Tripoli clashes heat up - #Lebanon #Syria

The ongoing clashes in Lebanon’s troubled northern city of Lebanon heated up Tuesday afternoon, leaving at least one person dead and a number others injured.

Sniper activity intensified in rival neighborhoods of Jabal Mohsen and Bab al-Tebbaneh starting at noon, leading to the death of a 30-year old civilian identified as Mohammad Rashid Sultani, the National News Agency reported.

The report added that two injured people were rushed to Tripoli’s Islamic Charity Hospital, which has hosted a number of other wounded Tripoli residents since the deadly clashes that have killed at least 5 people began Sunday afternoon.

Meanwhile, OTV reported that a Jaba Moshen resident—identified as Youssef al-Saqa—was also killed in the intensifying clashes.

Heavy gunfire rocked the battlefronts amid the explosions of rocket-propelled grenade rounds, local media outlets reported, with Al-Jadeed television saying an ambulance was targeted by sniper fire on the Tripoli-Akkar highway.

The ongoing clashes erupted Sunday afternoon, leaving four people dead before today’s violence, including two Lebanese Armed Forces soldiers who were killed when army troops came under heavy gunfire Monday as they attempted deploy on Syria Street separating Jabal Mohsen and Bab al-Tebbaneh.

The fighting in Tripoli came as troops backed by Lebanon’s Hezbollah reportedly entered Al-Qusayr, a strategic rebel stronghold linking Damascus to the Mediterranean coast.

Sunni Sheikhs Rafei and Ahmad al-Assir in April had called on Lebanese Sunnis to assist the rebels in Al-Qusayr, however Rafei on Sunday denied that the clashes were linked to the Al-Qusayr campaign.

Jabal Mohsen residents have frequently clashed with locals from neighboring areas in the troubled northern city of Tripoli. These recurrent disputes triggered by sectarian differences also reflect a split in Lebanon’s political scene in which opposition parties back the revolt in Syria while the ruling coalition, led by Hezbollah, supports the Damascus regime.

N O W - 05/21/2013

Syrian rebels say will target Aleppo airport

Syrian rebels warned on Friday they will target the international airport of the northern city of Aleppo after firing at an airliner preparing to take off, the first direct attack on civilian a flight in the 21-month-old revolt.

Thursday’s attack was another sign of the growing confidence of rebels who are also fighting an offensive in the central province of Hama, pursuing a string of territorial gains to try to cut army supply lines and pressure the capital Damascus to the south.

A rebel commander who gave his name as Khaldoun told Reuters by Skype that snipers from the Intelligence Armed Struggle Battalion, part of the Islamist Jundallah brigade, had hit the wheels of Syrian Airways flight RB201 on Thursday.

“Those were warning shots,” he said, adding that the plane had been unable to take off. “We wanted to send a message to the regime that all their planes - military and civilian - are within our reach.”

There was no immediate mention of the incident on Syrian state media.

Rebels accuse the government of using civilian aircraft to transport weapons and Iranian fighters who they say are helping President Bashar al-Assad’s forces. Insurgents have cut off many of the road links to Aleppo, Syria’s biggest city.

Fighting around Damascus has made the road to the capital’s international airport unsafe for traffic. Foreign airlines have stopped flying there. According to flight schedules, the Cairo-bound RB201 usually flies from Damascus rather than Aleppo.

“What happened with Damascus airport will happen to Aleppo, even if the price is higher,” Khaldoun said.

Another rebel urged civilians not to use Aleppo airport or Syrian Air flights “as they will be targets from now on”.

DRUZE-SUNNI TENSION

Syrian forces shelled the town of Moadamiah southwest of Damascus on Friday, killing at least 15 people and wounding dozens who were taking refuge in a residential compound.

“They fired several rockets at the neighborhood where hundreds of people were hiding. The field hospitals are now unable to take in more wounded. The numbers are big,” said Murad al-Shami from Damascus.

The revolt against Assad began with peaceful protests calling for greater freedoms but after a heavy security crackdown turned into a civil war largely pitting the Sunni majority against the Alawite sect to which Assad belongs.

Other minorities like Druze, Christians and Shi’ites fear for their freedoms with the growing influence of Sunni Islamist hardliners in the armed revolt.

Opposition activists and rebels said on Friday they were trying to defuse tension between Druze in Sweida province and Sunni fighters from neighboring Deraa province, cradle of revolt against Assad.

The reason behind the confrontation was not immediately clear, but an activist said it started when fighters attacked a government checkpoint in Sweida killing and kidnapping several people, several of them Druze. Residents in the area were angered and in return attacked and kidnapped rebels.

“They exchanged kidnappings and threats but everybody is working on sorting it out,” a Druze activist said.

Sweida, home to Syria’s Druze minority, is solidly under state control. Most Syrian Druze have stayed on the sidelines of the revolt.

“What happened in the past days breaks the heart and is unacceptable to any free man … We are confident that we will get out of it,” said Mouaz Alkhatib, leader of the newly formed opposition coalition.

“Clashes between neighbors and brothers mean one thing - weakening the revolution and empowering the regime,” he said in a statement. “I call on all my people and loved ones to look for a brotherly solution and not to threaten (each other) or kidnap civilians and innocent people”.

BEIRUT | Fri Dec 21, 2012 11:44pm EST

Lebanese PM links deadly blast to #Syria, offers to resign

20/10/12

Najib Mikati says car bomb is related to the

exposure of a Syrian plot to sow chaos in

Lebanon; President Michel Suleiman urges PM

to stay


B
EIRUT (AP) — Lebanon’s prime minister linked the massive car bomb that tore through Beirut to the civil war in neighboring Syria on Saturday, the latest signal that the crisis is enflaming an already tense region.

The blast Friday in the heart of Beirut’s Christian area killed eight people, including the country’s intelligence chief, Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan.

The government declared a national day of mourning for the victims on Saturday, but protesters took to the streets, burning tires and setting up roadblocks around the country in a sign of the boiling anger over the bomb.

Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati said Saturday the explosion is linked to al-Hassan’s recent investigation, in which he exposed an alleged plot by Syria to unleash a campaign of bombings and assassinations to sow chaos in Lebanon.

“I don’t want to prejudge the investigation, but in fact we cannot separate yesterday’s crime from the revelation of the explosions that could have happened,” Mikati said at a news conference following an emergency Cabinet meeting.

Lebanon’s fractious politics are closely entwined with Syria’s. The countries share a web of political and sectarian ties and rivalries, and Lebanon has been caught up in the fallout of from the civil war pitting Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces against rebels seeking to overthrow the regime.

The countries share a web of political and sectarian ties and rivalries, often causing events on one side of the border to echo on the other. Lebanon’s opposition is an anti-Syrian bloc, while the prime minister and much of the government are seen as pro-Syrian.

Al-Hassan’s probe over the summer led to the arrest of former Information Minister Michel Samaha, one of Assad’s most loyal allies in Lebanon.

