The National - News

Syrian jet ‘shot down’ as Assad forces close in on town bombed with sarin

- Opinion, page 13

Hardline rebels in an extremist-controlled bastion in north-west Syria claim they shot down a regime Sukhoi 22 warplane yesterday.

Hayat Tahrir Al Sham, a former Al Qaeda affiliate, said the jet was hit over the town of Al Tamanah in southern Idlib, where a grinding offensive by the Syrian military has displaced thousands.

Orient, a pro-Syrian opposition TV station, also reported that a jet had been downed and said that the incident took place near Khan Sheikhoun, close to the front lines of the regime’s offensive.

Khan Sheikhoun is nine kilometres from Al Tamanah.

Regime fighters yesterday pushed towards Khan Sheikhoun, which is on an important motorway, after a week of ground advances, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, which is in Britain, said. “Regime forces are now 4km from Khan Sheikhun to the west, with nothing between them and it but fields,” Observator­y chief Rami Abdel Rahman said.

To the east, fighters loyal to Syrian President Bashar Al Assad are battling to control a hill 6km from the town.

Clashes yesterday killed 14 regime forces, 20 extremists and seven allied rebels, he said.

Eight years into Syria’s civil war, Idlib is the last major stronghold of opposition to the Assad regime.

Air strikes and rocket fire by the regime and its ally Russia have pounded the region for more than three months, killing hundreds and displacing tens of thousands.

A sarin gas attack on Khan Sheikhoun in 2017 killed dozens of people and prompted President Donald Trump to order a missile strike against the Syrian airbase from where the United States said the attack had been launched.

An investigat­ion by the United Nations and the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons said the Syrian government was responsibl­e for releasing sarin on the town on April 4, 2017.

Damascus denies using such weapons. Almost all residents of Khan Sheikhun have since left the town.

State news agency Sana yesterday said troops had taken several villages from the militants in the area west of Khan Sheikhun. AFP correspond­ents reported seeing dozens of families fleeing fighting over the past few days.

A buffer zone deal brokered by Russia and Turkey last year was supposed to protect the Idlib region’s three million inhabitant­s from an all-out regime offensive, but it was never fully implemente­d.

It lasted barely more than two days: a ceasefire in Idlib, the last redoubt of rebels fighting to overthrow Syria’s Bashar Al Assad, as well as home to more than three million civilians, swiftly collapsed last week.

Civilians who had gone back home found themselves in the crossfire and fled yet again. Half a million people have been displaced since May and nearly 800 killed, according to the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitari­an Affairs.

It is proof yet again – as if more proof were needed – that the Assad regime can never be a partner for peace in Syria. It never was, and it never will be. Its continued survival will ensure that whatever peace reigns in Syria when the guns fall silent will be short-lived, rendered inherently unstable by the regime’s chronic inability to adhere to any good-faith agreement or compromise.

The assault on Idlib began in earnest four months ago and was stepped up in July with an intensifie­d aerial campaign. The result was a series of war crimes – the systematic targeting of schools, bakeries, markets, rescue workers and hospital facilities, some of which had shared their GPS coordinate­s with the UN to avoid being bombed.

The civilian suffering, exacerbate­d by the fact that many residents were themselves refugees from elsewhere, and because most of the population consists of women and children, has been extreme. But hopes for a reprieve were rekindled by a ceasefire deal that was announced on August

1 and which came into effect the following day. Civilians returned to towns like Khan Sheikhoun and Maarat Al Numan, which had been emptied of their inhabitant­s because of the routine bombardmen­t of civilian targets by the regime and its allies.

The ceasefire itself only lasted until August 4, ending with a regime-fuelled barrage of violence that included dozens of air raids and mortar shells. Government forces advanced and over the weekend seized new territory from the rebels fighting them. Civilians who had returned to their homes, navigating through the rubble that was their towns, were forced to flee again, spending the Islamic holiday of Eid Al Adha on the run, often scattered in refugee settlement­s or with no shelter from the bombardmen­t from the skies.

The Syrian regime violated the deal, ostensibly because the main militant group that controls Idlib, Hayat Tahrir Al Sham, extremists who were affiliated with Al Qaeda, refused to pull back from a buffer zone that separates the two sides and demilitari­se it in line with a prior agreement negotiated by Russia and Turkey. The terrorists of HTS, who have faced sustained protests by Idlib’s civilians in rejection of their ideology, are unlikely to adhere to the regime’s terms.

But this quid pro quo is nothing but a cruel joke. Idlib’s helpless civilians can do little to force the armed militants of HTS to disarm, nor should three million civilians be collective­ly punished for the intransige­nce of the militants.

The regime has repeatedly violated the norms of war generally and ceasefire agreements specifical­ly in its campaign to militarily reclaim the country from the opposition, never letting deals signed by its own representa­tives or its allies stand in the way of its scorched earth bombardmen­t of Aleppo, the suburbs of Damascus, Idlib, or other key battles that it has won. Last year, a ceasefire in Eastern Ghouta that was agreed to by Moscow before the United Nations Security Council was promptly and unilateral­ly discarded, the regime and its allies choosing to resume a brutal siege that culminated in a chemical attack on the city of Douma and the subsequent surrender of the opposition.

The repeated tearing up of ceasefire deals throughout the country over the past few years of regime military gains should give pause to those who are now proposing rapprochem­ent with Mr Al Assad, perhaps seeking a place at the table or an opportunit­y to draw him away from his Iranian allies. Such hopes will be met with deceit.

But the more tragic reality behind the regime’s serial dishonesty is that ordinary Syrians cannot ever believe it. A common refrain whenever I interviewe­d opponents of the regime, during brief lulls in the fighting, was that “Assad cannot be trusted”. This has been confirmed on multiple occasions but what it means more broadly is that the regime is committed to complete military domination, and rhetoric that pays lip service to political reforms and human rights will remain just that. There will be no reforms once the regime has won, no gesture of conciliati­on or concession to its defeated rivals, nothing but the attempted return of totalitari­an military control. Its worst instincts will prevail over counsel that points out it cannot hope to hold a country so fragmented and torn by war without fundamenta­l changes and that Syria cannot be stable amid this injustice for long.

Right now, Mr Al Assad’s victory appears to be a foregone conclusion. But what Idlib has shown is that any deal whose basic outcome isn’t a transition away from this regime is a farce, which will sooner or later lead to renewed fighting. That price will be paid by Syria’s embattled civilians and the internatio­nal community that allowed such a propositio­n to take hold in the first place.

In breaking the ceasefire, the Syrian regime is once again violating the norms of war

 ?? AFP ?? Abu Abdullah (centre), a Syrian returning to Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib, inspects his destroyed home
AFP Abu Abdullah (centre), a Syrian returning to Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib, inspects his destroyed home
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates