21 Jan 2013 #Syria - defection of 450 regime soldiers from Damascus to Hasaka and Deir al-Zour under protection of FSA

01/04/2012 - #Syria - Damascus - FSA helps secure over 200 defected soldiers

#Syria rebels ready final assault on Sheikh Suleiman base

QABTAN AL-JABAL, Nov 24 (AFP): Rebels who have besieged Sheikh Suleiman army base for nearly two months are confident it will fall in days, giving them full control of a swathe of northwest Syria from Aleppo to the Turkish border.

Their optimism has been buoyed by a steady stream of defectors from the ranks of the several hundred troops defending the strategic base, the last major garrison still in army hands between the border and Syria’s northern metropolis.

“We have been besieging the base for nearly two months, the 300 or 400 soldiers entrenched inside are in a desperate situation,” rebel commander Sheikh Tawfik told AFP.

“Many have deserted. Just this morning five more escaped-they are with us now,” beams the bearded commander, whose authority is now unquestioned in the nearby town of Qabtan al-Jabal.

The base sprawls over nearly 200 hectares (nearly 500 acres) of rocky hills about 25 kilometres (15 miles) west of Aleppo.

Sheikh Tawfiq says according to the deserters, morale among rank and file conscripts is at rock bottom and it is only the officers, mostly drawn from the same Alawite minority as President Bashar al-Assad, who prevent a full surrender.

“Every soldier in the base understands that the end of the regime is near. They are just waiting for an opportunity to lay down their arms, but their Alawite officers prevent them,” he said.

9 Nov 2012 #Syria : 8,000 Syrians flee to Turkey

Mass exodus overnight brings total number of refugees across border to 120,000

  • AFP and AP
  • Published: 13:37 November 9, 2012
  • Image Credit: AFP
  • Syrian people cross the border between Syria and Turkey on Thursday, to enter the town of Ceylanpinar in Turkey. Clashes broke out early in the morning in the Rasulayn region of Syria’s al-Hasakah province, a few hundred meters from Ceylanpinar, whose residents could hear the sound of mortar fire and intense shooting across the border.

Ankara: Some 8,000 Syrian refugees fled to Turkey overnight amid escalating clashes between rebel forces and troops loyal to Damascus near the border, a foreign ministry official said on Friday.

The latest influx brought the total number of Syrian refugees in Turkey to more than 120,000, added the official on condition of anonymity.

Meanwhile, Turkey’s state-run agency says 71 Syrian soldiers, including two generals and 11 colonels, have fled to Turkey.

Anadolu Agency says Friday the group arrived in the Turkish border province of Hatay seeking refuge. They were taken to a camp that shelters military defectors, including dozens of other generals.

Clashes between Syrian regime forces and rebels continued for a second day around the town of Ras Al Ayn, in Al Hasaka province in northeastern Syria, forcing Turkish authorities to keep schools in the neighbouring Turkish town of Ceylanpinar closed.

Turkish officials said Thursday the rebels had taken control of the border crossing in Ras Al Ayn but clashes continued around a security building.

Turkey is sheltering more than 112,000 Syrian refugees.

6 Nov 2012 #Syria convulsed by assassination, defections

BEIRUT, LEBANON - Gunmen assassinated the brother of the Syrian parliament speaker Tuesday in a central Damascus neighborhood, the official Syrian news agency reported, as clashes between government forces and the rebels convulsed most major cities and seven defecting Syrian generals fled into neighboring Turkey.

The violence aroused new concern about the faltering diplomatic efforts to end the conflict. At the United Nations, the under-secretary general for political affairs, Jeffrey Feltman, briefed the Security Council and told reporters afterward that the antagonists in Syria appeared unable to break out of the “military logic” that force will dictate the outcome. He also expressed hope that the Security Council could put aside its divisiveness and “act in a unified fashion” to help the special Syria representative of the United Nations and the Arab League, Lakhdar Brahimi, who is to brief council members later this month.

‘Grimmer every day’

“Our overriding message is one of great concern,” Feltman said. “The situation inside Syria is turning grimmer every day, and the risk is growing that the crisis could explode outward into an already volatile region.”

The assassination victim, Mohammad Osama al-Laham, was shot while en route to work in Damascus, the Syrian capital, the official news agency SANA reported.

