key town of Qusayr two weeks ago, rebel
fighters have been flocking to Aleppo to shore up one of the few
remaining opposition strongholds.
Renewed
fighting suggest that the city has become the latest target for
regime loyalists emboldened by the Lebanese Hezbollah fighters that
have swelled their ranks. Rebel leaders and their backers in the West
and other Arab countries fear that the strident support of Hezbollah
has tipped the two-year conflict in Assad’s favour; a development
that has led the West – especially the UK, US and France – to
openly contemplate arming the rebels for the first time.
Regime
forces have not yet launched a fully-fledged assault on Aleppo, but
reports in newspapers loyal to President Assad have suggested that
the army sees the city as its next target. Capturing Aleppo would
also allow the army to cut off major supply lines from Turkey to
rebel strongholds in the north.
Activists
in the region have told the Reuters news agency that opposition
forces, including growing numbers of radicalised Islamists, have been
mounting counter-attacks on Hezbollah-backed troops and militiamen
recruited from Shia enclaves near Aleppo, a mostly Sunni city some 20
miles from the border with Turkey. The violence is also spilling over
into Lebanon, where four Shia men were yesterday killed in an ambush
in the Bekaa Valley, a region where families loyal to President Assad
live side-by-side with those who support the opposition.
The
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, said last week
she feared that the bloodshed in Qusayr would be repeated in Aleppo
and undermine international efforts to push for an end to more than
two years of civil war. The UN reported last week that some 93,000
people have now been killed in the conflict while more than a million
have been displaced.
The
feeling that the pro-Assad forces may be gaining the upper hand has
led to a flurry of diplomatic activity in the West and the Arab
world, focused on arming the rebels. Jordan’s King Abdullah told
graduating military cadets in Amman yesterday that they must be ready
to fend off any threats from Syria. More than half a million refugees
have already crossed the Syrian border into Jordan.
For
the West, Jordan is becoming an increasingly important fulcrum in the
regional response to the Syrian conflict. It is hosting a large-scale
military exercise involving thousands of US troops, and media reports
yesterday suggested that British soldiers could also be sent to
Jordan.
The
US has also agreed to install Patriot missile batteries along
Jordan’s 235-mile border with Syria and is allowing a squadron of
up to 24 F-16 fighter jets to remain after the exercises. Hours
earlier Egypt’s President Mohamed Morsi announced that Cairo would
cut all diplomatic ties with Syria and withdraw its diplomats in
Damascus.
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