Austin American-Statesman

Internet interrupti­on leads to fears of onslaught by Assad

- By Bassem mroue and Zeina Karam

BEIRUT — Internet service went down Thursday across Syria and internatio­nal flights were canceled at the Damascus airport after a road near the facility was closed by heavy fighting in the country’s civil war.

Activists said President Bashar Assad’s regime pulled the plug on the Internet, perhaps in preparatio­n for a major offensive. Cellphone service also went out in Damascus and parts of central Syria, they said. The government blamed rebel fighters for the outages.

With pressure building against the regime on several fronts and government forces on their heels in the battle for the northern commercial hub of Aleppo, rebels have begun pushing back into Damascus after largely being driven out of the capital following an offensive in July. One Damascus resident reported seeing rebel forces near a suburb of the city previously deemed to be safe from fighting.

The Internet outage, confirmed by two U.S.based companies that monitor online connectivi­ty, is unpreceden­ted in Syria’s 20-month-old uprising against Assad, which activists say has killed more than 40,000 people.

Regime forces suffered a string of tactical defeats in recent weeks, losing air bases and other strategic facilities. The government may be trying to blunt additional rebel offensives by hampering communicat­ions.

U.S. State Department spokeswoma­n Victoria Nuland condemned what she called the regime’s “assault” on Syrians’ ability to communicat­e with each other and express themselves. She said the move spoke to a desperate attempt by Assad to cling to power.

Syrian authoritie­s often cut phone and Internet service in select areas to disrupt rebel communicat­ions when regime forces are conducting major operations.

The government sent mixed signals about the Internet outage but denied it was nationwide.

 ?? Associated PRESS ?? Syrians walk in a destroyed street Wednesday in Homs province. The government may be trying to blunt rebel offensives by hampering communicat­ions.
Associated PRESS Syrians walk in a destroyed street Wednesday in Homs province. The government may be trying to blunt rebel offensives by hampering communicat­ions.

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