Samaha, who is in custody, is accused of plotting a wave of attacks to spread sectarian violence in Lebanon at Syria’s behest. Also indicted in in the August sweep was Syrian Brig. Gen. Ali Mamlouk, one of Assad’s highest aides. He was charged in absentia.

Mikati also said he had offered to resign after Friday’s car bomb, but the president asked him not to plunge the country into more uncertainty. Mikati said he suggested a national unity government but President Michel Suleiman asked him for some time to hold discussions with political leaders.

Mikati is facing deep political pressure from his opponents over the attack.

Friday’s violence and subsequent protests threatened to plunge Lebanon back into a dark cycle of bombings and reprisal that made the country notorious during the 1975-90 civil war.

In the eastern town of Marj angry protesters tried to storm an office of the pro-Syrian Itihad group, but Lebanese soldiers pushed them away wounding five protesters, security officials said. They added that dozens of people who marched in protest in the border town of Moqueibleh came under fire from the Syrian side of the border forcing them to disperse without any injury.

The highway linking central Beirut with the city’s international airport was closed, as well as the highway that links the capital with Syria, the officials said on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak publicly.

The bombing also raised fears that the crisis could lay bare Lebanon’s sectarian tensions.

Many of Lebanon’s Sunni Muslims have backed Syria’s mainly Sunni rebels, while Shiite Muslims have tended to back Assad. Al-Hassan was a Sunni whose stances were widely seen to oppose Syria and Shiite Hezbollah, the country’s most powerful ally in Lebanon.

Al-Hassan also played a role in the investigation of the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, a powerful Sunni figure.

A UN-backed tribunal has indicted four members of militant group Hezbollah, which along with its allies now holds a majority in Lebanon’s Cabinet. Hezbollah denies involvement in Hariri’s killing and has refused to extradite the suspects.

Al-Hassan’s department also had a role in breaking up several Israeli spy rings inside Lebanon over the past few years, Lebanese officials said.

Member of former Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s parliamentary bloc Nuhad Mashnouk said al-Hassan’s funeral will be held in Beirut Sunday afternoon and the late general will be buried next to Hariri’s tomb.

Lebanon’s top Sunni cleric, Grand Mufti Mohammed Rashid Kabbani, condemned al-Hassan’s assassination, calling it a “criminal explosion that targets Lebanon and its people.” He called for self-restraint, saying “the criminal will get his punishment sooner or later.”

Police and army troops sealed off the site of Friday’s blast as military intelligence agents investigated what was the deadliest bombing in Beirut in four years.

Rafik Khoury, editor of the independent Al-Anwar daily, said the assassination was an attempt to draw Lebanon into the conflict in Syria, which has been the most serious threat to the Assad family’s 40-year dynasty.

“The side that carried the assassination knows the reactions and dangerous repercussions and is betting that it will happen. Strife is wanted in Lebanon,” Khoury wrote.

Sharbal Abdo, a Beirut resident who lives down the block from where the car bomb detonated, on Saturday brought his six-year-old son Chris and 12-year-old daughter Jane to see what happened the day before. They were both at school when the blast ripped through the area.

“They were very afraid yesterday, and cried a lot late into the night,” Abdo said. “Today I decided to bring them here and show what happened. They need to face this situation. It may be their future.”

#Syria conflict deepens sectarian rifts in Lebanon

17/10/12


In this Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2012 photo, Bassel Hojeiri, 37, principal of the local middle school, with his wife, Hanan, and their son Muhammed, speak at his house during an interview with The Associated Press, in Arsal, a Sunni Muslim town eastern Lebanon near the Syrian border. This Lebanese border town has become a safe haven for war-weary Syrian rebels, a way station for wounded fighters and home to hundreds of frightened Syrian refugee families. Residents of Arsal, a Sunni Muslim town of 40,000, have strong motives to help those trying to topple Syria’s brutal regime: they themselves were harassed and abused by it during three decades of de facto Syrian control of Lebanon. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

KARIN LAUB

ARSAL, Lebanon (AP) - This Lebanese border town has become a safe haven for war-weary Syrian rebels, a way station for wounded fighters and home to hundreds of frightened Syrian refugee families.

Residents of Arsal, a Sunni Muslim town of 40,000, say they have strong motives to help those trying to topple Syria’s regime: they themselves were harassed and abused by it during three decades of de facto Syrian control of Lebanon.

But in siding with the rebels, many of them fellow Sunnis, Arsal is also deepening rifts with its Shiite Muslim neighbors in the Bekaa Valley that runs along Lebanon’s eastern border with Syria. Large areas of the scenic valley are controlled by Hezbollah, the powerful Shiite militia that is supporting and - according to the U.S. and the Syrian opposition - also fighting alongside Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces.

For now, Lebanon’s rival political and religious groups have largely tried to keep a lid on domestic tensions stoked by the conflict next door, with collective memories here still scarred by Lebanon’s own 15-year civil war that ended in 1990. But any major escalation in Syria or miscalculation by the combatants’ Lebanese supporters could ignite Lebanon’s explosive sectarian mix.

Unlike some parts of Lebanon, the Bekaa has not been hit so far by sectarian violence linked to the bloodshed in Syria, although a drive along the valley’s bustling main thoroughfare and the string of towns that line it, shows where the region’s Shiite and Sunni loyalties lie.

In predominantly Shiite Baalbek, one of the Bekaa’s larger towns, a downtown billboard shows Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah next to Assad, who is decked out in a military uniform and aviator glasses. “They will not weaken our resolve,” reads a defiant caption.

The presence of Iran, the region’s Shiite power and a patron of both Hezbollah and Assad, is also visible: A poster of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, with the slogan, “We can,” hangs from roadside poles along a four-lane highway that signs boast was partially funded by Tehran.

A turn off the highway and down a winding uphill road, leads east toward the Syrian border and Arsal.

Homes here are bare-bones, made of raw gray cinderblock, without stone facades. A spray-painted Syrian rebel flag - with green, white and black horizontal stripes and three red stars on the white - decorates one of the walls in the center of town.

Bassel Hojeiri, principal of the local middle school, said people in Arsal back the rebels as fellow Sunnis fighting a regime controlled by Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, but also because of deep-seated hatred of Syria’s rulers.

As a border town, Arsal suffered under a particularly oppressive Syrian military presence when Damascus held sway in Lebanon from 1976 to 2005. Syrian troops at checkpoints near Arsal would sometimes beat area residents, arrest them without reason, demand cash or even seize cars, said Hojeiri, 37, a former mayor of Arsal.

“People hated them,” Hojeiri said of the Syrian occupiers. “Now hopefully their time is ending.”

The town has stood by the rebels from the start, and now is deeply involved in the conflict. Last month, Syrian warplanes in pursuit of rebels fired missiles that struck near Arsal. Lebanese media have also suggested weapons smuggled from Lebanon to the rebels go through Arsal; residents acknowledge there’s a rich tradition of smuggling in Arsal, but say they don’t know anything about arms smuggling.

