12/22/2012 - #Syria - Aleppo - Jubhat al-Nusra declared ‘no-fly zone’ over Aleppo

Al-Nusra Front (Jubhat al-Nusra), a group of fighters in Syria, has declared what it called ‘no-fly-zone’ over Aleppo, stating that the Syrian regime’s army is using commercial flights to transport military gear and troops.

In a video sent to Al Jazeera, the group warned any civilians of boarding commercial flights to avoid being used as human shields.

They also confirmed laying siege on the al-Nairab airfield, adding that any plane over the skies of Aleppo will be targeted.

Al-Nusra told Al Jazeera they will use anti-aircraft guns of 23mm and 57mm caliber to down planes.

Senate orders study on U.S. no-fly zone in #Syria

04/12/12

The Senate voted Tuesday to order President Obama to study what military options the U.S. would have if it wanted to get more deeply involved in the revolt  against Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad.

Backers said it was meant to be a “reasonable assessment” of what U.S. forces can do to degrade Mr. Assad’s air power, but opponents said the study would mark a first step toward the kind of “no-fly zone” Mr. Obama imposed on Libya two years ago.

“This amendment is simply a way of saying we in the Senate are concerned, care about the slaughter going on in Syria and agitated [that] those in the rest of the world are not doing more,” said Sen. Joe Lieberman, Connecticut independent.

The 92-6 vote came as part of the annual defense policy debate. Minutes after the amendment was approved, the Senate voted 98-0 to pass the broader bill, which lays out everything from troop levels to restrictions on how the military fights the war on terror.

With the U.S. involved in Afghanistan and with the Middle East still simmering in the wake of the Arab Spring, policymakers are grappling with what role America should play.

Backers said the classified assessment from the Pentagon of a no-fly zone plan would help inform Congress as to what options there are for the U.S. to try to contain the regime in Syria, which is engaged in a pitched battle with rebels.

Among the options the Pentagon would study would be the no-fly zone, deploying air-defense systems such as Patriot missile batteries to neighboring countries, or engaging in air strikes to take out Syrian aircraft.

The study does not authorize U.S. force.

But Sen. Rand Paul, Kentucky Republican, said the amendment smacks of the beginning of involvement.

“I think it’s a bad idea to discuss contingency plans for war,” he said.

He said the last no-fly zone the U.S. led, in Libya, has produced a questionable result, ousting dictator Moammar Gadhafi but replacing him with a government that is not clearly pro-American. And he pointed to the results of elections in Egypt, where the Muslim Brotherhood’s candidate won the presidency, as another sign of worry.

The defense bill will now have to be squared with the House, which passed its own version earlier this year.

Prospect of #Syria no-fly zone echoes action in Libya

15/11/12

The prospect of British involvement in a no-fly

zone to tackle the bloodshed in Syria comes a

year after the end of a similar military mission in

Libya that was estimated to have cost the UK

more than £1 billion.


An RAF Typhoon takes off for a mission over Libya

Hailed as a success following the toppling of Colonel Gaddafi, it saw the RAF fly hundreds of sorties against targets in the North African country.

The allied mission gave relief to rebels who had risen up against the dictator after they became pinned down in their stronghold of Benghazi, and eventually helped bring about their ultimate triumph.

It lasted from March to October. In June, the Ministry of Defence admitted that the war could cost taxpayers £260 million but according to later analysis the cost of the operation until the end of August was between £850 million and £1.75 billion.

The revolt had erupted in mid-February as part of the Arab spring, a wave of popular unrest across the Middle East. But by the time the allied mission began, Gaddafi’s forces were on the verge of marching on Benghazi.

Raids smashed the dictator’s air force before the conflict appeared to head towards stalemate, with ill-trained rebels struggling to fight their way west towards Tripoli.

But with Nato destroying thousands of targets, they eventually took the capital in August, sending Gaddafi into hiding.

It was an alliance air strike that hit his convoy as it fled Sirte, leading to his capture and killing on October 20.

A coalition led by the United States, France and Britain launched the first salvos in the air war on March 19, before handing over command of the mission to Nato on March 31.

