http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jan/04/syria-rebels-arms-drying-up

Syria rebels' arms supplies and finances drying up despite western pledges
With no sign of the west relaxing its ban on arming opposition forces, rebels 
are forced to focus on a gradual war of attrition

  a.. Julian Borger, diplomatic editor 
  b.. guardian.co.uk, Friday 4 January 2013 17.22 GMT 
 
Syrian rebels fire on government positions in Aleppo. A shortage of weapons is 
said to be thwarting oppotunities for opposition forces to advance. Photograph: 
Abdullah Al-Yasin/AP

Despite widespread pledges of support from western and Arab states, the main 
Syrian opposition coalition says it has still not seen any significant increase 
in funding or arms supplies.

Members of the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition 
Forces, formed in November, say that there is still no sign of western capitals 
relaxing their ban on delivering weapons to the rebels and even Gulf Arab 
governments, which helped arm opposition groups last year, are supplying less 
each week.

"The supplies are drying up. It is still Syrian expats – individuals – who are 
providing the funding by and large," said a Syrian businessman who has helped 
fund the opposition since the uprising began 22 months ago.

As a result, he said, the fragmented rebel forces have given up hopes of a 
sweep through the country and are focusing instead on a gradual war of 
attrition: besieging isolated government military bases to stop the regime 
using planes and helicopters against them and ultimately to capture weapons, to 
compensate for the meagre supplies from abroad.

Opposition groups claim to be close to overrunning a regime helicopter base 
near the northern town of Taftanaz, in Idlib province, posting a video online 
purporting to show a captured tank firing at government armoured vehicles and 
helicopters inside the perimeter walls of the base.

"The battles now are at the gates of the airport," Fadi al-Yassin, an activist 
based in Idlib told the Associated Press, adding that the base commander, a 
brigadier general, had been killed in the fighting on Thursday.

Yassin said that it had become very difficult for the regime helicopters to 
take off and land at the base, but warplanes from airfields further south, in 
the central province of Hama and the coastal region of Latakia, were bombarding 
rebel fighters besieging Taftanaz.

President Bashar al-Assad's government also claimed to be advancing in Daraya, 
a Damascus suburb close to another military air base and some government 
headquarters.

As it has become increasingly clear that large-scale external assistance is 
unlikely to materialise, the many locally-based rebel groups have found ways of 
sustaining themselves militarily and financially, but have largely given up 
hoping for a sudden breakthrough.

"What you are going to see is one or two air bases beginning to fall, 
particularly in the north, in Aleppo and Idlib," the opposition financier said. 
"But there is a law of diminishing returns. As these bases are encircled there 
is less bounty in each one as the government has been moving out assets when it 
becomes clear the bases are going to fall."

In November, the rebels succeeded in bringing down some government aircraft 
with shoulder-launched missiles captured in a regime base, but Peter Bouckaert 
of Human Rights Watch said sightings of such missiles had faded in recent 
weeks. "There was a spike late last year, but there have been no signs of any 
more since that capture, and there is no evidence we have seen of 
foreign-supplied missiles," he said.

Over the past two months, the US, UK and France as well as other European 
states and the Gulf monarchies have declared the newly formed national 
coalition "the sole legitimate representative of the Syrian people", in what 
they hoped would be a turning point in bringing some cohesion to the deeply 
divided opposition and in forging links between those in exile and rebel 
commanders inside Syria.

Such links have continued to be elusive, however, and the new coalition and its 
backers are blaming each other, in rows reminiscent of the problems that dogged 
its forerunner, the Syrian National Council.

Western governments have made disbursements of aid dependent on proven control 
over rebel forces in Syria and credible assurances that the assistance would 
not further the aims of extremist Islamist groups such as the Nusra Front, 
declared a terrorist organisation by the US. Opposition leaders complain that 
without significant aid they have little hope of rallying support or exerting 
any control over the chaotic anti-Assad effort.

"We don't even money for airplane tickets," one complained.

"It is little unfair of the international community and particular the French 
to bestow this title [of sole legitimate representative] on the coalition and 
not follow through," said Salman Shaikh, of the Brookings Institution's Doha 
centre thinktank, which played a role in bringing together disparate Syrian 
activist and opposition groups last year. "If they cannot provide for people in 
the north, which I suspect will come under full opposition control this year, 
then the people on the ground will question what is the point. And what you 
will get is just more factionalism."

He added: "I see a very dark period ahead of us, with a total breakdown like 
Iraq in 2006, with sectarianism on a scale we have not yet seen in Syria."

Mustafa Alani, the director of the national security and terrorism studies 
department at the Gulf Research Centre, said: "The people fighting on the 
streets are not controlled by people outside. They feel they can topple the 
regime without any help. They feel they are able to self-finance and self-arm 
and they can survive.

"Their focus has shifted. Their strategy is not to try to hold villages and 
towns so much, but to concentrate on air bases, to stop the aircraft flying and 
to build up pressure in Damascus. That is where the war will be decided."


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