Volunteers from Islamic charities have sneaked scores of wounded rebels into Lebanon, driving them from there to hospitals in Tripoli, a Sunni stronghold in northern Lebanon, and bypassing clinics in Hezbollah-run areas in the valley, said Mohammed Hojeiri, a local activist.

Arsal has also taken in hundreds of Syrian refugee families, most from villages in Homs province, about 25 kilometers (15 miles) to the northeast. Some of the refugees rent apartments, while others live with Arsal families or in a small camp on the outskirts of town, where tents are being replaced by cinderblock shacks to prepare for the harsh mountain winter.

Rebel fighters have also used Arsal as a temporary haven to rest from the fighting across the border.

Peach farmer-turned-fighter Mohammed Yousef left his village of Zara in Homs province late last month after airstrikes destroyed his home and many others in the village. He reached Arsal after a seven-hour cross-border trek across mountainous terrain, he said, adding that several dozen of his fellow rebels do the same from time to time.

“Arsal is the … mother of the revolution,” the 25-year-old said affectionately of his Lebanese hosts who have sheltered his extended family of 10 in an empty building.

Yousef dismissed Syrian troops as largely ineffective, saying most can be bribed, but swore to exact revenge from Hezbollah, which he blamed for the destruction in his village. “We want to slaughter Hassan Nasrallah, the dog,” Yousef said of the Hezbollah leader. “He shelled us, he destroyed our houses, and killed our children.”

Hezbollah denies that it is fighting alongside regime forces, and a spokesman declined further comment Monday.

Lebanese security officials have said a number of Hezbollah activists recently buried in the Bekaa Valley had been killed in fighting in Syria, while Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, told the U.N. Security Council on Monday that “Nasrallah’s fighters are now part of Assad’s killing machine.”

Hojeiri, the school principal, said tensions between Shiites and Sunnis in the valley have been rising since the start of the Syrian revolt. Each side is aware of the other’s loyalties, and people are careful not to talk about politics when someone from the other sect is present, he said.

“People here don’t want another (sectarian) war,” he said.

In the past, ties between the communities were civil and even warm, he said, noting that some 200 men in Arsal are married to Shiite women from nearby villages.

For years, religious differences seemed unimportant, he said. Even during Lebanon’s civil war, with its frequently shifting alliances, Shiites and Sunnis were partners more often than they were foes.

Timor Goksel, a former official in the U.N. peacekeeping force in south Lebanon, said he believes the two sides have too much to lose by bringing the Syrian conflict home.

“Sunnis are very much involved in stone quarrying and the Shiite families are mostly involved in the hashish business,” he said. “Both sides respect each other’s turfs and have their own livelihoods, hashish and stone.”

Perhaps that’s why the valley has not seen sectarian clashes - unlike the majority-Sunni Tripoli, where sporadic fighting between pro- and anti-Syrian groups has killed more than two dozen people since May.

However, Sarkis Naoum, a columnist for Lebanon’s An Nahar daily said the sectarian tensions bubbling under the surface could erupt at any time.

“If anything major happens, what is happening in Syria could expand into Lebanon,” he said.

#Syria Alawites live in calm beside Sunni neighbours

19/09/12

Syria Alawites live in calm beside

Sunni neighbours

Women walking around their heads uncovered and men sporting trimmed moustaches instead of the thick signature beards of Islamist fighters are clear signs that the village of Kdin in northwest Syria is Alawite territory.

The hamlet in Latakia province, which lies at the foothills of the vast Jabal Akrad (Kurd mountain), lives in peace seemingly far from the bloody conflict engulfing the rest of the country.

Kdin is surrounded by Sunni Muslim Arab populations, with Jabal Akrad have been completely taken over by the rebellion against President Bashar al-Assad, who belongs to the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

On a late sunny summer day residents gather figs and apples from their orchards. Children run in play from one house to another as their mothers look on, sitting on shaded terraces. Girls in tight clothing saunter, mobile phones in hand.

There is no sign of rebels in the village.

“Sometimes we pass through the village but we have no reason to stop,” says Abu Badih, a rebel commander from the neighbouring and conservative Sunni-dominated town of Salma.

The contrast between Kdin and Salma, five kilometres (3 miles) from each other, is striking.

In Kdin, families busy themselves with activity, farmers carry out their work. In Salma, shells rain daily on half-deserted streets, into which practically only gunmen on mopeds venture.

Ties between the two villages are sound, say Sunni Muslims in the region.

Farmers are bound by commercial transactions, and Sunni Muslims are often seen in the village exchanging greetings with acquaintances.

But despite the apparent normality of life in Kdin, people keep to themselves and are suspicious when visitors show up.

Mistrust is palpable, exacerbated by the deadly conflict which has become more sectarian in nature as the months go by pass and pit Sunni Muslims rebels against the ruling Alawite minority.

Village elders in Kdin make it clear that journalists are not welcome.

“What are you doing here?” they ask of the outsider while leaning against a tractor.

The tranquil existence with the Sunni neighbours comes at a price — discretion and absolute neutrality are essential.

Most Alawite villages in the region, located on hills that slope down towards the port of Latakia, have naturally chosen to side by the regime and welcomed the army out of sheer fear of a rebel advance.

“We aren’t for Bashar or for the rebels. None of this is our problem. We want one thing only, to live in peace,” says a man whose swelling belly looks as if it will cause his trousers to rip.

“There are no shabiha (pro-regime militiamen) here, no rebels either, just families who only want calm,” he adds, putting an abrupt end to any further discussion before offering the visitor some figs.

For rebels who refuse to accept that the conflict is sectarian in nature, Kdin serves as a positive example.

“Alawites live in peace in the area. Our fighters have advanced through at least five of their villages without touching a hair on anyone’s head,” a local doctor who supports the armed opposition says.

The rebel commander Abu Badih agrees: “We dont target the Alawites but the regime’s accomplices who live among all of the country’s sectarian communities.”

The doctor regrets that “many Alawites have fallen into the trap laid by the government, which says this is a sectarian war.”

11.9.12 INTERVIEW-Syria alleging sectarian war to mask power struggle - Turkish official

Tue, 11 Sep 2012 08:58 GMT

Source: reuters // Reuters

By Tom Heneghan, Religion Editor

ISTANBUL, Sept 11 (Reuters) - Turkey believes Damascus is now portraying the Syrian crisis as a Sunni-Shi’ite conflict to mask President Bashar al-Assad’s loss of political authority, according to a senior adviser to Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan.

This “neo-sectarian” approach aims to rally Syrian Shi’ites to Assad’s side and explain away opposition to him by majority Sunni states in the region, Ibrahim Kalin told Reuters.

But Syria’s Sunnis and Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi’ism to which Assad belongs, are not fixed blocs and Turkey does not see the crisis in sectarian terms, Kalin said at a weekend conference of Muslim and Christian religious leaders from the Middle East.

“The Assad regime, because it has lost its political legitimacy, is now trying to present this as a sectarian conflict,” he said. “They claim that those who oppose the Assad regime do so because they are Sunnis and they hate Shi’ites.