The agency attributed the attack to terrorists, the government’s standard description for the opposition to Syrian President Bashar Assad, and said the motive was to deprive Syria of skilled loyalists needed in the country.

Al-Laham, the brother of Jihad Laham, speaker of the People’s Assembly, held a doctorate in agriculture.

The assassination came one day after the funeral of Mohamed Rafeh, 30, a TV star who was abducted and killed, apparently by government opponents over the weekend.

Generals’ defections

In Turkey, which has become one of Assad’s biggest opponents, news agencies reported that seven Syrian army generals arrived with their families through the border town of Reyhanli in Hatay Province, escorted under tight security. The generals were sent to the Apaydin military camp, home to high-ranking military officers and their families who have fled Syria.

Turkey’s Zaman newspaper reported that the latest defections bring the total number of Syrian generals who have defected to 42.

Government and rebel reports detailed clashes in virtually every major urban area Tuesday, extending what had already been described as some of the worst violence in months.

The mayhem included three bombs that exploded late in the day in Qudsiya, a working-class suburb of Damascus, according to SANA and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a group based in Britain with contacts inside Syria. At least 10 people died and 40 were injured, the observatory said.

It said the bomb went off in Zahra Square, near an area that is heavily populated by Republican Guards, an elite military unit whose members are drawn from Assad’s minority Alawite sect, which controls Syria. The guards have been heavily involved in fighting regime opponents.

The bombings were part of a series of killings and attacks with booby-trapped cars that have targeted people or neighborhoods close to the seat of Assad’s government.

The death toll nationwide was at least 159.

6 Nov 2012 #Syria : Seven Syrian generals defect to Turkey: report

Free Syrian Army fighters pose near military trucks after they fought and defeated government troops at the airforce base in Salqin city near Idlib November 2, 2012. Picture taken November 2, 2012.  REUTERS/Hamam al-Sermeeni/Shaam News Network/HandoutFree Syrian Army fighters pose near military trucks after they fought and defeated government troops at the airforce base in Salqin city near Idlib November 2, 2012. Picture taken November 2, 2012. REUTERS/Hamam al-Sermeeni/Shaam News Network/Handout

ANKARA: Seven more Syrian army generals defected to Turkey on Tuesday to join opposition fighters as the regime in Damascus renewed air strikes across the country, the Anatolia news agency reported.

Amid tight security, the generals were taken to a camp in the southern border province of Hatay, it said.

Turkish officials refuse to give an exact number of Syrian generals currently on Turkish soil as some are returning to Syria to join the active fighters inside the conflict-wracked country.

Turkey is currently home to nearly 112,000 Syrian refugees registered in several camps along its volatile border, as well as the exiled Syrian opposition’s political and military leadership.

Army defectors, flanked by their families, stay in the Apaydin camp in Hatay province where security is tighter.

Turkey fell out with one-time ally Syria after the regime’s unleashed a deadly crackdown on protests in March last year, and has joined in Arab and Western calls for the ouster of President Bashar al-Assad.

11.9.12 new defections, officers and soldiers join FSA

Strained #Syrian army calls up reserves; some flee

04/09/12

DAMASCUS (Reuters) - Syria is calling up former soldiers from the reserves to active army service in growing numbers, a sign of the strain of efforts to crush the 17-month-old revolt against President Bashar al-Assad.

Several fleeing reservists and a serving army officer told Reuters that thousands of men had been called up in the past two months to bolster the 300,000 strong army, and many of them are failing to report for duty.

“We have two choices: Stay and kill fellow Syrians, or desert, and be on the run from military courts,” said a legal assistant summoned for duty in Damascus. Like others interviewed for this article, he asked not to be identified for security reasons.

One army officer contacted in Homs said he believed that only half of those called up in recent months had reported for duty, although it was not possible to verify that figure or ascertain whether other units had experienced similar levels of reservists failing to report.

The officer said many units had suffered heavy losses battling rebels.

“There is a shortage of men. A lot of fighters have been killed, and we have desertions,” he said by telephone, sighing.

Most Syrian men are required to serve in the army for two years when they turn 18 or after finishing university. After a man has served, he remains in the reserves and can be called up for active duty.

