The Mercury News

Airstrikes batter Syria after talks don’t work

- By Louisa Loveluck The Washington Post

BEIRUT >> Syrian and Russian warplanes launched dozens of airstrikes on Syria’s northern province of Idlib on Saturday, a monitoring group said, intensifyi­ng pressure on the country’s last rebel stronghold after crisis talks yielded no progress.

At least seven civilians were dead after at least 80 airstrikes around the province’s southern edge, according to the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights. It said the violence was the “most intense” in weeks, with helicopter­s also dropping barrel bombs packed with shrapnel.

Pro-government forces have massed on the edges of Idlib, wedged into Syria’s northwest along the Turkish border. Syrian and Russian officials — key allies in Syria’s long conflict — appear to be preparing for an all-out assault to retake the area for good.

But there are deep fears that an attempt to reclaim Idlib could touch off major bloodshed and a humanitari­an crisis among the area’s 3 million civilians, half of them displaced from elsewhere in Syria.

At a meeting in Tehran on Friday, the presidents of Russia, Iran and Turkey failed to agree on a cease-fire to halt the violence.

Although on different sides of the war, Turkey and Russia share an interest in preventing the situation from unraveling.

Turkey worries the violence could send hundreds of thousands of fleeing civilians to its border. Russia is wary of being drawn deeper into a bloody battle as it tells internatio­nal partners that Syria is stabilizin­g and open for reconstruc­tion.

The Observator­y said Saturday that some 2,000 people were already on the move from areas being bombed, heading deeper into Idlib province.

Al-Qaeda-linked rebels, known as Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, control more than half of Idlib.

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