Arab Times

Syrians resume offensive on rebel stronghold in Idlib

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ISTANBUL, Aug 5, (Agencies): The Syrian army said Monday it will resume its offensive against the northweste­rn Idlib province, the last opposition-held stronghold, accusing insurgents there of violating a recent truce. Opposition activists reported airstrikes had resumed in the southern parts of the enclave, which is located on the Turkish border.

Meanwhile, Turkish and American military officials began a two-day set of talks in the Turkish capital, Ankara, about establishi­ng a safe zone in northeaste­rn Syria to address Ankara’s concerns about US-allied Syrian Kurdish-led forces in that region.

The Syrian military said in a statement carried by state media that insurgents in Idlib had continued to break the cease fire, which went into effect late Aug 1.

State media and opposition activists had reported repeated violations of the truce by both sides since then.

The military statement said the rebels also failed to abide by an agreement reached last year to withdraw from a demilitari­zed zone surroundin­g the enclave.

The cease fire marked a brief pause in the stalled government offensive against al-Qaeda-linked militants and other jihadi groups, which dominate Idlib and surroundin­g areas.

The assault on the rebel stronghold began April 30, displacing more than 400,000 people and killing hundreds. Around 3 million people are living inside the rebel-held area.

Restarting

After the army announced it was restarting military operations, the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, an opposition war monitor, said Syrian and Russian warplanes began airstrikes on the southern parts of Idlib, mainly the town of Khan Sheikhoun.

The Syrian military later reported that insurgents fired rockets at the Russian air base of Hmeimim “inflicting large human and material” losses outside it.

Turkey’s defense minister tweeted that a new round of talks had begun with the US military about creating a Turkish-controlled safe zone inside Syria east of the Euphrates River, which would have no Syrian Kurdish forces within 19-25 miles of the border. Turkey sees the Syrian Kurdish fighters as terrorists aligned with a Kurdish insurgency within Turkey.

American troops are stationed in northeaste­rn Syria along with the Kurdish forces, and have fought the Islamic State group together.

Turkish-US negotiatio­ns on the safe zone stalled in recent weeks, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly threatened a new military operation into the area. On Sunday, Erdogan renewed that threat.

For their part, the Syrian Kurds say Ankara’s statements mask a territoria­l grab inside Syria, which the Kurdish forces had liberated from IS militants.

The Syrian Democratic Council issued a statement Monday saying that its military wing – the US-backed and Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces – is a “force to defend” Syria’s ethnic and cultural pluralism.

The council added that Ankara “is trying to deceive the public” and to get the US and other parties to “participat­e in the crimes that Turkey is committing against humanity.”

Syrian militants have shelled the outskirts of the Hmeimim air base in northwest Syria, Russia’s Defence Ministry said on Monday.

The air base was unaffected by the attack, the RIA news

agency quoted the ministry as saying.

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