The alliance, joined by Arab partners Qatar and United Arab Emirates, flew some 26,000 sorties and destroyed almost 6,000 targets during the conflict.

The Ministry of Defence disclosed that Britain hit more than 900 targets, including secret police headquarters, command bunkers, tanks, rocket launchers and armed trucks. British combat aircraft flew more than 1,600 missions over Libya.

British warships stationed off the coast, and aircraft, also delivered humanitarian aid as well as rescuing refugees.

One of the vessels, HMS Liverpool, became the first warship since the first Gulf War to come under enemy fire.

US intelligence prompted Turkish interception of #Syrian plane, report says

21/10/12

TODAYSZAMAN.COM, İSTANBUL

Intelligence provided by US agencies was behind Turkey’s recent interception of a Syria-bound passenger plane on suspicion that it was carrying military equipment, a US news report said on Saturday.

Turkish jets forced the Syrian plane, en route from Moscow to Damascus, to land at an airport in Ankara on Oct. 10 and officials seized military communication equipment and parts that could be used in missiles before allowing the plane to resume its journey.

While Turkish officials have so far declined to name the source of the intelligence obtained by Turkey on the presence of non-civilian cargo on the plane, the Washington Post quoted US officials as saying that US intelligence agencies were behind the tip that led the Turkish military to intercept and ground the plane.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said last week the Syrian plane was carrying Russian-made ammunition destined for Syria’s Defense Ministry.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said last Friday that the grounded plane was legally carrying Russian radar parts for Syria.   

Lavrov insisted the shipment of “electric equipment for radars” was legitimate cargo in compliance with international law, but he added that it was of “dual purpose,” meaning it could have both civilian and military applications.

According to the report, “as Syria’s internal conflict has increasingly spilled across its northern border into Turkey, the US government has stepped up cooperation with its key NATO ally.”

The report quoted US officials as saying that military officials from both countries have recently “met to make contingency plans to impose no-fly zones over Syrian territory or seize Syria’s stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons.”

19/10/12

US Considers No-Fly Zone in #Syria

Scott Stearns

Turkey facing questions on #Syria policy

08/09/12


Syrian refugees flock to Turkey and Jordan: Tens of thousands of Syrian refugees have spilled across the border into Turkey and Jordan since the 17-month uprising in their homeland began.

By Karin Brulliard, Published: September 7

ANTAKYA, Turkey — Turkey, a rising heavyweight in the Muslim world, has led the international campaign to oust the regime in next-door Syria. But as the fighting drags on, Turkey is complaining that the United States and others have left it abandoned on the front line of a conflict that is bleeding across its border.

With its calls for an international haven for refugees in Syria going nowhere, Turkey is rushing to shelter an influx of about 80,000 Syrians. In the east, Kurdish militants who Turkey alleges are aided by Syria are intensifying deadly attacks. And in this Alawite-heavy border region, a rest and resupply hub for the mainly Sunni Syrian rebels, worries are growing that Syria’s sectarian strife might infect Turkey.

Turkish officials stand behind their Syria policy, and the problems have posed little threat to the moderately Islamist government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan or to Turkey’s carefully cultivated popularity in the region. But as opinion polls indicate declining domestic support for the government’s stance, Turkey is finding it has limited room to manage fallout that analysts say it did not anticipate when it turned against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad last year.

“Ankara now realizes that it doesn’t have the power to ­rearrange — forget it in the region, but also not in Syria,” said Gokhan Bacik, director of the Middle East Strategic Research Center at Turkey’s Zirve University. “So Ankara desperately needs American support. But American support is not coming.”

When a U.S. delegation visited late last month, the Turks made the case they had made two weeks earlier to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, a senior administration official said: They were overwhelmed with Syrians, and they wanted the United States and others to establish safe areas, protected by a no-fly zone, for them inside Syria. Their limit, the Turks warned, was 100,000 refugees.

Clinton, confronted with emotional Turkish pleas, said that a no-fly zone would require major outside military intervention and that the United States did not believe it would help, according to the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive conversations. But rather than dismiss Turkey’s concerns outright, Clinton called for further bilateral discussions and an “operation and command” structure for the two governments to coordinate their responses to the crisis.

