http://www.latimes.com/world/worldnow/la-fg-wn-islamist-groups-syria-jordan-border-20130929,0,2851209.story

Islamist Syrian rebels claim to capture crossing on Jordanian border 
  a.. 
       
      Syrian opposition fighters fire at government forces near Daraa, Syria. 
Rebel forces claimed to have taken control of a border crossing near there on 
Sunday. (Sham News Network / September 26, 2013) 
     

  a..  Oft-repeated mantra in Damascus: 'We're tired of this' 
  b..  Syrian rebel groups form alliance, slam Western-backed opposition 
  c..  Global community wasting no time in securing Syria's chemical weapons 

By Nabih Bulos 
September 29, 2013, 11:39 a.m.
AMMAN, Jordan--A group of Islamist brigades, including the Al Qaeda-linked 
Nusrah Front, has taken over one of two official crossings on the 230-mile 
border between Syria and Jordan, according to a statement on one of the 
brigades' websites.

The Ahraar Al-Sham brigade, one of the largest armed rebel groups in Syria, 
announced that the Ramtha border crossing overlooking the city of Daraa in 
southern Syria was captured after more than four days of fighting by the 
"Operations Room of the Islamic Gathering," a coordinating body among various 
Islamist brigades. The pro-opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights 
reported that 26 government soldiers were killed in the clashes.

Once a vibrant passage between the two countries, the crossing has been closed 
almost since the beginning of the conflict in Syria, with no people or goods 
passing through. Nevertheless, the takeover represents a potentially 
significant victory for the rebels in Daraa.

"Our primary aim was to destroy a large gathering of army and security 
elements," said Abu Mustafa, the nom de guerre of a battalion commander 
operating in southern Syria. "But," he continued, "we are considering 
approaching the Jordanian government so as to reopen the crossing in the 
future."

The victory comes on the heels of a move by two rebel groups, the Islamic State 
of Iraq and Sham, to secure control of the city of Azaz on the Turkish-Syrian 
border. It also marks the increasing prominence of fighters with Islamist 
leanings in Syria. Fifty groups issued a joint statement recently announcing 
the creation of Jaysh Al-Islam (the Army of Islam). The Western-backed Free 
Syrian Army and the Supreme Military Council are not involved with the new 
organization.

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http://www.latimes.com/world/worldnow/la-fg-wn-syrian-rebels-alliance-20130925,0,6612349.story

Syrian rebel groups form alliance, slam Western-backed opposition 
  a.. 
       
      Smoke rises from buildings after an airstrike hit in Habit village in the 
Syrian central province of Hama. (Associated Press / September 25, 2013) 
     
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By Raja Abdulrahim 
September 25, 2013, 1:47 p.m.
Nearly a dozen of the largest Syrian rebel groups, including one linked to Al 
Qaeda, have formed an Islamic alliance that could serve as the basis for a 
future political bloc and have denounced the Western-backed Syrian National 
Coalition.

The bloc explicitly called for sharia, or Islamic law, to be the sole source of 
legislation in Syria, which for decades has been governed with iron-fisted 
secularism by President Bashar Assad and his late father, Hafez.

The announcement makes public what many of the opposition militias have said in 
the past. They maintain that the exiled coalition leaders are out of touch with 
the deteriorating situation on the ground and do not represent those living and 
fighting in Syria.

“This force believes that those deserving of representing it are those who have 
lived its burdens and shared in its sacrifices of honest sons,” the statement 
read.

The statement came late Tuesday ahead of the arrival in Damascus on Wednesday 
of United Nations inspectors for a second time to investigate the use of 
chemical weapons.

The alliance includes groups aligned with the mainstream Free Syrian Army, 
Islamist groups which fight alongside them and the Al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front, 
which the Obama administration has labeled a terrorist organization. The Al 
Qaeda-linked Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, which has more foreign fighters 
and has increasingly fought against mainstream FSA groups, is not a signatory 
to the agreement, but its joining has not been ruled out.

“The main goal is to unify the fighting forces,” said Bashir Saleh, a spokesman 
with the Al Tawheed Brigade, one of the main organizers of the alliance.

Last week, the Islamic State and a smaller FSA group clashed in a northern town 
near the Turkish border. The hostilities were but one reason for the sudden 
formation of the alliance, Saleh said.

Saleh said the announcement also came as many Syrians still in their homeland 
pressed opposition leaders outside the country to not attend international 
peace talks in Geneva that will include government representatives. A political 
solution must come from inside Syria and not orchestrated by the international 
community, he said.

“The problem is the coalition is outside and it doesn’t know what is happening 
inside,” Saleh said. “Maybe one or two or three of the coalition members have 
come and entered Syria but then they leave quickly like they are foreign 
visitors.



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