“The good news is that the vast majority of the Sunnis and Shi’ites don’t buy this argument and realise these are political decisions, not a sectarian conflict.”

Kalin described as “neo-sectarianism” the growing emphasis on religious identities across the Middle East, but said these trends - while real - were still mostly secondary to the political struggles driving events in the region.

Syrian society is a religious and ethnic mosaic with multiple fault lines. The Alawites who comprise the bulk of the ruling establishment make up 12 percent of the population, while Sunnis, the backbone of the opposition, account for 75 percent.

There are also Christian (10 percent), Kurdish (8 percent) and Druze (less than 3 percent) minorities. Christians have stayed mostly neutral in the fighting, Fearing an Islamist victory if Assad goes. Syrian Kurds have used Assad’s weakness to take control of some northern areas of the country.

MORE ABOUT ISRAEL THAN ISLAM

In Ankara’s analysis, Shi’ite Iran’s staunch support for Assad is partly due to sectarian solidarity, but based more on flawed political assumptions.

“Iran considers Syria to be a sphere of influence and part of a front against Israeli occupation in the region,” Kalin said.

“Their calculation is that, if the Assad regime is toppled, the new regime in Syria would not hold its ground against Israeli policies, which is simply wrong.”

The newly elected governments in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya have proven to be very concerned about the Palestinian cause, and they now express their opposition to Israeli occupation of Arab land with full democratic credentials, he said.

“Whoever comes to power in Syria will be based on the popular will of the people. The vast majority of the Syrian people, just like the rest of the Middle East, are against the Israeli occupation,” he added.

Kalin, a former professor of Islamic philosophy and leading advocate of better Muslim-Christian understanding, said Islam’s majority Sunnist and minority Shi’ites have had phases of both calm and tense relations throughout Islam’s history.

They also have splits within their own ranks and varied experiences of living together in different countries.

“Both historically and doctrinally, it would be a big mistake to treat the Sunnis as one bloc and the Shi’ites as one bloc,” he argued. “There’s no one single indicator that can really define that whole identity.”

SALAFIS HIT BOTH SUNNIS AND SHI’ITES

Kalin said Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which have backed conservative Sunni movements in other recent uprisings in the Arab world, also put politics before religion in Syria.

“They are supporting the Syrian opposition against a brutal regime - that’s the bottom line there,” he said.

Erdogan, a Sunni, impressed the religious leaders meeting in Istanbul by using an iconic Shi’ite image - the killing of Imam Hussain, a grandson of the Prophet Mohammad, at a battle in 680 in Kerbala in Iraq - to denounce the bloodshed in Syria.

“What is happening today in Syria is the same as what happened in Kerbala 1,332 years ago,” he said on Friday, comparing the Syrian people to the slain Shi’ite Hussain and Assad to the rejected Sunni leader who killed him.

“This is not a Sunni or Shi’ite issue, it’s a matter of justice and oppression,” Kalin said.

Neo-sectarianism is also evident in the radical Salafi ideology that rejects both Shi’ites and other Sunnis as heretics who have strayed from the purity of early Islam, he said, noting that Salafis had recently destroyed several Sufi Muslim shrines in Libya. (Editing by Kevin Liffey)

#Syria’s rebel fighters vow no mercy for their own pro-regime family members

11/09/12

Free Syrian Army fighters told the Monitor that bringing down President Assad trumps family ties, and that they are willing to fight, or even kill, brothers and cousins fighting for the regime.

By Tom A. PeterCorrespondent


Free Syrian Army (FSA) soldiers take cover during a clash with Syrian Army forces in the Amariya district in Aleppo, Syria, Monday, Sept. 10. Manu Brabo/AP

Aleppo, Syria

It’s been nearly a month since Abu Saddam, a rebel fighter, last spoke with his brother, who fights on the side of the regime as a special forces soldier in Damascus, Syria. They feared that the phone call was being monitored, so they spoke in code as Abu Saddam tried to gauge if his brother was prepared to defect and join him in the ranks of the rebels’ Free Syrian Army (FSA).

At the time, Abu Saddam says, his brother sounded ready, but a month later his brother is still with the government.

“If my brother does not leave the Army, I swear I will kill him,” says Abu Saddam, who asked to use his nickname for security reasons. “We are fighting people who are fighting against our Sunni religion and supporting a criminal regime that doesn’t differentiate between fighters and women and children.”

Like many FSA fighters on the front lines, Abu Saddam describes his commitment to toppling the Assad regime as a quest more important than family. The Syrian uprising has devolved into a bloody civil war, pitting brother against brother, dividing families and communities in a way that may leave scars lasting long after the fighting ends.

For much of the uprising, Aleppo, a bastion of pro-Assad supporters, remained relatively quiet. But when fighting finally erupted there in late July, the city became the center of the conflict, tearing families apart.

In Aleppo’s Old City, Abu Mohammad (also a nom de guerre), the leader of a local FSA unit, says his troops are mostly battling pro-government militias. Many of the men in his unit, the Grandsons of Saladin, grew up in the city and say they have friends and family who are still loyal to the government.

“The most important thing now is the cause. It’s more important than family,” Abu Moham­mad says.

Recently, one of his soldiers, Mo­hammad Zakariah Hidad, learned that his cousin, a member of a pro-regime militia, was killed in a nearby battle with the FSA. Mr. Hidad says he was never close with his cousin, who he says terrorized protesters as a pro-government thug during the uprising. When Hidad reached the street where his cousin was killed, the battle was still ongoing, so he could only see the body with binoculars.

“I was very happy when I saw his body. I called another person in his militia whose phone number I had and told him Mahmoud [my cousin] was dead, and if he keeps fighting for [President Bashar al-] Assad, he will be next,” he says. “Because my cousin is dead it means that there is one less devil man.”

Meanwhile, the divide between Syria’s sectarian groups appears to be deepening. The FSA draws its members from most ethnic groups throughout Syria, but many Sunni Muslims in the FSA now describe themselves as engaged in a struggle to protect their religion from the country’s Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam which Assad and his closest supporters follow.

Even though there are Alawites who have defected, Abdu Abu Mohammad, a Sunni opposition fighter, says, “It’s impossible to have a Shiite with us.”

Referencing Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militant group that has supported the Assad regime, he adds, “Everyone who is a Shiite is with Hezbollah and Hezbollah is with Assad. For us as Sunnis, there is no problem with Shiites or other religions, but the Shiites say ‘If you kill a Sunni, you will go to heaven’.”

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.

Are #Syria’s Rebels Getting Too Extreme?

Aug 24, 2012 4:45 AM EDT

Syria’s 18 month-long conflict is deepening sectarian divisions, breeding more and more openly Islamist Sunni rebels talking about the rebellion ushering in Sharia law—and raising the prospect of an ungovernable post-war nation.

While the international media focuses on whether al Qaeda has latched onto the escalating Syrian conflict, opposition activists and human-rights observers are less alarmed than the Pentagon about the trickle of foreign fighters arriving in the war-torn country than about the home-grown hardening of sectarian attitudes among Syrians and the adoption by rebels of more muscular Islamist views.