Turkey’s posture toward Assad is the result of an about-face. Before the uprising, Syria was the centerpiece of Turkey’s “zero problems with neighbors” foreign policy, and trade and travel between the countries flourished.

Now Turkey hosts the opposition Syrian National Council and provides a haven to the rebel Free Syrian Army and hundreds of defected Syrian soldiers. On Wednesday, Erdogan called Syria a “terrorist state.” The stance has boosted Turkey’s credibility in the Arab world but complicated its relations with Iran and Russia, which support Assad.

Turkey has constructed a string of 11 refugee camps along its border and is building more for newcomers, who the government says enter at a rate of 4,000 a day. Thousands are packed into public schools and dormitories, and hundreds of Syrians are being treated in Turkish hospitals.

Turkey backtracked on a recent statement that it would close its doors at 100,000 refugees. But Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who is facing growing criticism at home, suggested regret last week over the open-door policy.

“There is an increasing sense in Turkey that, through making such a sacrifice and tackling an enormous issue all by itself, we are leading the international community to complacency and inaction,” he said at the United Nations.

The refugee crisis is swelling as Turkish headlines are dominated by deadly battles in the alpine southeast between security forces and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, which has waged a separatist insurgency for 28 years. Turkish officials accuse Syria of arming the guerrillas and empowering a PKK offshoot in sections of northeastern Syria along the Turkish border. Last month, Turkish officials blamed the PKK for a bombing that killed nine civilians in the city of Gaziantep.

Turkey is particularly concerned that Syrian missiles could fall into the hands of the PKK, enabling it to attack the helicopters Turkey relies on to fight the insurgents, Bacik said.

Yet even as Turkey condemns Assad, frets about a growing power vacuum in Syria and pleads for international intervention, officials and analysts say the country has no appetite for deploying its military unilaterally to confront Assad or secure a refugee zone.

There is widespread public opposition in Turkey to military action, and analysts say Turkey is wary of jeopardizing its popularity in a region where the legacy of Ottoman rule remains fresh. The Turkish military is ill-prepared for what could be a prolonged, Iraq-style sectarian war, said Henri Barkey, a Turkey expert at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania.

“They realize this is a Pandora’s box, that you go in and God knows how you’re going to come out,” Barkey said.

Barkey said Turkey’s 566-mile border with Syria made the conflict “a no-win situation for the Turks from the beginning.” Turkish commentators and opposition politicians have seized on the issue as a policy failure, and some analysts and U.S. officials said Turkey exacerbated its woes by limiting U.N. involvement in the camps and allowing Sunni rebels and refugees to concentrate in the largely Alawite province of Hatay.

“The government is facing a crisis for which it has no answers, and a public at home that is growing increasingly uneasy over this,” Semih Idiz, a foreign policy analyst, wrote in the Hurriyet Daily News, an English-language newspaper in Turkey. “If this is not a debacle, then what is?”

That unease is palpable in Antakya, less than an hour from the border. Many residents of this scenic town and surrounding Hatay province are members of the Alawite minority Shiite sect that dominates the Syrian regime. Syria and Turkey are majority Sunni.

Antakya had been a shopping destination for Syrians. Since the rebellion, it has become a base for Syrian refugees and rebels, including thickly bearded men who stand out in a town where sundresses and shorts are common. Cross-border trade has slowed, and apartment prices have spiked.

Here, support for Assad remains strong, and there is simmering anxiety that Erdogan, the prime minister, is supporting the Syrian rebellion to cement Sunni supremacy in the region. Those fears have been stoked by Turkey’s main opposition party, which has accused the government of training radical Islamists in a nearby camp for defectors. The government denies that and says it has not armed rebels.

“They’re shaping some new religious fighters. What is the guarantee those fighters would not fight back against Turkey someday?” said Refik Eryilmaz, an opposition member of parliament from Hatay, which hosts five refugee camps.

Ismail Kimyeci, the Hatay chairman of Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, said critics are overstating the presence of fighters in Antakya. He dismissed the concerns as propaganda meant to stir division. “The Syrian people are demanding a new, free country,” Kimyeci said. Of the Syrians in Hatay, he said: “We don’t really see which religion they are. The Turkish policy is to help everyone.”