Syria’s conflict has killed more than 20,000 people. Fleeing reservists said that whatever their political stance, they did not want to be part of the country’s civil war.

The fighting has intensified in the past two months, with rebels, often led by army defectors, launching advances in the capital Damascus and commercial hub Aleppo despite being massively outgunned by one of the region’s best-equipped armies.

Syrian authorities, who say they are fighting foreign-backed terrorists, have not given full details of military casualties. One anti-Assad monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, says nearly 6,000 soldiers and members of the security forces have been killed.

DEMAND RISING

The Homs officer said reservists had been called up for several months but demand had risen in the past two months, especially since the surge in fighting in Damascus and Aleppo.

“We have yet to need full army mobilization. But if the situation deteriorates in the coming months, we may need it. The country is in a state of war and we need everyone’s help.”

Residents in Damascus say checkpoints across the city now inspect young men’s IDs to check they are not fleeing army service or have not been called up from the reserves. Some deserters dare not leave their homes, fearing neighbors who might report them.

The legal assistant, who became a reservist after finishing his required military service in Syria’s special forces two years ago, said he was stopped at a checkpoint in the capital and taken to an army reserve center outside Damascus for a two-week training session.

He said he ran away from his training camp one night, and is now in hiding.

Syrian law requires men who served in the military to get army approval for passports, state jobs and even marriage licenses, which makes it more difficult for reservists to avoid a call-up.

Fadi, a former artillery specialist, said he was called by the army for active duty and given 48 hours to prepare to leave his coastal city of Tartous.

“I was terrified. I don’t want my baby daughter to grow up fatherless. My wife is crying non-stop. If I have to be on the run for the rest of my life, I won’t report for duty,” he said.

A member of Assad’s minority Alawite sect, Fadi, 30, is trying to find a way to bribe a security officer to let him flee the country.

Many Alawites like Fadi have stood by Assad, fearing sectarian retribution from the Sunni Muslim majority leading the revolt. “If my community found out what I was trying to do, they would call me a traitor,” he said. “No one would help me hide.”

“GO, DIE”

The army officer in Homs said men under 30 or men who had recently completed their army service were being called up by military headquarters first, as well as men who had specialized in artillery or armored vehicles units.

Even opponents of Assad have been called up. Tamouz, a 28-year-old playwright who was arrested earlier this year for opposition activism, said he was called up for military service last week and fled the next day.

“I did my service in the infantry,” he said. “Nowadays, that basically means: ‘Go, die.’”

Syrian state television shows video loops of young soldiers shooting their weapons and marching in training drills to the sound of the national anthem, “Protectors of the Home.”

The legal assistant said that before he escaped he had trained with 200 conscripts from all around the country.

“The officer training us tried to raise our spirits, he would smile and play patriotic songs. Some people seemed excited, but most of us were scared and felt deflated.”

Once neutral, he said he was forced to pick sides in the conflict after his callup, and is now working with the opposition. “Why should we spend our whole lives serving the Assad family?”

(Reporting by a journalist who cannot be identified for security reasons; Writing by Erika Solomon; Editing by Peter Graff)

FSA commander: We control most areas of #Syria

07/08/12

The battle in Syria’s northern city of Aleppo will be decisive in shaping the future of the struggle and, despite the continuous deployment of reinforcements and new armored units by President Bashar al-Assad’s regime on the outskirts of the city, the Free Syrian Army (FSA) has claimed it controls large swathes of land in the country, especially in rural areas, with only military bases and urban areas in Damascus still under the control of the regime.

The embattled Assad regime faces tough challenges to endure in the face of the increasing defections of senior politicians and generals who were once key parts of the regime’s inner circle.

The recent defection of Prime Minister Riyad Hijab and two unnamed ministers to neighboring Jordan is a major blow to Assad, but there remain doubts over the real effect this will have on the resilience of the regime as the countries’ Alawites still seem to be loyal to Damascus. Riyad Hijab is the most senior civilian politician to defect since the outbreak of unrest over a year ago.

Amid ongoing debates over whether the world is witnessing the beginning of the end in Syria, Malik al-Kurdi, a senior commander in the FSA who currently heads several operations against the Syrian military in Aleppo, has claimed that the administration in rural areas has collapsed. In an exclusive interview with Today’s Zaman via telephone from Aleppo, al-Kurdi said the state is no longer in the rural areas as the FSA dominates these parts of the country.