Syrian rebels pray at a military base north of Aleppo July 24, 2012. (EPA / Landov)

They worry that the prolonged strife and blood-letting is disfiguring the rebellion, turning what started out as a more secular effort to oust President Bashar al-Assad and his minority Alawite-led government into a sectarian confrontation between Sunnis and religious minorities that could render Syria so fractured it is ungovernable as a single state.

“The conflict has become more sectarian and more Islamic,” says Ole Solvang of Human Rights Watch. “It was a lot more secular a year ago.” He says he’s noticed in the last 12 months more fighters sporting beards and more wearing headbands proclaiming, “There is no God but God, and Mohammed is His Messenger.” Fighters are becoming radicalized and talking openly of the rebellion ushering in an Islamist state based on Sharia law. When asked whether they are fighting for democracy or Islam many are now emphasizing the latter.

Above all, hatred for Assad’s minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam that some Sunnis reject as not being Islamic at all, is growing, adding to a toxic mix of Islamism and sectarianism that’s already leaching poison beyond Syria’s borders into neighboring Lebanon. On August 15, gunmen from a Lebanese Shia clan abducted more than 20 Syrian Sunnis in the Bekaa Valley in eastern Lebanon in response to the kidnapping of a clansman by rebels in the Syrian capital of Damascus. And earlier this week, a dozen were killed and scores more injured when fighting erupted in the Lebanese city of Tripoli involving the Alawites and Sunni Muslims.

Radwan Abu-Alsha, a commander with the Tawheed brigade in Aleppo, is not unusual in rejecting brusquely the idea that there can ever be reconciliation between Sunni rebels and Alawites, whom he says butchered his wife and children last March in Homs. “Alawites were my friends and neighbors, but no one should ask me to live side-by-side with them again,” he told The Daily Beast. Along with several Tawheed colleagues who nodded vigorously in agreement, he stressed the responsibility of the Alawites in the pro-Assad Shabiha militia for many of the worst excesses in Homs this winter and spring and elsewhere in the country.

Many Sunnis have worked closely with the regime since Hafez al-Assad established it 40 years ago. Sunnis who have benefited from it in terms of power and wealth continue to fight to preserve it. But the 18 month-long conflict is exacerbating Syria’s sectarian divisions, testing the loyalty of senior Sunni members to breaking point and prompting an increasing number to defect.

“Hundreds of years ago we lived next door to each other and in peace. Assad is exploiting sectarian divisions.”—Sunni mosque leader

Last week, the most senior defector since the uprising against the government began, Riad Hijab, the country’s former prime minister, urged Syrian troops and officials to join the rebellion, labeling Assad the “enemy of God.” Some Syrians interpreted this as a coded message suggesting that, as an Alawite, Assad is not a true Muslim.

On August 19, Assad appeared to respond to the charge by making a rare public appearance to pray at the Hamad mosque in Damascus at the start of Eid al-Fitr, a three-day holiday marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan. It was the first time he’d been seen in public since July’s bombing in Damascus in which top security and defense aides were killed.

Like his father, Bashar has sought to obscure the regime’s Alawite roots, but he appears to be hedging his bets now, praying at a Sunni mosque one day but using the Alawite-dominated Shabiha to raise the sectarian temperature by carrying out atrocities such as the massacre in May in Houla in which 108 Sunnis died. Syria observers believe this is part of a last-ditch effort by the regime to divert the conflict into a sectarian war and to make it less about Assad. And it appears to be working.

“In order to survive, Assad and his Alawite generals will struggle to turn Syria into Lebanon—a fractured nation, where no one community can rule,” argues Syria expert Joshua Landis of the University of Oklahoma on his blog, Syria Comment. He terms this Assad’s Lebanon option.

The Assad regime is stoking the fear among the country’s minorities, from Assad’s Alawite sect—15 percent of Syria’s 22.5 million population—to Christians and Druze, that a rebel victory will trigger Sunni triumphalism and unleash a religious cleansing.

And some increasingly Islamist rebel forces are falling into Assad’s trap, forcing out Christians from their homes in Homs and other towns, including 9,000 Christians from the western Syrian city of Qusayr, following an ultimatum by a local rebel commander. Christian refugees from the Syrian town of Kusair claim that radical Islamists who had joined the fight against the Assad regime have murdered many of their relatives.

Gregorios III Laham, the Melkite Greek Catholic Patriarch of Damascus, says it isn’t foreign jihadists who are doing this. Talking to Sky News, he said they were local Muslims “moving into peaceful Christian areas.”  He said he fears Christians could be forced out of the country after the civil war, as happened in neighboring Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein, where 600,000 fled, many going to Syria.

In an interview with The Daily Beast, two senior Sunni mosque leaders in the rebel-held town of Al Bab insisted post-Assad Syria should be run according to Sharia law, but that minorities should not be afraid. “Islamic law accepts other religions. The majority of Syrians are Sunni Muslims and so they want Sharia law,” says Abdulbaset Kuredy. “We only fight people who carry weapons and those who don’t, have nothing to fear.”

He says, though, that Alawites are not Muslims, as they don’t apply “our teachings.” Is he afraid that the civil war will become more sectarian? “Hundreds of years ago we lived next door to each other and in peace. Assad is exploiting sectarian divisions,” he says.

Opposition activist “Tony” al-Taieb, who works with the Free Syrian Army-linked military council in Aleppo, says it is not surprising that religion is playing a more prominent role and that sectarian feelings are growing. “People are suffering and experiencing terrible things and it is natural for attitudes to harden as this goes on,” he says. He blames Western nations partly for the increasing sectarianism, arguing that the rebels feel neglected by the U.S. and European nations, which should be doing more actively to help rebels finish Assad. “There are more risks for the West from hanging back than intervening,” he adds.

Among the troubling risks is that as sectarianism increases more foreign fighters and jihadists will be attracted to Syria, further distorting what started as a reform movement into a holy war. Observers on the ground—from journalists to human rights groups—have seen only small groups of foreign fighters, some possibly linked to al Qaeda. But as the conflict becomes prolonged, the numbers are likely to grow
#Syria, Tripoli’s fighters

24/08/12

Lebanese army commandos driving an armored personnel carrier in the Bab al-Tabbaneh neighborhood of Tripoli. (AFP)

Lebanese army tanks were deployed last night on several main streets of Tripoli after two days of fierce fighting between Sunnis and Alawites in their neighboring enclaves of Bab al-Tabbaneh and Jabal Mohsen that killed 12 people and left scores injured. The boost in security came as Prime Minister Najib Miqati held a security meeting in his hometown with state and local figures to lay out a plan for Tripoli’s political leaders to provide full support to the army, which is getting ready to deploy in 20 locations in Jabal Mohsen and in another 10 locations in Bab al-Tabbaneh. “The situation in Tripoli is relatively stable,” Miqati said after the meeting at his residence. “We are making [all possible efforts] to prevent [the situation in] Tripoli and all of Lebanon [from exploding].”

