The Peterborough Examiner

Syrian troops recapture vital border crossing

Rebels had held crossing into Jordan since 2015

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

JABER AS-SARHAN, JORDAN — Syrian government forces recaptured a vital border crossing with Jordan on Friday and raised the national flag for the first time in years, restoring sovereignt­y over a key region and potentiall­y reopening a gateway for Syrian exports to Arab countries.

Weakened by a crushing government offensive backed by Russia and abandoned by their U.S. allies, rebels in southern Syria found themselves compelled to accept yet another humiliatin­g surrender deal that would see opposition fighters transporte­d by buses to areas held by rebels in the country’s north.

The capture of the Naseeb border crossing came hours after the rebels announced they had reached an agreement with Russian mediators to end the violence in Daraa province and surrender the crossing. It marks the return of President Bashar Assad’s forces to the province where the uprising against him began seven years ago, following successive military victories across most of the country with the help of powerful allies Russia and Iran. It also underscore­s the U.S.’s remarkable declining role and influence in Syria.

“What is happening in southern Syria is a big achievemen­t for the Syrian army and its allies and a resounding defeat for America, Israel and their allies,” said an official of the Iranian-backed Hezbollah militia, Ali Daamoush, during a Friday prayers sermon in Beirut.

The rebels in southern Syria once received significan­t backing and support from the U.S. that has receded and all but dried up over the past few years. Although the U.S. government negotiated a de-escalation agreement for southern Syria last year, it has remained silent as Assad’s forces marched onto Daraa in the past two weeks in a crushing assault that displaced more than 330,000 people. Similarly, Israel is quietly acknowledg­ing that Assad’s forces will soon be on its doorstep, laying down red lines for postwar relations with the Syrian leader. Israel’s main concern now is to keep archrival Iran as far away from its border as possible — along with its proxy, the Lebanese militia Hezbollah.

The government’s offensive to retake Daraa and the nearby Quneitra region on the frontier near the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights began on June 19, and is now expected to turn more forcefully toward retaking Quneitra, potentiall­y setting up a clash with Hezbollah and Iran unless they agree to stay away from the area as Israel demands. The assault has forced hundreds of thousands to flee toward the sealed Jordanian border and the frontier near the Golan in one of the largest displaceme­nts in the seven-year Syrian conflict. Dozens have been killed.

An Associated Press journalist on the Jordanian side of the border could see the Syrian side of the crossing, along with the former free zone and some blue tents housing displaced people. The Syrian flag flew in the distance, along with what appeared to be a Russian flag.

The rebels seized control of the crossing in 2015, severing a major lifeline for Syrian exports and disrupting a major trade route between Syria and Jordan, Lebanon and the oil-rich Gulf countries.

There was no immediate comment from Jordan on the Syrian forces’ recapture of the Naseeb crossing. On Twitter, Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said Amman was holding talks with all parties to the Syrian conflict focused on ensuring the return of the displaced.

“The solution is political and the protection of civilians, preventing their displaceme­nt and saving the (Syrian) brothers more suffering is everyone’s responsibi­lity,” he wrote.

The rebels accused Washington of betraying the opposition fighters after internatio­nal community bowed to Russian pressure.

“We were betrayed mostly by the Americans. We should have been cautious by our friends and the betrayal of friends,” the spokespers­on for the rebels’ joint operations room, Ibrahim Jabawi, said bitterly.

Hezbollah, meanwhile, boasted that some of its elite units were helping to direct battles close to the front with the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

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