The National - News

SYRIA REBELS EXPECT VERY LITTLE TO CHANGE AFTER STRIKES

Allies’ attack on regime of ‘unjust dictator’ is unlikely to make much difference for country’s battered civilians

- DAVID ENDERS With reporting by Ahmed Barakat in Turkey

Ordinary Syrians and rebel fighters say they do not think the missile strikes on Syria by the US, France and Britain will swing the country’s sevenyear-old civil war against President Bashar Al Assad.

The strikes yesterday morning were limited to sites linked to Mr Al Assad’s chemical weapons and caused no reported casualties.

“I support any attack on Assad from any party because he is an unjust dictator and murderer,” said Anas Al Wawi, whose parents were forced to leave their home in a suburb of Damascus last week by regime troops.

Mr Al Wawi’s family comes from Douma, the target of the April 7 chemical attack that triggered yesterday’s military response by the US and its allies.

Two days after that attack, the rebels holding Douma began withdrawin­g under a deal with the government, bringing yet another region under its control.

But instead of dealing a blow to Mr Al Assad, the strikes emboldened his supporters around Douma, Mr Al Wawi said, leading to attacks yesterday morning against buses carrying people from the town to rebel-held areas in northern Syria as part of the evacuation deal.

“My brother was on one of the buses that was attacked,” he said. “A young man on the bus was killed.”

US President Donald Trump ordered missile strikes on a Syrian airbase last April after a sarin gas attack on the northern city of Khan Sheikhoun that killed scores of people.

Mr Trump said the attack was intended “to prevent and deter the spread and use of deadly chemical weapons”. But there have been many reports of chemical weapons being used by the Assad regime since then.

Yesterday’s strikes were more wide-ranging and included Mr Al Assad’s chemical weapons research, production and storage centres at three sites in Damascus and Homs.

“This should have happened a long time ago because of the repeated use of chemicals by Assad,” said Mohamed Basirini, a doctor from Khan Sheikhoun who left the town in 2014 and now lives in Turkey.

But Dr Basirini said he did not expect it to make a real difference.

“Currently, the best thing to do is to create a no-fly zone over liberated areas where people can live relatively safely,” he said.

Mr Al Wawi doubted that Mr Trump’s motives had anything to do with sparing Syrian lives.

“It has nothing to do with chemical weapons. It is for Trump and his domestic battles,” he said, referring to the US president’s legal troubles. Last week federal agents raided the office of Mr Trump’s lawyer.

There were reports that Mr Al Assad’s forces had moved military equipment and personnel away from bases over the past week.

An employee at one of the largest hospitals in government-controlled Damascus said before the strikes that there had been no preparatio­ns for an increase in casualties.

He said he did not believe the strikes had anything do with chemical weapons use.

“It is because the terrorists lost to the Syrian army in most areas,” he said, referring the array of foreign-backed rebel forces seeking to overthrow Mr Al Assad. “What we want from the Americans is to stop supporting terrorists and help the Syrian government overcome the crisis.”

Ever hopeful, rebel groups told The National before the strikes that they had made plans to take advantage of US strikes in any way possible, possibly launching operations against government forces in their wake.

But yesterday, rebels expressed disappoint­ment and fear of a renewed government offensive against Idlib province, the last major part of the country under rebel control.

“I am expecting an escalation by the regime against civilians in Idlib and in the areas of northern Syria and the liberated areas, because the regime always takes revenge on civilians,” a rebel fighter told Reuters. “More was expected from the American strike.”

Even before the strikes took place, opponents of Mr Al Assad said a severe strike would galvanise his foreign backers.

When rebels, partly with US support, were putting heavy pressure on government forces in previous years, Iran and eventually Russia stepped in to shift the balance.

Both countries have troops in support of Mr Al Assad and the Russians have provided him with heavy air and artillery support, something the US has declined to do for the rebels fighting him.

“If the American strike were serious the Russians would instantly intervene,” said Suhayb Al Ali, a journalist from Homs.

But Al Ali said that he supported any US action because of the possibilit­y that a severe strike might pressure Russia to hasten its efforts for a political solution.

“The Assad regime, Russia and Iran have gone so far in the war against the Syrian people using all sorts of weapons, including chemicals. The Syrian people don’t have much left to lose,” he said.

I expect an escalation against civilians in the liberated areas, because the regime always takes revenge on civilians REBEL FIGHTER

 ?? AP ?? The missile strikes against the regime for its Douma chemical attack galvanised its supporters in Damascus, who waved Syrian, Iranian and Russian flags
AP The missile strikes against the regime for its Douma chemical attack galvanised its supporters in Damascus, who waved Syrian, Iranian and Russian flags

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