The situation was stable indeed in Bab al-Tabbaneh around 5 p.m. on Thursday, while the fighters held their own meeting in an office in Zahrieh, an area near Bab al-Tabbaneh. The young men, all in their early 20s, sat and drank pineapple juice, exchanged impressions about the day’s fighting and discussed the current political situation in Lebanon and next-door Syria, where the regime is battling an armed rebellion that is spreading into Lebanon.

Abu Omar, a well-built 24-year-old who sells cell phones for a living, wore a white T-shirt and jeans on his break, though an hour earlier he was equipped with military gear and was shooting his M16 toward Jabal Mohsen. Abu Omar has been taking part in skirmishes with Jabal Mohsen fighters since he was 15. At first he and his friends would shoot at the area just to have fun, but then he started to understand the cause, he said.

“We are Sunnis and they are Alawites. We could hear them saying bad words about us and our religion on their walkie-talkies. Yes, it’s all sectarian. We have to defend our land. We are all fighting there together, people like me who are not religious Salafists or Islamists. It’s our home,” he said. Abou Omar is usually positioned in Souq al-Qameh with 13 other young men from the neighborhood.

The current battle started on the second day of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr. According to locals, a few children were playing on Syria Street, which divides Jabal Mohsen and Bab al-Tabbaneh. “They shot at the kids from Jabal Mohsen. We retaliated,” Abu Omar said. He is convinced that it was a provocation ordered by well-trained pro-Syrian factions in Tripoli, namely Hezbollah. “There are Hezbollah snipers in there. I know for a fact. I tested them,” he said. “I was in Souq al-Qameh, and I put a small teddy bear in a cart and pushed it. The bullet hit the teddy bear. There is no way somebody can shoot that well without training. The guys in Jabal are like us, not trained. But this guy knew what he was doing.”

He says he and his comrades won’t stop fighting, no matter how destructive it is for both sides. Now it is not just between Sunnis and Shiites, but also about the Syrian uprising. Bab al-Tabbaneh is hosting an estimated 20,000 Syrian refugees and anti-Assad regime activists. Jabal Mohsen residents tend to side with the Syrian government.

“They are our friends and we need to protect them,” Abou Mustafa, another young man from the neighborhood, said of the Syrians taking refuge in Bab al-Tabbaneh. “They don’t fight with us. There are no Syrians fighting in Tabbaneh. If they want to fight they go to fight the Assad regime in Syria. But we protect our friends and their families while they are here.”

Abou Omar agrees. “What I tell you now is what any man fighting in this neighborhood will tell you. This is far from over. It has been happening for years and years. Every now and then we shoot at each other, us and the guys from Jabal Mohsen. But this time it’s different. It’s going to get worse.” In addition, the Shiite Moqdad clan, which kidnapped scores of Syrians in Lebanon in retaliation for a member of the tribe being taken by rebels in Damascus, said Friday is the deadline for the rebels to release their relative. “Tomorrow all hell will break loose,” Abu Omar said before leaving to retake his position in Souk al-Qameh.

Thursday night Salafist Sheikh Khaled al-Baradei was killed during the clashes. Intermittent gun battles could be heard from Bab al-Tabbaneh and Jabal Mohsen in the morning. By 8 a.m., masked gunmen were roaming Tripoli’s streets, burning shops in Nour Square, and business owners were closing their shops and offices.

#Syria is one country, Syria for all!! No sectarianism!! 

#Syria is one country, Syria for all!! No sectarianism!! 

Victory closer, divisions deepen in #Syria opposition


BEIRUT (Reuters) - Three separate Syrian opposition groups have floated proposals for a transitional government in the past week, a sign that differences among the many factions opposing President Bashar al-Assad are deepening even as victory seems closer.

With fighting reaching Damascus and Aleppo in the past month, Western countries are increasingly anxious to see the disparate groups agree on a credible plan for a transitional government should Assad fall.

The head of the Syrian National Council (SNC), a long-established opposition umbrella group, said talks would be held within weeks to form a transitional government.

The next day the Free Syria Army, a loosely coordinated group of insurgents fighting Assad’s forces, floated a separate proposal that called for the establishment of a higher defense council bringing together military and civilian figures.

And the day after that, a group of exiled Syrian activists who left the SNC announced a new opposition alliance that also aimed to form a transitional government.

It is neither news nor a surprise that Syria’s opposition is divided. Assad’s opponents include Islamists and secularists, Kurds and Arabs, Sunni Muslims and members of religious minorities, defected army officers and the political activists they once hunted, exiles abroad and fighters on the ground.

The Istanbul-based SNC in particular has come under fire for being out of touch with the fighting in Syria itself. Colonel Riad al-Asaad, nominal head of the Free Syria Army, said it was made up of opportunists who want “to ride over our revolution and trade with the blood of our martyrs”.

Haitham al-Maleh, a former judge, broke away from the SNC to launch the “Council for the Syrian Revolution”.

“I don’t differ with the Syrian National Council over their vision, but over their tactics. I’m different in that I’m working on the ground, and they’re just theorizing,” he told Reuters.

Burhan Ghalioun, the SNC’s former leader, said news of the SNC’s plans to form a transitional government had created “a competitive dynamic” among those who want a role.

“I think we will be able to overcome this competition … I think Haitham’s move was a wrong one and it must be fixed with minimum fuss and without giving it importance,” he told Reuters.

Most alarming for the West, the rebels fighting inside Syria include al Qaeda-style Islamist fighters with a strong sectarian, Sunni Muslim agenda. Secularist opposition figures and members of religious minorities are also worried.

“Several opposition groups have adopted an increasingly fundamentalist discourse and demeanor, a trajectory that mirrors the conflict’s gradually deadlier and more confessional turn (and) popular loss of faith in the West,” the International Crisis Group said in a report.

Western countries fear that sectarian killings could make it difficult to halt the fighting even if Assad falls, and could unleash the sort of mass slaughter that erupted in Iraq after Saddam Hussein was toppled.

Among other issues dividing the opposition is the role of senior defectors like Brigadier General Manaf Tlas, a former member of Assad’s inner circle who fled Syria and has since been hosted by anti-Assad governments in Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

Many opposition activists say Tlas is tainted by his long service under Assad and worry that he will be foisted on them as a future leader. Ghalioun said he sees a military role for Tlas and other defecting officers to retake control of the army and re-establish security in the country. Maleh was dismissive.

“I do not think that Manaf Tlas has a role in the coming time as a leader. He should have announced his defection when he left Syria and said ‘I’m joining the Free Syrian Army and I will fight alongside them,’” Maleh said.

However, some experts say the opposition’s fractiousness has a positive side, showing pluralism emerging after decades of repression under the Assad family’s Baathist rule.

“This is a political society emerging after almost nothing. So the diversity is normal and healthy,” said Nadim Shehadi, Middle East expert at London’s Chatham House think tank.