But tensions are festering. In interviews, Antakyans complained about Syrian rebels ditching restaurant tabs or robbing women of their jewelry, though none could cite personal experience. Last weekend, several thousand people protested Turkey’s participation in what was described as an imperialist plot against Syria. Some said all rebels must leave Turkey.

“They are saying, ‘After we finish in Syria, we will cut your throats here,’ ” said Ali Zafer, 33, a teacher who said he supports Assad, describing one common rumor about the rebels. Turkey, he said, “especially brought them to Antakya, to kill Alawites.”

Syrians interviewed said they generally feel welcome but know that might wear off. At a rebel safe house in Reyhanli, where the Alawite population is smaller, occupants said Turks stop by with supplies and encouragement.

“We are trying our best to obey the rules of a foreign country,” said a rebel commander who goes by the nom de guerre Abu Hashim.

But he also contended that the controversy should motivate Turkey to speed an end to the war. “It’s better for the Turkish government to send us weapons,” he said, “so they can avoid this fuss here.”

Karen DeYoung in Washington contributed to this report.

34 perish as #Syria death toll mounts – With no ‘no-fly zone’, rebels target airports

05/09/12

34 perish as Syria death toll mounts

– With no ‘no-fly zone’, rebels target

airports


ALEPPO: The body of a man on the ground during clashes between Syrian army forces and opposition fighters in the area of Malls in the restive Seif Al-Dawla neighborhood. — AFP

DAMASCUS: Syrian troops backed by artillery and warplanes fought rebels on multiple fronts yesterday as peace envoy Lakhdar Brahimi described the death toll as “staggering” and destruction “catastrophic.” In the diplomatic arena, President Bashar Al-Assad came under renewed fire from Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who said Syria had become a “terrorist state”, and from Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi, who told him to go. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said fighter jets bombed rebel zones in the northern city of Aleppo before dawn while ground troops simultaneously unleashed a barrage of shells. After the bombardment, the bodies of at least 19 people were found, among them seven children, the Britain-based watchdog said. Aleppo has been the target of a five-week-old offensive by regime forces trying to dislodge rebels who took over swathes of the country’s commercial capital in July.

Activists have reported relentless bombardments and food shortages in those neighborhoods still held by rebels, while an AFP reporter who was in Aleppo on Tuesday said life in the loyalist-controlled central area was relatively normal. Rebels yesterday attacked Hamdan military airport near Albu Kamal town in the eastern province of Deir Ezzor, the Syrian Observatory said. Having failed to persuade the international community to impose a no-fly zone over the country, the rebel Free Syrian Army has increasingly targeted airports used by regime attack helicopters and warplanes.

“Fighting has been going on for hours inside Hamdan airport between soldiers and rebels, who have taken over large sections of the site,” Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said, adding that at least six rebels died in the assault. In Deir Ezzor city, two people were killed, one of them by sniper fire, the Observatory said. Several blasts were heard in the Jubar district of the capital Damascus as it came under heavy bombardment, and explosions were also heard in the Yalda area just south of the city, the watchdog said. In the central city of Homs, the rebel bastion of Khaldiyeh came under fierce mortar fire, and three children were killed in bombardment by regime forces of the Ariha area in Homs province, it added.

Brahimi, the newly appointed UNArab League peace envoy for Syria, said on Tuesday the death toll in the country was “staggering” and the destruction “catastrophic.” The Algerian former foreign minister, who took up his post on Saturday, also warned that the situation across Syria was “deteriorating steadily.”Turkey’s Erdogan, who turned against Assad when the Syrian president resorted to brutal force against unarmed protesters, used his strongest language yet against his erstwhile ally. “The regime in Syria has become a terrorist state,” Erdogan told his ruling AKP meeting in Ankara.