Aleppo, the commercial center and largest city of the country, had remained quiet until the last weeks of July as it was a place in which Assad had held much confidence.

The spillover of fighting into the commercial city shows that the rebellion against Assad has truly become nationwide and the fate of the struggle in the city is likely to decide the future of the fighting, politicians and experts have underlined.

The regime has begun to employ more violent tactics and to strike indiscriminately at both civilians and rebels in Aleppo, which has entirely become a warzone.

“We are using guerrilla warfare as we lack heavy weapons to counter the troops of the regime. We have been launching hit-and-run operations aimed at dealing a major blow to the military with the minimum casualties of FSA fighters. If we stay permanently in one place, we could face heavy losses; therefore, we always change our positions,” al-Kurdi said, citing the imbalance of power wielded by the FSA and regime troops.

The rebels have often renewed their plea to Arab countries, Turkey and the rest of the world for rocket-propelled grenades and surface-to-air missiles so that they may come closer to matching the superiority of Assad’s army in conventional warfare.

Addressing the humanitarian tragedy in the war-torn city, al-Kurdi stated that the regime has cut the supply of bread and flour to Aleppo. He renewed his people’s plea to the world for urgent assistance in helping put an end to the deaths of civilians who are trapped in the ancient city.

“We urge the international community to take urgent measures to end the bloodshed and unremitted slaughter by the regime as the situation seems to be worsening,” the commander said, adding that more than a third of the Syrian population is homeless and suffering from starvation. Additionally, the Syrian people lack essential medical equipment. “We ask for medical supplies and arms,” he said.

Al-Kurdi added that the defection of Riyad Hijab has boosted the morale of the Syrian people and FSA fighters and has encouraged others to follow a similar path. It could embolden other potential defectors, al-Kurdi asserted.

FSA: Turkey, Arab countries must intervene in Syria

As the prolonged political and military impasse is unlikely to be overcome in the foreseeable future, al-Kurdi has called on Turkey and Arab countries to intervene militarily in Syria to end the bloodbath.

This marks the first time an FSA member has issued a direct call for military intervention in Syria, indicating a break with the traditional position of the armed organization, which had determined as its core objective the toppling of the regime by its own means. The FSA has only accepted military materials from other countries and has heavily relied on weapons captured after assaults on regime forces.

“Iran has sent troops through Iraq into Syria, and the presence of Iranian soldiers in the country has reached a significant level. We urgently demand a military intervention launched by Arab countries and Turkey,” al-Kurdi stated.

Moreover, he said the FSA wants a NATO air campaign directed at military targets with pinpoint accuracy in order to diminish the efficiency of the regime’s forces.

In early August, 47 Iranian pilgrims were kidnapped in Damascus. However, al-Kurdi argued they are not civilians as Iran claims but military advisors who had engaged in military operations against the FSA. “Syria is a warzone. The Iranians who were kidnapped by FSA fighters are members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards who came to Damascus with military aims,” he said. He added that the Syrian air forces had launched an airstrike on the location where the Iranian military advisors were being held and that during this air bombardment, several members of the FSA as well as civilians died.

The FSA sternly against fragmentation of Syria

As battles rage on in Syria’s major cities with no clear sign of a triumphant side, the possible fragmentation and disintegration of Syria has become a hot topic occupying the agendas of Western capitals and major international papers.

International pundits and western politicians have been contemplating possible scenarios that include separate Alawite, Sunni, Druze and Kurdish states in a post-Assad Syria.

This issue came to the fore when Syrian troops withdrew from the northern part of the country and handed control of some northern towns over to the Democratic Union Party (PYD), a political offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

According to al-Kurdi, this was a well-planned and carefully considered move by Assad as part of a plot to divide Syria and ensure the establishment of an Alawite state in a coastal region of the country as Sunni Arabs would be pitted against Syrian Kurds in a struggle to take control of the north.

“The regime withdrew its troops from near the Turkish border and left the area to the control of the PYD and the PKK, aiming to create problems between Arabs and Kurds. The plan is to create an Alawite state in a coastal region of the country, leaving Sunnis and Kurds involved in a struggle to control the [northern] areas,” al-Kurdi said.

