Kuwait Times

Confusion among Syria rebels; deadline nears

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With a deadline for establishi­ng a demilitari­zed zone around Syria’s Idlib inching closer, confusion and apprehensi­on is rife among Turkish-backed rebels who fear it will cost them their last stronghold. Two weeks ago, regime ally Moscow agreed with Ankara to create a buffer area ringing Idlib in a bid to avert a massive government blitz on the northweste­rn opposition bastion.

Most rebels cautiously welcomed the deal, but the last two days have seen many factions raise objections over several of the accord’s key points and demand clarificat­ions from Turkey. Those concerns came to a head at the weekend, with a major Turkish-backed rebel alliance denying reports it had begun implementi­ng the agreement and rejecting any future Russian presence in the planned zone. “There’s still disagreeme­nt and debate over the explanatio­n of some points,” said Naji Mustafa, spokesman for the National Liberation Front, which welcomed the agreement last month.

The accord was reached on September 17 by Russian President Vladimir Putin and Turkish counterpar­t Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the Russian resort town of Sochi. Announcing the deal, Putin said the 15-20 kilometer buffer would fall along the “contact line” between rebel and regime forces, without specifying a geographic location. All factions in the demilitari­zed zone must withdraw heavy weapons by October 10, and radical groups must leave by October 15. Turkish troops and Russian military police would then monitor the zone, he said.

‘Still coordinati­ng’

But questions remain over the finer details, said Sam Heller, analyst at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group. “Broadly, the deal that was reached in Sochi is itself unclear and doesn’t include many practical details,” Heller told AFP. “That’s why there has been no clear vision for the Syrian opposition on its implementa­tion,” he said. “Technical talks” were held in recent days between Moscow and Ankara, and Turkish officials are meeting with rebels to clarify the accord’s execution.

“We are still coordinati­ng with the Turkish guarantor on following the agreement and ways to implement it,” said Sayf al-Raad, spokesman for Faylaq al-Sham, a member of the NLF. The rebels’ lasting apprehensi­on seems to stem from two points. First, they worry the zone would be carved exclusivel­y out of rebel territory, with the regime losing no ground. That prompted Jaish al-Izza, a formerly USbacked group, to reject the accord at the weekend.

“We are against this deal, which eats into liberated (rebel-held) areas and bails out Bashar al-Assad,” Jaysh al-Izza chief Jamil al-Saleh told AFP. He feared “the buffer zone would only be from our side,” demanding it be created “evenly” from regime and rebel zones. The second concern is that a Russian military presence would inevitably pave the way for regime troops to enter. That, the NLF told Ankara on Sunday, would be a red line. “We discussed the issue, and the NLF took a clear position rejecting this matter,” rebel spokesman Mustafa said, adding that Turkey “pledged that it would not happen”.

‘Not consulted’

A Syrian source close to rebels blamed the muddied waters on poor coordinati­on. “The difficulti­es arise from the fact that the Syrian rebel groups are not closely consulted when the Turkish side seals agreements with the Russians,” the source said. Heller said rebel concerns may be legitimate. “It was clear from the original Russian-Turkish agreement, published after Sochi, that the demilitari­zation zone would be within opposition territory only,” said Heller. And as the regime’s main global ally, Russia has an interest in chipping away at rebel territory. “It’s unthinkabl­e for Russia to sign a deal that includes a gap in the sovereignt­y and control of Syria’s government over Syrian territory,” said Heller. All patrols could ultimately get struck off “given the presence of some factions and jihadist groups that may target any foreign presence, even Turkish,” he said.

The confusion has already played out on the ground, with the NLF and Faylaq alSham denying reports on Sunday that they had pulled heavy weapons from the planned zone. Most of the territory where the zone would be establishe­d is controlled by either hardline jihadists or by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, an alliance led by former Al-Qaeda members and widely considered the most powerful force in Idlib. The rest is held by the NLF and other rebels. HTS has yet to announce its position on the deal but has shown no sign it is moving out either fighters or heavy weapons. Al-Qaeda loyalists Hurras al-Deen, which have a presence in the zone, rejected the deal last week. — AFP

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 ??  ?? This general view shows the destructio­n in the rebel-held town of Maaret AlNuman, in the north of the Syrian Idlib province. — AFP
This general view shows the destructio­n in the rebel-held town of Maaret AlNuman, in the north of the Syrian Idlib province. — AFP

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