“Syria is not an ordinary country to us. We do not have the luxury to remain indifferent to what’s happening there.” Assad also came under fresh attack from Egypt’s Morsi, who told a meeting of Arab League ministers in Cairo that it was time for the Syrian regime to step down. “I tell the Syrian regime ‘there is still a chance to end the bloodshed’. Now is the time for change… no time to be wasted talking about reform,” Morsi said. He urged Assad to “take lessons from recent history” and step aside, in reference to Arab Spring revolts that overthrew the longtime dictators of Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. Morsi, who last week slammed the Syrian regime as “oppressive”, stressed that a resolution of the crisis was the responsibility of Arabs. “The Syrian blood that is being shed day and night, we are responsible for this,” Morsi said. “We cannot sleep while Syrian blood is being shed.”

Less stridently, China said yesterday it supported a political transition in Syria and defended its record during a visit by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Clinton, meeting in Beijing with China’s top leadership, reiterated she was “disappointed” by Chinese and Russian vetoes of UN resolutions that would have threatened action against Assad to end the spiraling bloodshed. Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi called for all sides to end fighting, telling a joint news conference with Clinton: “Let me emphasize that China is not partial to any individual or any party.” In a preliminary toll, the Observatory said at least 34 people were killed nationwide yesterday – 28 civilians and six rebels. The watchdog, which relies on information from a network of activists on the ground, says more than 26,000 people have been killed overall in Syria since the revolt against Assad’s rule broke out in March 2011. The United Nations says about 20,000 have died. — AFP

Veteran war surgeon says casualty numbers higher than thought

04/09/12
By Dominique Soguel


Beres is currently working in Aleppo.

ALEPPO, Syria: Veteran war surgeon Jacques Beres has his own compelling reasons for urging that a no-fly zone be imposed over Syria – one bomb dropped by the regime leaves more wounded than doctors can fix in a day.

Working under cover in the northern city of Aleppo, which has been pounded for weeks as President Bashar Assad’s forces seek to overrun rebel bastions, Beres insists the death toll in the Syrian conflict is higher than what is reported.

“At least 50,000 people have been killed without counting the disappeared,” Beres, a French surgeon who daily patches up dozens of people in a hospital near the front lines of Aleppo, told AFP in an interview.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has a network of activists on the ground across Syria, has given a latest toll of at least 26,283 people killed in Syria since the revolt began in March last year – 18,695 civilians, 1,079 defectors and 6,509 troops.

But Beres said watchdogs such as the Britain-based Observatory are unable to paint a full picture of the losses because many deaths are documented “only with ink and paper.”

“I am sure that the dead that I have here are not tallied in London,” he said.

In the past two weeks, he said, he has treated a daily average of 20 to 45 wounded people, the majority of them fighters with the opposition Free Syria Army, including “quite a few jihadists.”

Fatalities in rebel ranks range between two and six each day, he said.

But those are just the figures collected in one small hospital within a massive commercial city which is now almost evenly divided between rebel and army-controlled areas.

Many gray zones lie between both camps and the security situation remains fluid: Shops are open and pedestrian traffic has resumed in some neighborhoods while tank shells and mortar hit others.

“It is shameful that a no-fly zone hasn’t been set up,” said the co-founder of Doctors Without Borders, setting aside a cup of tea to review X-rays and offer a Syrian colleague advice on how best to dislodge a bullet from a man’s leg.

“It is an incredible massacre. Even if now it is a civil war, it is a very asymmetric conflict: light weapons against tanks and aerial bombardment,” said Beres, whose experience on the field covers almost every major war from Vietnam in the 1960s to Libya last year.

“All this because they asked for a little bit of freedom and said that they had enough of Bashar.”

This is the third humanitarian mission that Beres has undertaken to Syria this year, backed variously by organizations such as France Syrie Democracie, UAM93, Doctors Without Borders, and AAVS (Association d’aide aux victimes en Syrie).

He was in the central city of Homs in February when the neighborhood of Baba Amr was decimated by Assad’s forces. In May he roamed around Idlib province where he says pro-regime soldiers destroyed pharmacies and burned a clinic down to the ground.

Beres, in his 70s, has been smuggling himself into the country at great risk, armed only with the firm belief that he has a “humanitarian duty to heal.

Urgent need for #Syria no-fly zone, medic tells AFP

03/09/12

ALEPPO, Syria — Veteran war surgeon Jacques Beres has his own compelling reasons for urging that a no-fly zone be imposed over Syria — one bomb dropped by the regime leaves more wounded than doctors can fix in a day.

