There are clear signs that the Jihadists are taking the war to Lebanon, using Hezbollah involvement as a pretext.
Syrian
town of Qusair falls to Hezbollah in breakthrough for Assad
Rebels
confirm they have pulled out of strategic town after three-week siege
by Lebanese militia
26
January, 2013
The
Syrian border town of Qusair has fallen to Hezbollah forces after a
three-week siege that pitched the powerful Lebanese Shia militia
against several thousand Sunni rebels in what had been billed as a
defining battle of the civil war.
Rebel
groups released a statement early on Wednesday confirming that they
had pulled out of the strategic town in the early hours. Rebel
fighters are believed to have taken refuge in hamlets near Syria's
third city, Homs, around 20 miles (30km) to the north.
Outgunned
since the siege began, rebels inside the town said they had no option
but to flee "in face of this huge arsenal and lack of supplies
and the blatant intervention of Hezbollah".
"Dozens
of fighters stayed behind and ensured the withdrawal of their
comrades along with the civilians," the statement said.
The
fate of residents who remained as the battle raged remains unclear.
Rebel leaders from the town who contacted the Guardian earlier this
week said more than 15,000 people had stayed in their homes from a
prewar population of around 30,000.
Qusair
had been heavily bombed by artillery and shells dropped by the Syrian
air force and rebel supply lines had been severed by regime forces to
the north and east and Hezbollah advances from the south and west.
Hezbollah
has led the attack. Its large-scale public role has drawn strident
criticism in Lebanon and across the Sunni Arab world, where
inter-Muslim sectarian tensions have reached dangerous highs,
especially since the assault on Qusair began.
There
was no immediate reaction from the Hezbollah leadership. However,
media outlets loyal to the group announced that the town had been
"cleared of terrorists" at around 6.30am on Wednesday.
Hezbollah is believed to have suffered close to 200 casualties during
the fighting, a higher number than its members had expected before
launching the attack.
Shia
residents of the south Beirut suburb of Dahiyah were on Wednesday
handing out celebratory sweets at traffic lights to mark the group's
victory in Syria – a battlefield far from southern Lebanon, where
it has battled its traditional foe, Israel, for much of the past 30
years.
Hezbollah's
role as a spearhead against a Sunni insurgency in an Arab land has
meant a rethink of the group's raison d'etre and has unambiguously
wedded it to the fortunes of the Assad regime, whose military had
been unable to gain ground in numerous battles across the country
until the increased role of Hezbollah and a militia of Shia fighters
from Syria and elsewhere, known as Abu Fadl al-Abbas.
Iran,
the main patron of both groups, released a statement on Wednesday
morning "congratulating the Syrian people for their victory".
In
recent days Hezbollah had deployed hundreds of its elite forces to
Qusair, a sign that the battle was drawing to a close despite
resistance from rebels who had proved tougher than expected. The
defence of the town was primarily led by homegrown fighters, among
them defectors. However, reinforcements from Homs and Aleppo, as well
as a contingent of around 200 from the al-Qaida-aligned Jabhat
al-Nusra, arrived one week ago. The total number of fighters is
thought to have been around 3,000.
Rebel
casualties are unknown. But on Monday, a surgeon from the town
contacted the Guardian to say that his supplies of essential
medicines had run out. "We have had no resupplies at all,"
he said. "Nothing has been able to get through."
Qusair
had been hailed as a key strategic route for both sides. Located
roughly halfway between Damascus and Homs, it is situated on a
crucial supply line for the regime, which had for much of the past
year been unable to secure the road between Syria's first and third
cities.
The
majority Sunni town also stands incongruously between the Shia
villages of northern Lebanon and along the border itself and Syria's
Alawite heartland, which spreads from near Homs north-west to the
Mediterranean cities of Latakia and Tartous.
Maintaining
a contiguous link between the areas is believed to have been a
military goal for regime officials in the event that the war leads to
a breakdown of borders in the region and a need to consolidate a safe
zone for the Alawite and Shia populations.
Buoyed
by victory in Qusair, a broader role for Hezbollah is now thought to
be on the agenda. Unconfirmed reports in recent days have suggested
that the group will now be moved to Aleppo in similarly large
numbers, where it will attempt to dislodge rebel groups who have
controlled 60% of Syria's largest city for the past 10 months.
Lebanon's
Baalbek hit by rockets launched from Syria
RT
At
least five rockets launched from Syria reportedly hit the city of
Baalbek in Lebanon on Wednesday, according to the AFP.
According
to that source, three rockets hit the Hezbollah stronghold near the
city’s centre. There is speculation that the attack may have been
in retribution for Hezbollah’s role in the Syrian army’s
successful siege against Qusayr, also near the border with Lebanon
and until recently rebel-held territory.
The
loss of Qusayr is thought to be a significant setback for rebel
forces opposing President Assad.
The
Arab League on Wednesday condemned the involvement of Hezbollah, the
Lebanon-based Shiite group. The Arab League notably includes several
influential Sunni Muslim Gulf states, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, both of
which have been major supporters of the ongoing rebellion against
Assad.
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