Kuwait Times

Syria rebels and ex-Qaeda arm in mini-war

US to isolate terrorist group in wider insurgency

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The coming together of several factions of Syrian rebels against the countryís former Al-Qaeda affiliate has upped the ante against the jihadists following their exclusion from peace talks. Six factions have joined the powerful Ahrar al-Sham group in the battle against Fateh al-Sham Front, which changed its name from Al-Nusra Front last year after breaking ties with Al-Qaeda. Analysts say this comes as Fateh al-Sham seeks to intimidate its previous allies, as it feels it is being isolated from the armed opposition amid air strikes against the jihadist group. Fateh alShamówhi­ch is listed internatio­nally as a ìterrorist­î groupóhas been excluded from both a fragile nationwide ceasefire in force since Dec 30 and peace talks held this week in Kazakhstan.

It has been hit in recent weeks by a series of deadly air strikes, most believed to have been carried out by the US-led coalition fighting jihadists. The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitor, has said Fateh al-Sham appears to believe that local rebels were providing coordinate­s for the strikes. The infighting comes after years of Fateh al-Sham battling alongside rebels against President Bashar al-Assadís forces in Idlib province, which is the last major bastion of the armed opposition. The alliance has complicate­d the support of Western countries for the armed opposition.

Pre-emptive attack

Earlier this week, the jihadist group accused rebels of having brokered a deal to ìfight Fateh al-Sham and isolate it.î Fateh alSham attacked a rebel base, sparking fighting between it and several factions across the northern provinces of Idlib and Aleppo. ìFateh al-Sham sees its attack as pre-emptive,î said Aymenn al-Tamimi, an expert in jihadist movements, as rebels come under pressure to dissociate themselves from the former AlQaeda affiliate. He noted ìthe increasing frequency of US air strikes on Fateh al-Sham, which I think the US clearly intended in part as a message to other factions to stay away from merging with Fateh al-Sham.î

ìThe US has been intending to isolate Fateh al-Sham in the wider insurgency,î he said. He said ìthe lack of condolence­s being paid to Fateh al-Sham by other factions for the loss of fighters and leaders at the hands of these air strikesî could show this strategy was at play. The armed opposition has for months criticized Fateh al-Sham, accusing it of tarnishing the image of the rebellion because of its ties to Al-Qaeda despite them cutting ties to the group last year. Tensions between both sides further piqued after the army retook the whole of Aleppo from the rebels last month and they accused each other for the fall of the northern city.

Militarily costly

On Thursday, Ahrar al-Sham said in a statement it would consider all attacks against it or its bases ìas a declaratio­n of war.î Tamimi said it was unclear how far the factions would go in their fight, but ìAhrar alSham did make clear it is trying to act to deter any aggressive action rather than totally eliminate and isolate Fateh al-Sham.î However, ìif it does escalate to an existentia­l war, then I have no doubt Fateh al-Sham will defend its holdings to the end,î he said.

ìLosing out in Idlib would mean the end of Fateh al-Sham as a major player in the Syrian insurgency.î Syria specialist Thomas Pierret said Fateh al-Sham was ìtaking series of strategic positions to intimidate the factionsî, but both sides had no interest in continuing the fighting. The rebels ìknow a direct confrontat­ion with a jihadist faction of this scope would be suicidal,î he said. And Ahrar al-Sham knew a fight to death with Fateh al-Sham would be ìmilitaril­y costly.î

At the end of Astana, regime supporters Russia and Iran and rebel backer Turkey stressed their determinat­ion to fight jihadist groups and the need to dissociate rebel groups from Fateh al-Sham. Syriaís conflict has killed more than 310,000 people and displaced millions since it erupted in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government protests.

It has since evolved into a complex war, with the rise of jihadist groups and the involvemen­t of internatio­nal powers.—AFP

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 ??  ?? ALEPPO: Syrian government forces walk past a destroyed vehicle and a graffiti bearing the emblem of the Ahrar Al-Shamís Rahman Brigade of the Islamic Front (Left) in the former rebel-held Sukkari district in the northern city of Aleppo. —AFP
ALEPPO: Syrian government forces walk past a destroyed vehicle and a graffiti bearing the emblem of the Ahrar Al-Shamís Rahman Brigade of the Islamic Front (Left) in the former rebel-held Sukkari district in the northern city of Aleppo. —AFP

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