Working under cover in the northern city of Aleppo, which has been pounded for weeks as President Bashar al-Assad’s forces seek to overrun rebel bastions, Beres insists the death toll in the Syrian conflict is higher that what is reported.

“At least 50,000 people have been killed without counting the disappeared,” Beres, a French surgeon who daily patches up dozens of people in a hospital near the front lines of Aleppo, told AFP in an interview.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has a network of activists on the ground across Syria, has given a latest toll of at least 26,283 people killed in Syria since the revolt began in March last year — 18,695 civilians, 1,079 defectors and 6,509 troops.

But Beres said watchdogs such as the Britain-based Observatory are unable to paint a full picture of the losses because many deaths are documented “only with ink and paper.”

“I am sure that the dead that I have here are not tallied in London,” said Beres.

In the past two weeks, he said, he has treated a daily average of 20 to 45 wounded people, the majority of them fighters with the opposition Free Syria Army, including “quite a few jihadists.”

Fatalities in rebel ranks range between two and six each day, he said.

But those are just the figures collected in one small hospital within a massive commercial city which is now almost evenly divided between rebel and army-controlled areas.

Many gray zones lie between both camps and the security situation remains fluid: shops open and pedestrian traffic has resumed in some neighbourhoods while tank shells and mortar hit others.

“It is shameful that a no-fly zone hasn’t been set up,” said the co-founder of Doctors Without Borders, setting aside a cup of tea to review X-rays and offer a Syrian colleague advice on how best to dislodge a bullet from a man’s leg.

“It is an incredible massacre. Even if now it is a civil war, it is a very asymmetric conflict: light weapons against tanks and aerial bombardment,” said Beres, whose experience on the field covers almost every major war from Vietnam in the sixties to Libya last year.

“All this because they asked for a little bit of freedom and said that they had enough of Bashar.”

This is the third humanitarian mission that Beres has undertaken to Syria this year, backed variously by organisations such as France Syrie Democracie, UAM93, Doctors Without Borders, and AAVS (Association d’aide aux victimes en Syrie).

He was in the central city of Homs in February when the neighbourhood of Baba Amro was decimated by Assad’s forces.

In May he roamed around Idlib province where he says pro-regime soldiers destroyed pharmacies and burned a clinic down to the ground.

Beres, in his seventies, has been smuggling himself into the country at great risk, armed only with the firm belief that he has a “humanitarian duty to heal” even though “in one second a bomb leaves more people wounded than a surgeon can fix in a day.”

Urgent need for Syria no-fly zone, medic tells AFP

By Dominique Soguel | AFP

Veteran war surgeon Jacques Beres has his own compelling reasons for urging that a no-fly zone be imposed over Syria — one bomb dropped by the regime leaves more wounded than doctors can fix in a day.

Working under cover in the northern city of Aleppo, which has been pounded for weeks as President Bashar al-Assad’s forces seek to overrun rebel bastions, Beres insists the death toll in the Syrian conflict is higher that what is reported.

“At least 50,000 people have been killed without counting the disappeared,” Beres, a French surgeon who daily patches up dozens of people in a hospital near the front lines of Aleppo, told AFP in an interview.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has a network of activists on the ground across Syria, has given a latest toll of at least 26,283 people killed in Syria since the revolt began in March last year — 18,695 civilians, 1,079 defectors and 6,509 troops.

But Beres said watchdogs such as the Britain-based Observatory are unable to paint a full picture of the losses because many deaths are documented “only with ink and paper.”

“I am sure that the dead that I have here are not tallied in London,” said Beres.

In the past two weeks, he said, he has treated a daily average of 20 to 45 wounded people, the majority of them fighters with the opposition Free Syria Army, including “quite a few jihadists.”

Fatalities in rebel ranks range between two and six each day, he said.

But those are just the figures collected in one small hospital within a massive commercial city which is now almost evenly divided between rebel and army-controlled areas.

Many gray zones lie between both camps and the security situation remains fluid: shops open and pedestrian traffic has resumed in some neighbourhoods while tank shells and mortar hit others.

“It is shameful that a no-fly zone hasn’t been set up,” said the co-founder of Doctors Without Borders, setting aside a cup of tea to review X-rays and offer a Syrian colleague advice on how best to dislodge a bullet from a man’s leg.

“It is an incredible massacre. Even if now it is a civil war, it is a very asymmetric conflict: light weapons against tanks and aerial bombardment,” said Beres, whose experience on the field covers almost every major war from Vietnam in the sixties to Libya last year.

“All this because they asked for a little bit of freedom and said that they had enough of Bashar.”

This is the third humanitarian mission that Beres has undertaken to Syria this year, backed variously by organisations such as France Syrie Democracie, UAM93, Doctors Without Borders, and AAVS (Association d’aide aux victimes en Syrie).

He was in the central city of Homs in February when the neighbourhood of Baba Amro was decimated by Assad’s forces.

In May he roamed around Idlib province where he says pro-regime soldiers destroyed pharmacies and burned a clinic down to the ground.

Beres, in his seventies, has been smuggling himself into the country at great risk, armed only with the firm belief that he has a “humanitarian duty to heal” even though “in one second a bomb leaves more people wounded than a surgeon can fix in a day.”

02/09/12

Will a buffer zone calm or stoke tensions?

We discuss the feasibility and risks of enforcing a buffer zone and a no-fly zone in Syria.

Turkey has appealed to the UN Security Council to create a safe zone inside Syria, but they hold out little hope for an endorsement from the council that has failed so far to take action to stop the violence.

Ankara believes that 100,000 refugees would be a tipping point and with that threshold fast approaching, the government is proposing a solution: Ankara wants UN approval for a buffer zone for displaced Syrians that stretches about 20km into Syrian territory.

Britain and France say they have not ruled out any options - including a no-fly zone - to help civilians fleeing the war.

Laurent Fabius, the French foreign minister, says so-called liberated zones have been identified and with proper funding and administration they could serve as a refuge for civilians caught in the violence.

But to be effective, a buffer zone would also need a no-fly zone to protect the area, and that cannot be established without a UN Security Council resolution.

Turkey has been pressing for the establishment of safe havens inside Syria to stem the mounting exodus of refugees, and reacted with frustration when its calls fell on deaf ears at the UN Security Council on Thursday.

But on Friday, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, acknowledged that any such move would require UN backing and would be far too risky without the prior establishment of a no-fly zone. Enforcing such a zone without consent from the Damascus regime would risk military confrontation.

However, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has called the proposal for a buffer zone unrealistic. 

“I believe that talk about a buffer zone is not practical, even for those countries which are playing a hostile role (against Syria),” al-Assad said in a recorded interview broadcast on Syria’s Addounia television.

But Ahmet Davutoglu, the Turkish foreign minister, has warned that the problem goes beyond being an internal issue. He says that “no one has the right to expect Turkey to take on this international responsibility on its own.”

“According to OCHA (UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs), there are more than two million internally displaced people in Syria. In the face of such a humanitarian disaster, the UN should initiate the establishment of IDP camps within Syria without delay. Needless to say, these camps should have full protection. Let us also be clear, there is only one side which is responsible for this tragedy, it is the regime in Syria.”

It is something that Erdogan seems to agree with: “We cannot take such a measure unless the United Nations Security Council decides in favour of it …. First a decision for the no-fly zone must be taken; then we would be able to take a step towards a buffer zone”

To discuss the issue, Inside Syria, with Teymoor Nabili, speaks to Halla Diyab, a Syrian writer and spokeswoman for the Organisation for Democracy and Freedom in Syria; Daniel Serwer, a professor at the John Hopkins school of Advanced International Studies, and a scholar at the Middle East Institute, who also blogs at peacefair.net; and Birol Baskan, a professor of government at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service.

“We are excluding no option for the future. We do not know how this crisis will develop, how it will develop over the coming months - it’s steadily getting worse, we’re ruling nothing out and we have contingency planning for a wide range of scenarios. We don’t generally go into what all that contingency planning is, but we also have to be clear that anything like a safe zone requires military intervention and that of course is something that has to be weighed very carefully.”