He stated that the FSA sternly opposes such a plan and will not allow Syria become a divided country. “Our Kurdish brothers mostly do not endorse the goals of the PKK and want to live side-by-side with Arabs in a democratic Syria that will be formed after the fall of Assad.”

The fall of the Assad regime would be a major blow to the Alawites, who heavily invested in the regime and have not ceased to endorse Assad throughout the 17-month unrest. Alawites now fear the rebels will seek revenge in a post-Assad period for their role in suppressing the uprising.

To alleviate these concerns and fears, al-Kurdi said the Alawites are a natural part of Syrian society and emphasized that the FSA is not carrying out a sectarian war. “As a result of pressure by the regime, the Alawites have been mobilized against us as if this were a sectarian war. The regime has manipulated the Alawites’ fear of sectarian strife and convinced them to take part on its side,” he explained.

He called on Alawites to unite with the opposition against their common enemy and oppressor, inviting them to take part in a democratic Syria where the rights of all groups will be granted and government positions will be distributed according to merit rather than nepotism or sectarianism.

Clinton sees need to plan for post-Assad #Syria

07/08/12

Associated Press

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Tuesday that the defections of Syria’s prime minister and other senior officials increase the urgency of planning for the ouster of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

PRETORIA, South Africa —

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Tuesday that the defections of Syria’s prime minister and other senior officials increase the urgency of planning for the ouster of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

In South Africa’s capital, Pretoria, Clinton said the U.S. and other nations need to make sure that Syrian state institutions remain intact once Assad loses his grip on power.

“The intensity of the fighting in Aleppo, the defections, really point out how imperative it is that we come together and work toward a good transition plan,” Clinton said.

On a visit to start the handover of control of an AIDS prevention and treatment program, she also said that global efforts to stop the virus “have saved hundreds of thousands of lives.” South Africa has the world’s highest rate of HIV infection.

On Syria, Clinton said the opposition is becoming increasingly effective and better armed. But the fighting has created “desperate humanitarian needs of those suffering inside Syria and those who have fled. These are growing by the day,” she said.

Clinton spoke a day after the defection of Prime Minister Riad Hijab, the latest in a string of high-level departures from the Assad regime.

The defections reinforce her view that Assad’s regime will not survive. “I do think we can begin talking about planning for what happens next: the day after the regime does fall. I am not going to put a timeline on it, I can’t possibly predict it, but I know it’s going to happen as do most observers around the world,” Clinton said.

She said she would raise these issues when she travels to Turkey for talks on Syria on Saturday.

Clinton played down U.S. concerns over South Africa’s reluctance to support Western-backed initiatives at the United Nations, where South Africa is wrapping up a two-year elected term on the Security Council. South Africa abstained on the last Security Council resolution on Syria, which would have called for sanctions for non-compliance with Kofi Annan’s peace plan. The resolution failed on a double veto by Russia and China.

“As crisis and opportunities arise there are tough issues that we have to tackle together,” Clinton said. “We do not always see eye-to-eye on these issues. … Sometimes we will disagree, as friends do.”

Clinton and Foreign Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane pledged to intensify cooperation in dealing with crises in African hotspots, such as in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Somalia.

In South Africa, 5.7 million people - 17.8 percent of the population - have tested positive for HIV. PEPFAR, the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, has spent $3.2 billion on anti-retroviral drugs and HIV prevention programs in South Africa since 2004. The program was initiated by President George W. Bush and has been continued by President Barack Obama’s administration.

On Wednesday in Cape Town, Clinton will preside at a ceremony at which the U.S. will begin shifting administrative control of the AIDS initiative and treatment implementation to the South Africans. The handover will take five years.

“We believe as partners on the continent we can do more about stability and the way we are going to foster economic growth and security,” Nkoana-Mashabane said.

Later, at a U.S.-South Africa business summit, Clinton hailed the growing trade ties between the two countries. She noted that two-way trade had shot up 21 percent to almost $22 billion from 2010 to 2011.

Nearly 98 percent of South Africa’s exports to the U.S. enter the country duty-free under the African Growth and Opportunity Act, which is set to expire in 2015. Nkoana-Mashabane urged the U.S. Congress to extend the act and Clinton said the administration would work with lawmakers on it.

