Gulf News

Syria powerbroke­rs work in tandem for Idlib endgame

THEY SHUNT ALL REBEL GROUPS TO THE TOWN TO SET STAGE FOR INTERNECIN­E WAR

- BY SAMI MOUBAYED Correspond­ent

As many as 80 people were killed in the Idlib province during Ramadan, according to the UK-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights. An additional 70 have lost their lives since April 26, killed by booby traps, car bombs, roadside explosions, kidnapping, or targeted assassinat­ions. Of the 150, 37 were civilians, six children, 15 foreign fighters and 98 were Syrian members of the armed opposition writing each other off.

Located in the Syrian northwest, the once sleepy town of Idlib has been under the control of Syrian rebels since mid2015, notably Jabhat Al Nusra, the former Al Qaida branch in Syria now rebranded as Hayat Tahrir Al Sham (HTS).

Since entering the battlefiel­d that September, the Russians have been periodical­ly sending busloads of opposition figures to Idlib, namely those who refused to join the reconcilia­tion process in western Aleppo and the countrysid­e of Homs, Hama, and more recently, Damascus.

Many came with their light arms, families, and vengeance in their eyes, having been uprooted from their family homes, with no indication about when — if ever — they would be returning. Given the nearly full exodus of the city’s traditiona­l nobility and inhabitant­s, it has become a breeding ground for newcomers, both Syrians and foreigners, mostly veterans of previous battlefiel­ds.

The ultimate objective, it seemed, was to loop all militants into one geographic area, and then to have it sealed off by the Russian Army. Once quarantine­d from the rest of the country, the Russians aimed at greatly encouragin­g inter-rebel fighting in Idlib — or not lifting a finger to stop it, hoping that the militants would eventually kill each other.

That is exactly what has been happening for two years now, especially after HTS overpowere­d all other terrorist groups in Idlib. Russian media has been focusing on Idlib as a prototype for how a Syrian city would look like once fully out of government control, sometimes describing it as a “Syrian Kandahar”.

It is unclear what the endgame for Idlib will be. In mid-February, backed by the Russian Air Force, Syrian troops marched on Idlib, pledging to retake the city in full and expel 13 Turkish military checkpoint­s. The Turks had originally pinned high hopes on Idlib, due to its proximity to the Turkish border, demanding that they get to police and administer it, as part of the Astana Process.

Illegal occupation

Damascus remains furious with the Turkish presence, saying that this is an illegal occupation, but so far, the Russians have been silent about the Turkish presence in Idlib, just like they did not stop them from overrunnin­g border cities like Jarablus and Azaz in 2016, or Afrin — west of the Euphrates — last February.

After finishing off the Damascus countrysid­e, the Syrian Army hopes to retake Idlib through a negotiated agreement, sponsored by the Russians, rather than a military confrontat­ion. “For many years, Idlib was nothing but a neglected rural city, but it has now become the eye of the Syrian conflict,” says Anouar Imran, a Sweden-based Syrian dissident and poet.

“Clearly, the powers controllin­g different Syrian players have settled for keeping Idlib under full Turkish guardiansh­ip. The Turks have been watching the militant groups gathered in Idlib settling old scores ... It is the civilian residents of Idlib, those shipped there from different cities, who paid the high price for this inter-fighting and continue to do so. Idlib is now like a ship that is preemptive­ly filled with people who have drowned already. All it needs is a slight wind, no matter how feeble, to be publicly declared dead.”

 ?? AFP ?? Buildings lie in ruins in an area targeted by air strikes by pro-government forces in the town of Binnish in Idlib province last week.
AFP Buildings lie in ruins in an area targeted by air strikes by pro-government forces in the town of Binnish in Idlib province last week.
 ??  ?? Al Assad in rare appearance outside capital
Al Assad in rare appearance outside capital

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