Kuwait Times

The tale of 2 brothers reflects Syria rebel unity and divisions

Two brothers belong to different groups but share goals

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ISTANBUL: Brothers Abu Eliyas and Abu Yousef have fought at opposite ends of the insurgency against Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad. One is a member of a rebel group that was once backed by the CIA. The other is a jihadist in an internatio­nally proscribed terrorist movement. Yet despite their ideologica­l difference­s, they live under the same roof in rebel-held Idlib province and have fought on the same side against pro-Assad forces and Islamic State.

“The important thing is we fight the same enemy,” said Abu Eliyas, 40, a member of the Turkey-backed Failaq al-Sham group. “At home, we exchange military skills and informatio­n, and discuss the Syrian scene.” Abu Yousef, 27, belongs to the jihadist Tahrir al-Sham, formerly known as the Nusra Front. He believes the brothers’ “points of agreement are greater than the points of division.”

“We are members of one religion, one country and one goal”, he said. Their parallel journeys through the civil war that began in Syria in 2011 illustrate the complexiti­es of sorting insurgents deemed “radical” from more moderate rebels. This is the task facing Turkey as it seeks to shore up a deal with Russia over Idlib, which is part of an arc of rebel-held territory at the Turkish border. The province is part of the opposition’s last big foothold in Syria and is effectivel­y - at least for now - in a zone of Turkish influence under the agreement reached last month.

Russia expects Turkey to bring about a separation of insurgents, with “radical” rebels to leave a newly created demilitari­zed zone at the frontline with government forces by Monday. Turkey says the “moderates” can stay where they are. The Turkey-backed groups, gathered under the umbrella of the National Liberation Front (NLF), have said they will cooperate with Turkey’s efforts, despite some misgivings. The tougher part for Turkey is bringing the jihadists into line, particular­ly foreign fighters estimated to number in the thousands. President Tayyip Erdogan has suggested Tahrir al-Sham is cooperatin­g, though the group has yet to comment on the deal.

Battling Assad’s forces

The experience­s of Abu Yousef and Abu Eliyas show that the line between the “radical” and “moderate” rebels is not always easily drawn. Abu Eliyas is a trained lawyer with seven children who was working as a government employee when the conflict began. He took part in the first protests against Assad in the brothers’ home town of Deir al-Zor in eastern Syria.

“They were unforgetta­ble days. The feeling was very strange for us - that we are in Syria and going out in protest against the regime and the Assad family,” he said. Abu Eliyas took up arms with a Free Syrian Army group early in the conflict. After seizing the area, Islamic State militants destroyed his house in Deir al-Zor by rigging it with explosives and then blowing it up in what he described as an act of revenge. Abu Yousef, who is not married, was a student when the conflict began. He joined Nusra Front when it first emerged in Deir al-Zor, drawn by what he saw as the piety of its members, including foreigners.

Both fought Islamic State when it attacked eastern Syria in 2014 and went north with their family when IS conquered the area. Once there, Abu Eliyas joined Failaq al-Sham, and cited its standing in Turkey as one of the attraction­s. Failaq al-Sham has ties to the Syrian branch of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, which mounted an uprising in the 1980s and is deemed a terrorist group by the government. Close to Turkey, Failaq al-Sham was also one of the recipients of aid channeled through a US Central Intelligen­ce Agency program that was shut down by President Donald Trump.

Tahrir al-Sham has clashed several times with other rebels in the northwest, and crushed a number of foreignbac­ked factions. The brothers have always stayed out of these troubles, though enmity runs deep between the jihadists and some Idlib rebels. Tensions in Idlib have eased of late. Rebels formed a joint “operations room” in anticipati­on of an offensive by Syrian government forces that had been expected until Turkey and Russia struck their agreement last month. Tahrir al-Sham, with which Abu Yousef fights, has widened contacts with other groups and been visiting their rivals, an official in a rival faction said. If it holds, the agreement between Turkey and Russia could stabilize the map of the Syrian conflict for some time to come. Though Assad is still vowing to take back the area, an Idlib campaign without Russian support is seen as out of the question. Writing in the Wall Street Journal last month, Erdogan said “moderate rebels” should be part of an “internatio­nal counterter­rorism operation” that would target “terrorist and extremist elements” and “bring to justice foreign fighters”. — Reuters

Turkey faces task of sorting jihadists from moderates

 ??  ?? MAARET AL-NUMAN: Syrian men ride a motorcycle past heavily-damaged buildings in the rebel-held town of Maaret Al-Numan in the north of Idlib province. — AFP
MAARET AL-NUMAN: Syrian men ride a motorcycle past heavily-damaged buildings in the rebel-held town of Maaret Al-Numan in the north of Idlib province. — AFP
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