Clinton is in South Africa at the midpoint of an 11-day tour that has already taken her to Senegal, Uganda, South Sudan, Kenya and Malawi. After the stop in Cape Town, she will travel on to Nigeria, Ghana and Benin before moving on to Turkey.

#Syria Prime Minister Riad Hijab defects

06/08/12

Syrian Prime Minister Riad Hijab has defected from President Bashar al-Assad’s government to join “the revolution”, his spokesman says.

Mr Hijab was appointed less than two months ago and his departure is the highest-profile defection since the uprising began in March 2011.

State-run TV said he had been sacked.

Riad Hijab, who is said to have fled with his family, is a Sunni Muslim from the Deir al-Zour area of eastern Syria which has been caught up in the revolt.

Early reports said Mr Hijab had defected to Jordan, but Jordanian state TV later denied this. By Monday afternoon, Mr Hijab’s whereabouts were still unknown.

‘Freedom and dignity’

Earlier, his spokesman Mohammed el-Etri told al-Jazeera TV that he was in “a safe location”.

“I address you today at this grave hour where the country is living under the brunt of genocide and barbarian brutal killing against unarmed people who are simply demanding freedom and a dignified life,” ran Mr Hijab’s statement read by his spokesman.

“Today I declare… that I have defected from the terrorist, murderous regime and [am] joining the holy revolution. And I declare that from today I am a soldier of this holy revolution.”

Mr Etri later told the BBC that the Syrian regime was “now in its last throes” and that it had been dealt “a fatal blow” by Mr Hijab’s defection.

Mr Hijab is the first Syrian cabinet minister to defect.

The BBC’s Jim Muir in neighbouring Lebanon says the defection is a stunning blow to President Assad and a clear sign of the stresses building up within the regime.

Unconfirmed reports suggested that two other cabinet ministers had also deserted and there were claims that a third, Finance Minister Mohammad Jalilati, had been arrested while trying to flee.

But Syrian state TV said he was still in his office working as usual, and it broadcast what it said was a phone interview with Mr Jalilati categorically denying reports that he had been detained.

Last month, Syria’s ambassador to Iraq, Nawaf Fares, deserted to the opposition. Like the former prime minister, he was also from Deir al-Zour. Brig Gen Manaf Tlas, who was considered close to President Assad, also defected in July.

Thirty other generals have crossed the border into Turkey so far and Turkish news agency Anatolia reported on Monday that another general had fled with five high-ranking officers and more than 30 soldiers.

The prime minister’s dismissal was reported by Syrian state TV, which gave no immediate explanation.

Our correspondent said he had been regarded as a Baath party loyalist who was appointed following May general elections which were part of President Assad’s reform process.

In the al-Jazeera statement, Mr el-Etri said Riad Hijab’s defection had been arranged with the Free Syrian Army months before.

His replacement, Omar Ghalawanji, will reportedly lead a caretaker government.

‘Aleppo facing carnage’

Hours earlier, state TV said a bomb had gone off on the third floor of the Syrian state TV and radio building in Damascus, wounding three people.

A BBC Arabic reporter in the capital said the explosion in Umawiyeen Square in central Damascus had “ripped the floor” but had left the transmission of the three Syrian channels unaffected.

Pro-government forces have regained control of areas of Damascus seized by rebels in recent weeks but the rebels are continuing to hold out in the second city, Aleppo.

Opposition activists reported an intense bombardment of parts of Aleppo on Monday as 20,000 troops surround the northern city.

A spokeswoman for the exiled opposition Syrian National Council (SNC) told French radio station Europe1 that Aleppo was undoubtedly facing “carnage”, with a regime deploying its full military might, including its air force, against lightly armed rebels using guerrilla tactics.

Meanwhile, Iran has strongly denied that 48 Iranians seized by Syrian rebels at the weekend include members of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.

Rebels posted an online video of the Iranians on Sunday, saying they had been seized from a bus in Damascus the day before.

The rebels alleged they were on a reconnaissance mission in the capital.

Tehran, a key ally of President Assad, says they were visiting a renowned Shia pilgrimage site and has appealed to Turkey and Qatar to help secure their release. A rebel commander said their documents were still being checked.

