The National - News

ASSAD ON VERGE OF VICTORY IN THE CRADLE OF SYRIA’S UPRISING

▶ Backers of anti-regime forces have grown silent in the face of the fall of Deraa

- KAREEM SHAHEEN Istanbul

The Syrian pilot held up a piece of paper as his plane flew over rolling fields of green, yellow and brown surroundin­g a large city – Deraa.

The authentici­ty of the undated image was unconfirme­d, but the message on that piece of paper was stark, and it would be borne out by the campaign that followed.

It said: “Here the sedition was born, and here we will bury it.”

Deraa has long had symbolic value as the cradle of the uprising in Syria. The detention and torture of teenagers who had scrawled anti-government graffiti on a school wall is often credited as the spark that led to widespread protests in 2011 against a totalitari­an police state led by the Al Assad family.

But now the regime of Bashar Al Assad stands on the verge of total victory over the city that first defied his iron grip on power. Deraa’s rebels are defeated, the city’s arc closely following that of the broader uprising in Syria, now with little if any pretense of internatio­nal outrage as Damascus, with unwavering support from Moscow and Tehran, marches inexorably towards military victory.

“The other parts of the country that fell militarily did so under immense firepower and internatio­nal silence, perhaps even acquiescen­ce and an agreement with the Russians to end the whole thing,” said a doctor in Deraa. “They agree now that all of Syria must return to the regime’s bosom.”

The province has long had great strategic value – it straddles the Jordanian border, once a key economic lifeline for Syria, and is a stone’s throw from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

Tel Aviv has lobbied Russia, the Assad regime’s most powerful backer, to prevent their Iranian allies and Tehran-sponsored militias fighting alongside the government from establishi­ng a presence near the Israeli border.

Parts of southern Syria were designated a de-escalation zone by the US, Russia and Jordan late last year, to alleviate those concerns. Parts of Deraa city have been under opposition control for years, and rebel groups controlled large chunks of the province, including the Nassib border crossing with Jordan. They also battled ISIS militants, who controlled territory in the region.

The rebels in Deraa, a coalition known in the past as the Southern Front, were often held up as an example of moderate opposition fighters who were vetted to ensure they had no extremists in their ranks. They received military and political backing from western powers, including the US and UK.

Parts of Deraa province, protected by implicit guarantees from those western nations, were also trumpeted as cradles of new institutio­ns that could thrive in democratic Syria, and where rebel fighters respected the authority of elected civilian councils.

As ever with Syria, the story was more complicate­d. The Southern Front factions were also riven by internal rivalries, complicate­d by the competing and evolving agendas of their backers. Officials with the rebel alliance have long complained that their internatio­nal backers forbade them from carrying out major offensives against the government and limited their weapons supplies, even as the opposition battled encroachme­nt by Al Qaeda-linked militants and ISIS forces.

But even those rebel groups were abandoned by their western backers.

The Assad government and its Russian allies turned to Deraa last month after a campaign in Eastern Ghouta – a rebellious agricultur­al region near the capital Damascus – in which 2,000 people died and the spectre of chemical weapons use again raised its head.

Faced with the prospect of calamitous violence, a quarter of a million people fled towns and villages in Deraa towards the Jordanian and Israeli borders, where both government­s bluntly said they would not allow refugees in, despite the harsh summer and the deaths of at least 12 children from scorpion bites and drinking contaminat­ed water. The rebels’ US allies said they would not intervene and, faced with the possibilit­y of a Russian-backed campaign, the opposition sued for peace, negotiatin­g a ceasefire and surrender deal last week.

The victory of government forces, which have surrounded the rebel-controlled parts of the city that birthed the Syrian uprising, is now a foregone conclusion.

Tens of thousands of civilians who fled the fighting have already returned to their towns, and the Syrian regime has taken control of the border crossing with Jordan for the first time since April 2015.

The regime will probably next set its sights on Idlib, the province bordering Turkey in the north with more than two million displaced people, and which is under the control of mostly conservati­ve rebel groups and Al Qaeda-linked militants. Other parts of the country in the north and the east are under US and Turkish protection.

Deraa’s fall was accompanie­d by little of the traditiona­l hand-wringing and condemnati­on by western capitals and UN officials, or even senior figures in the Syrian opposition.

When asked whether western attitudes towards the Southern Front had shifted, or if policymake­rs had decided it was best for the conflict to simply end, one western diplomat said: “I don’t have an answer to that.

“Our perception of the Syrian conflict has obviously evolved, and our support has obviously evolved.”

Another diplomat said the “moral hazard” of intervenin­g in Syria, or continuing to back an opposition that has been defeated militarily, had risen.

The doctor in Deraa had a blunter assessment: “The revolution today has no friends.”

 ?? AFP ?? A Syrian rebel looks out from behind fortificat­ions during a battle with pro-Assad fighters in western Deraa this week
AFP A Syrian rebel looks out from behind fortificat­ions during a battle with pro-Assad fighters in western Deraa this week
 ?? Reuters ?? Protesters carry bodies of people they said were killed by pro-Assad forces in Deraa, in June 2012. Now, a quarter of a million people have fled in the face of a Russian-backed regime assault
Reuters Protesters carry bodies of people they said were killed by pro-Assad forces in Deraa, in June 2012. Now, a quarter of a million people have fled in the face of a Russian-backed regime assault

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