“This argument about the incoherence of the opposition and the fact the opposition doesn’t constitute an alternative to the regime was used before as an excuse to do nothing,” he said.

“We have to help the opposition to come up with a transition plan and with an alternative.”

(Writing by Yara Bayoumy; Editing by Peter Graff)

First from their homeland, now from #Syria: Iraqis again flee sectarian fighting

31/07/2012

BAGHDAD — When he saw the bodies of men and women left rotting in the streets of Damascus, Hassan Hadi knew that the sectarian violence he had fled Iraq to escape years ago had now come to Syria. Despairingly, he left his belongings and fled again, back home.

Hadi is one of at least 12,680 Iraqis who streamed back to their homeland the past month to escape the Syrian civil war. Most of them are Iraqi Shiites, fleeing a reported rash of attacks against their community, apparently by Syrian rebel gunmen.

The attacks reflect the increasingly ugly sectarian nature of Syria’s conflict, where an opposition largely based among the country’s Sunni majority has risen up against the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad, which is dominated by members of the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. The motives for the attacks on Iraqis are unclear. They may be revenge against any Iraqi because the Shiite-led Iraqi government is seen as siding with Assad. They may also be fueled by sectarian hatreds, with resentment of Syria’s Alawite leadership flaring into anger at Shiites.

In July alone, 23 Iraqi Shiites have been killed in Syria, some of them beheaded, according to the Washington-based Shiite Rights Watch. In one gruesome case, the U.N. said an Iraqi family of seven was killed at gunpoint in their Damascus apartment.

But going back was wrenching for Hadi, given Iraq’s continued violence. “There are still bombings and explosions here, and when we decided to return to Iraq, it was a hard moment — we cried a lot,” he said, speaking at his mother’s house in Baghdad, where his family is staying until they can find a home.

The exodus of Iraqis back home is a bitter reversal for refugees tossed back and forth by violence. According to U.N. estimates, more than 1 million Iraqis fled to Syria between 2005 and 2008, when their homeland was on the brink of civil war, torn between Shiite militias and Sunni insurgents butchering their rival communities. Those who fled to Syria were a sectarian mix, though the majority were Sunnis.

Over the past few years, Iraqis have been slowly leaving Syria, many returning home as violence in Iraq eased. Fewer than 200,000 Iraqis remain in Syria, according to the office of the Iraqi ambassador in Damascus.

The recent targeting of Iraqis, however, brought a spike in returns. The majority of Iraqis fleeing Syria for home over the past month are Shiites, according to Saif Sabah, a spokesman for the Iraqi Ministry of Displacement and Migration.

According to U.N. and Iraqi officials, most of them fled Damascus, which in July saw its worst fighting yet of the 17-month-old Syrian conflict. For days, rebels took over whole neighborhoods of the Syrian capital, prompting a ferocious assault by government forces. Amid the fighting, it appears rebel fighters targeted Iraqis in the city.

The U.N. refugee agency said Iraqis in the mainly Shiite Damascus suburb of Sayeda Zeinab in particular were fleeing because of increasing violence in general but also “targeted threats” against them. Sayeda Zeinab saw heavy activity by rebel fighters during the Damascus battles.

Hadi and his family lived in Sayeda Zeinab. He said Sunni rebels and gangs went on a rampage in the suburb. He blamed the Free Syrian Army, the loose umbrella group of rebel fighters.

“The gangs of the Free Syrian Army started to spread in the area, killing women and some children as well as men,” Hadi said last week. “The bodies were left on the street for two days because no one could evacuate the casualties. My children were hysterical.”

“They are spreading sectarian violence in Syria,” Hadi said.

His report and other reports of anti-Iraqi violence could not be independently confirmed since Assad’s regime has tightly restricted journalists in Syria. The conflict has seen numerous tit-for-tat sectarian slayings among Syrians, including reported massacres by Alawite gunmen in Sunni areas.

A spokesman for the Free Syria Army strongly denied it has participated in or sanctioned the targeting of Shiite civilians.

“The members of the Free Syrian Army have principles and never do such things,” Brig. Gen. Anwar Saad-Eddin said. “The security situation has deteriorated nationwide and that anyone holds a weapon can say he’s from the Free Syrian Army. We have already arrested some of them.”

Hadi and his family of five fled to Syria in 2009 from the Iraqi Shiite holy city of Karbala in 2009 after Sunni insurgents killed his older brother. He has returned to a homeland still torn by deadly attacks. On July 23, Sunni insurgents linked to al-Qaida launched attacks in Baghdad and other Iraqi cities that killed 115 people, the country’s deadliest in more than two years.

At the al-Walid border crossing between Iraq and Syria crossing, Intisar Adel waited with her husband and daughter to enter Iraq. They fled to Syria in 2009. Now they were returning after gunmen — she believes they were rebels — stormed their apartment building in Damascus and ordered the landlord to evict all Iraqis, she said.

“They shot an Iraqi in the leg and they robbed some Iraqi residents in the building,” she said. “We immediately left the building and left our belongings there.

“The situation is unbearable.”

Most Iraqis are returning with the help of free flights and bus tickets paid for by the Iraqi government. In the last two weeks alone, Baghdad has flown at least 17 planeloads home from Syria. At least 5,000 Iraqis have driven across border crossings in their chaotic exodus from Syria.

Iraqi officials and Mideast experts say the targeting of Iraqis may be payback against the Baghdad government’s ties with Iran, which is Assad’s strongest ally in the region.

Though Baghdad has publicly refused to be drawn into Syria’s war, skeptics believe it is at least helping Iran ship weapons and other reinforcements to Assad’s regime. In March, the U.S. urged Baghdad to cut off its airspace to flights headed to Syria from Iran, and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki pledged to curb arms smuggling across his borders.

“It seems that the Syrian opposition wrongly thinks that Iraq’s government is taking the side of the regime. And some armed groups are targeting Iraqis because of this,” said Raad al-Dahlaki, a Sunni lawmaker in Baghdad.

“The people behind attacking Iraqis want to send a message that the conflict is of a regional dimension,” al-Dahlaki said, “and some governments and countries in the region should pay now for their stances.”

That reflects the broader fear, that as the Syrian conflict worsens it could turn into a wider sectarian conflict. Kamran Bokhari, a Toronto-based expert on Mideast issues for the global intelligence company Statfor, predicted militant groups from across the region will flock to Syria if a peace agreement isn’t settled soon.

“The entire region is descending into a regional geosectarian war,” Bokhari said. “The question is, how bad is it going to get?” 

Annan fears “imminent battle” in #Syria’s Aleppo

Reuters - International mediator Kofi Annan said he feared an “imminent battle” for Syria’s biggest city Aleppo.

Syrian opposition sources said helicopters from President Bashar al-Assad’s military pounded a rebel-held part of the city on Saturday and armored units were positioned for an onslaught that could determine its fate.

“I am concerned about reports of the concentration of troops and heavy weapons around Aleppo, in anticipation of an imminent battle,” Annan said in a statement.