William Hague, British foreign secretary

FACTS ABOUT THE BUFFER ZONE:

  • Turkey wants international support for creating safe zone inside Syria
  • UN Security Council met on Thursday to discuss supplying aid to Syria
  • French FM: France and Turkey have identified liberated zones in Syria
  • France says parts of Syria are out of government’s control
  • Syrian opposition member says al-Assad’s enemies need safe zone
  • Turkey originally said it could host no more than 100, 000 refugees
  • UN officials: Turkey has about 80, 000 refugees while Jordan has 150, 000
  • Over last two weeks up to 5, 000 refugees a day entered turkey
  • UN: Nearly 20, 000 people killed in Syria since the uprising began in 2011
  • Humanitarian agencies estimate up to 300, 000 people have fled Syria





29/08/12

Displaced Syrians Stranded at

Turkish Border

Pushed out of their homes and forced to protest in no man’s land where they wait, several hundred displaced Syrian families marched on the Turkish border on Tuesday demanding the international community enforce a “no fly zone” in Syria.

French leader to address #Syria in major speech

27/08/12

PARIS - President Francois Hollande will present his foreign policy goals to France’s ambassadors, with the Syrian crisis and terrorism in Africa’s Sahel region on the agenda.

Hollande, who was elected in May, gets his first chance to outline his diplomatic vision in the president’s annual speech to about 200 ambassadors.

A Hollande aide, speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to give details of the president’s speech before it was delivered, said Monday’s address is likely to refer to Syria, the Sahel and EU integration among other things.

As for Syria, Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius has said France would only intervene in the context of an international mandate. But he told RTL radio last week that talk of creating a “no-fly zone” will increase if the fighting continues.

France urges partial no-fly zone in #Syria

23/08/12

The international community should consider enforcing a no-fly zone over parts of Syria, France’s defence minister said.

Jean-Yves Le Drian said completely closing Syria’s airspace was equivalent to “going to war” and would require a willing international coalition that does not yet exist.

The minister, however, told television station France 24 today that France would participate in such an operation if it followed international legal principles.

For now, though, he suggested that a partial closure – which US secretary of state Hillary Clinton said Washington was considering – should be studied.

France, like other Western countries, is sending supplies to the rebels fighting Syrian president Bashar Assad, but the international community has been reluctant to intervene in the conflict as it did in Libya.

Free Syrian Army (FSA) Military Council Commanders To Formally Request No Fly Zone And The Declaration Of Safe Zones From International Community

22/08/12

PR Newswire

WASHINGTON, Aug. 21, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The following release is being issued by the Syrian Support Group:

Commanders of the Military Councils of the Free Syrian Army will officially announce that their forces have succeeded in liberating major parts of the country especially in the provinces of Aleppo, Idlib, Daraa and Damascus. In addition, they will reiterate that the Free Syrian Army was successful in protecting more than 7 million  Syrian citizens from the attacks of Assad’s forces, as well as preventing the dislocation of  the population. The Assad regime continues to use fixed-wing MIG aircraft and attack helicopters to strike at innocent civilians in Syria. It is not feasible, within the scope of current capabilities, for the Free Syrian Army to sustain defensive measures against these air attacks.  

At the same time, the establishment of safe zones is required in order to mitigate the growing humanitarian calamity in Syria and reduce the number of refugees flowing into neighboring countries, such as Turkey.  The FSA will work to protect, defend and provide humanitarian support to all Syrian citizens regardless of their ethnicity, creed, religion and/or political affiliation.  On this basis, the Commanders will request  that the US Government and the international community implement immediate humanitarian relief by establishing a no-fly zone over the provinces of the declared safe zones.

WHO: FSA Military Council Commanders

WHAT: A press conference with the Commanders of the Military Councils of the Free Syrian Army

WHEN: The press conference will take place on Wednesday August 22  at 10:00 a.m. at the National Press Club, 529 14th Street NW, Washington, D.C. 

ABOUT:  Press Conference is sponsored by the Syrian Support Group.  For more information please visit target=”_blank”>www.syriansupportgroup.org