#Syrian premier defects to Jordan –– official source

Former Syrian prime minister Riyad Hijab is seen in Al Qunatara in this photo taken on February 15, 2011 (Reuters file photo)

AMMAN –– Syrian Prime Minister Riyad Hijab has defected to Jordan, a Jordanian official source said on Monday.

“Hijab is in Jordan with his family,” said the source, who did not want to be further identified.

But Syria’s state-run TV said the country’s prime minister has been fired less than two months after taking up his post.
Hijab is a former agriculture minister and a loyalist in President Bashar Assad’s ruling Baath party.
He was appointed as prime minister on June 23.

The TV did not immediately give a reason why Hijab was dismissed from his post Monday. It says Omar Ghalawanji, Hijab’s deputy prime minister, was named as a temporary replacement.


02/08/12

#Syria Defection of Deputy Chief of the Air Intelligence in Deir Al-Zour

29/07/12

#SYRIA, OFFICERS AND SOLDIERS DEFECT IN IDLIB

#Syria’n rebels say gain ground as grip of army weakens

27/07/2012

(Reuters) - Since he joined a poorly armed, ragtag rebel group, Syrian fighter Radwan al-Saaour has been mostly on the run, hiding in the woods of Idlib province near Turkey as loyalist forces overran town after town killing people at will.

But his fortunes, and those of the armed resistance movement against President Bashar al-Assad’s rule, have changed dramatically in the last few weeks. Last month, Saaour celebrated repelling an army attack on the town of Kafr Karmin by setting a Russian-made army tank on fire.

“We took their anti-aircraft guns, the booty and left a dozen of their men dead,” said Saaour, 26, a former labourer who once earned a living in the port of Latakia.

Sixteen months after the uprising against Assad began, the battle between lightly armed rebels and the awesome firepower of the Syrian military - one of the largest standing armies in the Middle East - has become a war of attrition as defections weaken Assad’s forces and the rebels’ combat skills improve.

Saaour’s successes have been matched by broader rebel gains across the country in the last two weeks, as fighters seized several border posts and took the fight against Assad to the capital, Damascus, and to Aleppo, Syria’s biggest city.

It hasn’t all gone the rebels’ way though - government troops have since regained control over most of Damascus and were poised on Friday to launch a counter-attack in Aleppo after bringing in reinforcements from nearby provinces.

But while intense army shelling in the last few weeks has forced hundreds of Saaour’s comrades to retreat from towns within Idlib province and rural areas north of Aleppo, most of the countryside in northwest Syria is now outside the control of the overstretched military.

“We are now in control of most of the countryside around Idlib and the countryside north of Aleppo,” Saaour, one of hundreds of fighters who go back and forth across the border, told Reuters in a flat in the Turkish border city of Reyhanli.

Almost 70 percent of the large countryside towns in northwestern Syria that border Turkey - towns such as Maarat al-Nuaman, Sarmada, Maarat Nisreen, Kafar Takharim, Teftanaz and Binish - are in rebel hands, several Free Army commanders say.

In northern and western rural areas near Aleppo, the country’s largest city and commercial hub, the larger towns of Atareb, Darat Azeh, Anadan, Tel Rifat and scores of smaller villages have also fallen under rebel control.

That has left only the southern and eastern rural outskirts of the city of Aleppo still under the control of Assad’s forces.

“If it had not been for the shelling he would have no control at all over the countryside. The more losses on the ground, the more defections that weaken the army,” said Abu Omar, a young fighter from Idlib.

ARMY ON BACKFOOT

Only Harem, a pro-Assad Sunni Muslim border town, and the Shi’ite Muslim villages of Foua and Kfrya, 25 km (15 miles) from the border with Turkey, as well as parts of Jisr Shughur, now remain as isolated pro-army territory in the predominantly Sunni-populated Idlib province that borders Turkey, rebels say.

Subjected to more frequent attacks and roadside bombs, Assad’s battalions in the northwest have been increasingly confined to several large bases, including the main Mastuma army base, 4 km (2 miles) south of Idlib city.

The headquarters of the feared 46th battalion of the Republican Guard south of the restive town of Atareb, 15 km (10 miles) west of the Turkish border post of Reyhanli, has been the source of some of the heaviest artillery barrages, rebels say.

