THISDAY

Kurdish Forces Drive out Syrian Rebels from Air Base

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Kurdish fighters backed by Russian bombing raids have driven Syrian rebels from a former military air base near the border with Turkey, a group that monitors the war said yesterday. Rebel groups have been distracted by a major offensive in the area by the Syrian army and its Russian and other allies, allowing the Kurds to capture the base and expand their foothold in the north.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, which tracks the war through a network of sources on the ground, reported heavy fighting between Kurds and Syrian rebels around Menagh air base, a former Syrian air force facility that had fallen into rebel hands.

Russian warplanes staged at least 30 raids against rebels at the base before the Kurdish fighters were able to seize it. One rebel commander, Zekeriya Karsli from the Levant Front, said:“The fall of Menagh airport has made the situation on the ground pretty grim.”

Kurds in northern Syria have establishe­d a degree of autonomy since the start of the war in some areas bordering Turkey, which is struggling to end a three-decade insurgency on its own territory by Kurdish militants who want more self-rule.

Both Syrian and Turkish Kurds, however, stop short of a declared bid for independen­t statehood, unlike Iraqi Kurdistan, which is already an autonomous region and is moving toward a referendum to declare full independen­ce from Baghdad.

The Russians are happy to help the Kurds in this instance as it means further problems for the Syrian rebels they are trying to destroy. Kurdish YPG militias have taken advantage of the rebels’ preoccupat­ion with fending off the Russian-backed Syrian army offensive launched last week in the northern Aleppo countrysid­e to gain ground near an important border crossing with Turkey, the Syrian insurgents say.

Kurdish fighters based in the city of Afrin, south of rebel-held Azaz, have taken a series of villages, including Deir Jameal and al-Qamiya, which rebels have been forced to evacuate as Syrian troops advance from the south.

The intensive Russian bombing of rebel towns in northern Aleppo province, while avoiding the Kurds in Afrin, allowed the Kurds to move on Menagh airport, which the rebels had held since August 2013. “The Kurds have gained from the major offensive in Aleppo to widen their areas of control,” Rami Abdulrahma­n, head of the Observator­y, said.

The loss of the air base, which lies near the road between Aleppo and the Turkish city of Gaziantep, reflects the dramatic change in the balance of forces since Russia began its military interventi­on on Sept. 30 on behalf of President Bashar al-Assad.

Other rebel fighters trapped by Kurdish forces to the west and Syrian army and allied militias advancing from the south, are now seeking to defend Tal Rifaat, heavily hit by Russian bombers in the last two days, the Observator­y and a rebel source confirmed. Syrian troops are only a few kilometers from the town. Russian bombing had allowed Syrian troops supported by Iranian-backed Shi’ite militias to advance to almost 25 km (15 miles) from the Turkish border, the closest they have come in more than two-and-a-half years.

The Bab al Salam border crossing with Turkey was a main trucking gateway from Europe via Syria to the Gulf before the war. Moscow and Damascus say it is a conduit for arms to the rebels supplied by Turkey. The Syrian army advance has cut a rebel supply line between the border and the parts of the city of Aleppo which the insurgents control.

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