“The escalation of the military build-up in Aleppo and the surrounding area is further evidence of the need for the international community to come together to persuade the parties that only a political transition, leading to a political settlement, will resolve this crisis.”

But a Syrian opposition leader urged foreign allies to circumvent the divided U.N. Security Council and intervene.

“Our friends and allies will bear responsibility for what is happening in Aleppo if they do not move soon,” said Abdelbasset Sida, the head of the Syrian National Council which is the main umbrella group for opposition to Assad.

“Any action has to be from outside the Security Council through an Arab League initiative and through a resolution passed by the General Assembly,” he said early on Sunday on a visit to the United Arab Emirates for talks with officials.

French President Francois Hollande said he would keep trying to convince Russia andChina, which have Security Council vetoes, to support harder sanctions against Assad that they have opposed during the 16-month-old uprising.

“I will once more addressRussiaand China so that they recognize there would be chaos and civil war if Bashar al-Assad isn’t soon stopped,” said Hollande.

He said the Syrian government knew it was doomed and would use force until the very end, adding: “The role of the member states of the U.N. Security Council is to step in as quickly as possible.”

Russia played down speculation that it might offer Assad asylum, with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov saying on Saturday Moscow had no such agreement and was not even thinking about it.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition monitoring group, reported helicopter attacks on Aleppo’s central Salaheddine district and fighting elsewhere in the city.

“Helicopters are participating in clashes at the entrance of Salaheddine district and bombarding it,” it said.

One opposition activist said he had seen tanks and armored troop carriers heading for the district.

On the approaches to Aleppo from the north many villagers were still shopping or tending their fields. But fighters from the rebel Free Syrian Army were also in evidence.

One man in his 40s, carrying his family on a motorcycle, said he was fleeing the fighting in the city.

“We are living in a war zone,” he told Reuters. “I and my relatives are just going back and forth, trying to stay away from the fighting. We left Aleppo when we saw smoke and helicopters firing.”

CRUCIAL TEST

The battle for the city of 2.5 million people is seen as a crucial test for a government that has committed major military resources to holding control of its two main power centers, Aleppo in the north and the capital Damascus.

While neither side has managed to gain the upper hand, the uprising is being watched anxiously outside Syria amid fears sectarian conflict could spill over its borders. Minority Alawites have dominated through more than 40 years of Assad family rule in Syria, which has a Sunni Muslim majority.

Military experts believe that while Assad’s more powerful forces will overcome the rebels in Aleppo and other major cities, it risks loss of control in the countryside because the loyalty of large sections of the army is in doubt.

Three rebel fighters were killed in clashes before dawn on Saturday in Aleppo, the Observatory said. It said 160 people were reported killed in Syria on Friday, adding to an overall death toll of around 18,000 since the uprising began.

Video footage provided by the Observatory showed smoke rising over apartment blocks in the city into a hazy sky on Saturday. The sound of sporadic gunfire could be clearly heard.

Fighting was reported in other towns across Syria: Deraa, the cradle of the revolution, Homs, the scene of some of the bloodiest combat, and Hama.

At least 10 people were killed on Saturday when security forces went into Maadameyat al-Sham near Damascus, the Observatory said.

Russia has said international support for Syrian rebels would lead to “more blood” and the government could not be expected to willingly give in to its opponents.

It has also said it would not allow searches of Russian-flagged ships under new European Union sanctions governing vessels suspected of carrying weapons to Syria.

The increase in fighting in Aleppo follows a bomb attack on July 18 that killed Assad’s defense minister and three other top officials in Damascus, a development that led some analysts to speculate that the government’s grip was slipping.

#Syria defections hurt army morale, core intact

As Syrian army defections multiply, the backbone of the regime remains grounded on a loyal core of officers motivated either by conviction or fear of a post-revolt purge of their ranks.

The most prominent desertions have been the June 22 defection of a pilot who landed his fighter in Jordan and that of 85 soldiers who escaped to Turkey on Monday.

Such events offer inspiration for the increasingly organised rebels which, according to activists and monitors, have inflicted heavy losses on government troops in past weeks.

“These defections hurt the morale of the army,” Riad Kahwaji, who heads the Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis (INEGMA), told AFP.

But “you don’t have the kind of scale of defections that would make an impact,” said Aram Nerguizian, an analyst at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).

The scale of defections in the Syrian army, one of the largest in the Arab world, is hard to quantify, despite widespread videos and news reports of dissent.

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, “tens of thousands” of soldiers have fled since the anti-regime revolt broke out in March 2011, but not all have joined the armed rebellion.

British military analyst Paul Smyth points out that “the number of people who have deserted is still quite low considering the size of the Syrian military, which is quite large.”

“Any army which has been fighting in various parts of a country for over a year has obviously maintained a certain degree of cohesion,” said Smyth, founder of defense consulting firm R3IConsulting.

The International Institute for Strategic Studies estimates that in 2010, a year before the revolt, the Syrian army could count 325,000 troops under its command.

This number does not include an additional 300,000 reservists.

Either “people are not leaving the army because they are genuinely still loyal to the regime, or they are frightened of reprisals that may happen to their families,” said Smyth, a retired British officer.

“Probably both are true,” he added.

Testimonies from deserters often cite disobeying orders to shoot civilians as the prime cause of defections.

Kassem Saadeddine, spokesman for the rebel Free Syrian Army, said that soldiers who were reluctant to defect for fear of reprisals were supporting the rebels with weapons, intelligence and logistics.

But in elite units, the backbone of the army, numbering approximately 100,000 men, there have been no visible cracks.

“In Syria, there are two armies: the military itself and the army defending the regime,” Kahwaji said.

These include the dreaded fourth division of the First Army Corps, led by the younger brother of President Bashar al-Assad, Maher, which Kahwaji said “is the best equipped and better paid.”

The special forces, the Republican Guard and some of the fifth and ninth divisions are also “darlings of the regime”.

But in a majority Sunni country led by the Assad clan, hailing from the minority Alawite faith, loyalty to community has become more pronounced as the conflict takes an increasingly sectarian bent.

“Every major unit within the Syrian armed forces that has the ability to shape the security outcome is either directly or indirectly controled by Alawite officers,” Nerguizian told AFP.

“While these defections are not insignificant, they are still mainly Sunni soldiers who don’t have the kind of access to command and control” needed to cause “shifts within the Alawite command structure.”

Even many Sunni officers are hesitant to take the plunge.

“Many now believe that even if Assad were to go, the country will be embroiled in instability for years,” Nerguizian said. “There are still far too many within the military who prefer some kind of continuity over years of instability.

“Even if they support the opposition, they fear the prospect of an Iraq-style ‘de-Baathification’,” the analyst said, referring to the dissolution of the Baath — the ruling party in Syria — after the fall of Saddam Hussein in Iraq.

“They are going to hang in there with the hope of some political settlement.”

According to experts, the status quo is likely to drag on, especially given NATO’s reluctance to intervene in the conflict.

“The regime cannot decapitate the opposition by force and vice versa. It is a real war of attrition,” said Nerguizian.