http://arabnews.com/news/448595


Homs
  a..  
  This April 7, 2013, photo shows a street piled with damaged buildings shelled 
by forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar Assad in Homs. (Reuters)


BARBARA SURK | AP

Thursday 18 April 2013

BEIRUT: Syrian rebels captured large parts of a military base in the strategic 
Homs province on Thursday as opposition fighters try to expand territory under 
their control near the Lebanese border, activists said.
The central region is important to President Bashar Assad because it links 
Damascus, his seat of power, with one of his main allies, the militant 
Hezbollah group in neighboring Lebanon.
The latest rebel advances came a day after Assad accused the West of backing 
Al-Qaeda in Syria’s 2-year-old conflict. In a rare TV interview, Assad also 
lashed out at Jordan for allowing “thousands” of fighters to enter Syria to 
fight in the civil war.
In recent months, the rebels have chipped away at the regime’s hold in northern 
and eastern Syria. They have also made significant gains in the south, in the 
area between Damascus and the Jordanian border, helped in part by a recent 
influx of foreign-funded weapons across the boundary.
The Britain-based Observatory for Human Rights said the opposition fighters 
took control of most of the Dabaa military complex in Homs province on Thursday 
morning, after weeks of fighting with government forces for control of the 
facility. Sporadic fighting was still being reported in some parts of the base, 
the Observatory said.
Dabaa is a former air force base and has an airfield, which hasn’t been used 
since the fighting broke out. Instead, the army has based ground troops in the 
facility to fight the rebels, the Observatory said. It did not say how many — 
if any — government troops were at the base when it was overrun by rebels.
The base is located near Qusair, a contested central Syrian town near a key 
highway between Damascus and the coastal enclave that is the heartland of 
Syria’s Alawite community. The area also is home to the country’s two main 
seaports, Latakia and Tartus.
Syria’s regime is dominated by the president’s minority Alawite sect — an 
offshoot of Shiite Islam — while the rebels fighting to overthrow Assad are 
mostly from the country’s Sunni majority. Assad’s major allies, Hezbollah and 
Iran, are both Shiite.
Homs province was the site of some of the heaviest fighting during the first 
year of the Syrian conflict, which erupted in March 2011, and intermittent 
episodes of violence since.
Syria’s crisis began as peaceful protests against Assad’s rule and turned into 
civil war after some opposition supporters took up arms to fight a harsh 
government crackdown. The fighting that has taken increasingly sectarian 
overtones.
Syrian officials deny there is an uprising, accusing those who have turned 
against the government of being foreign-backed "terrorists" and "Islamic 
extremists."
In the interview with the government-run Al-Ikhbariya TV, Assad said the West 
has backed Al-Qaeda in his country’s civil war and warned that it will pay a 
price “in the heart” of Europe and the United States as the terror network 
becomes emboldened. The interview was aired on Wednesday to mark Syria’s 
independence day.
The US and its European and Gulf allies have backed the opposition in the 
Syrian conflict and have repeatedly called on Assad to step down.
Extremist groups, such as the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Jabhat Al-Nusra, are gaining 
ground in Syria’s conflict. Jabhat Al-Nusra, or the Nusra Front, has emerged as 
the most effective force among the mosaic of rebel units fighting against 
Assad’s troops.
Washington has designated Jabhat Al-Nusra a terrorist organization. The Obama 
administration opposes directly arming Syrian opposition fighters, in part out 
of fear that the weapons could fall into the hands of extremists.
Israel shares Washington’s concerns. In an interview with the BBC that aired on 
Thursday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the Jewish state has 
“the right to act to prevent that from happening.”
Netanyahu said in the interview that Israel fears that Syrian chemical weapons 
or sophisticated anti-aircraft system the rebels seek to counter the regime’s 
superior airpower will fall in the hands of Al-Qaeda militants or Hezbollah.
“Obviously we’re concerned that that the weapons that are groundbreaking and 
could change the balance of power in the Middle East would fall into the hands 
of these terrorists,” Netanyahu said.
In January, Israel all but confirmed that it carried out an airstrike in Syria 
that destroyed a shipment of anti-aircraft missiles allegedly bound to 
Hezbollah. The movement fought Israeli army to a standstill in a monthlong 2006 
war in Lebanon. Netanyahu refused in the interview to confirm whether Israel 
targeted the convoy.
Earlier this year, the US announced a $60 million non-lethal assistance package 
for Syria that includes meals and medical supplies for the armed opposition.
On Wednesday, US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel told Congress that the Pentagon 
is sending about 200 soldiers from an Army headquarters unit to Jordan to 
assist efforts to contain violence along the Syrian border and plan for any 
operations needed to ensure the safety of chemical weapons in Syria.
The decision to dispatch the 1st Armored Division troops of planners and 
specialists in intelligence, logistics and operations, came after several 
lawmakers pressed the Obama administration for even more aggressive steps to 
end the two-year civil war.
Even the most modest efforts by the international community to end the 
bloodshed in Syria have failed.
The United Nations Security Council is scheduled to receive an open briefing on 
the humanitarian, refugee and human rights crises in Syria later Thursday.
The joint UN-Arab League envoy to Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, is to brief the 
council behind closed doors on Friday.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon dismissed speculation that Brahimi will resign 
his post, saying on Wednesday he will continue to work as the joint special 
representative, stressing the importance that the UN work with the Arab League.
Syria’s “prospects may seem dim,” the secretary-general said, “but I remain 
convinced that a political solution is possible.”


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