In the last two months, the army has even deserted checkpoints that used to seal off one county town from another after suffering losses from ambushes and landmines targeting army convoys on supply routes to Aleppo, Idlib and Homs.

One sophisticated operation last month saw the rebels briefly capture the strategic air base of Ghanto near the restive town of Rastan where they destroyed surface-to-air missiles.

Around the same time, a daring raid on the Jebel Sheikh Barakat mountain, almost 20 km (12 miles) northeast of Aleppo, saw rebels overrun a radar station, loot its contents, and kill its defenders. Last week, rebels also overran the main Bab al-Hawa crossing with Turkey, and two other border posts.

“The state’s authority has almost disappeared on the main international highway, all the way from Turkey to Homs,” said one Syrian business traveller who entered the crossing from Aleppo and gave his name as Barakat.

In the town of Anadan, 20 km (12 miles) north of Aleppo, fighters say they return at night to engage the army in hit-and-run attacks on checkpoints and nearby security compounds, even after the army forced them to retreat to nearby mountains.

“They don’t have control during the night and even during the day they cannot stay too long,” said Ibrahim Maatouk, 35, a local rebel commander, brought by rebels to a Turkish ambulance at the border and rushed to surgery for bullet wounds in the chest and left leg.

“They are shelling rebel-held countryside towns randomly as far as 30 km (20 miles) away from their bases. Their aim is to terrify locals and make people hate us and turn them against us but the effect is the opposite. The more they bombard us the more people get closer together and hate them,” he added.

BOLDER ATTACKS

Young fighters, many suffering shrapnel wounds and broken limbs, say months of gun battles have honed their combat skills.

“We did not have experience to lay explosives, or any coherent leadership … but this is now changing,” said Khaldoun al-Omar who arrived from Sarmada, 5 km (3 miles) from the Turkish border.

“The battles are looking more like warfare between two armies, even though they far outgun us,” he added.

Higher ranking officers who joined the rebels in June with rocket-propelled launchers looted from army depots in the village of Khan Sobol and Jabal al-Zawya helped bring much needed expertise to the poorly equipped force.

“Two months ago we would not be able to confront a tank. Now, we are able to and the captured ones have been hidden in the mountains for when the time comes to use them,” said Omar, who underwent six hours of surgery in Turkey for a leg wound.

Omar said hundreds of youths, many of whom already had military training as conscripts, were now getting more rigorous training in woodland areas along the long porous border in makeshift camps.

Young rebels were now also using more sophisticated improvised explosive devices against armoured vehicles that the Syrian army has used in battle against them.

Syrian official media have shown munitions they say have been confiscated from “armed terrorists”, in displays which officials say are further proof that foreign financed weapons are getting into the hands of rebels.

Although they are becoming bolder and more effective across large swathes of the countryside, fighters say a lack of anti-tank weapons, bullets and rocket-propelled grenades puts them at a disadvantage when attacking heavily fortified army bases.

Several months ago, rebels retreated from the city of Idlib, where attacks against the army by youths shouldering AK-47 rifles did little damage and resulted in massive tank and artillery retaliation, rebels say.

“We ran out of ammunition and we had to pull back, even though we could have held them back for weeks if we had had more,” said Abdul Rahman al-Sheikh, a brigade commander now operating in the plantations near Taftanaz, a restive town in Idlib province.

The army’s use of sophisticated transceivers in helicopters to track rebel communications has also helped pinpoint many rebel hideouts for aerial bombardment, said Anas Haj Hassan, a rebel fighter.

“They are getting the location from mobiles and walkie talkies we use to communicate to hit the building we are taking cover in,” said Hassan, who only survived an attack that killed five of his group by leaving the location half an hour before.

A young wounded fighter, who goes by the name of Abu Abdullah, 27, who had just arrived from the town of Saraqib, said lack of sufficient anti-tank weapons and RPGs was hindering further gains.

“Our weapons are still weak, we need much more, at least RPGs and anti-tank missiles that we are now mostly using. The Russian AK-47 no longer has a role in the fiercest battles we are now waging against Assad’s forces,” said Abu Abdullah, lying in a Turkish hospital bed a few kilometres away from the battleground inside Syria.