http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/26/world/middleeast/syria-crisis.html?src=recg&pagewanted=all

Key Syrian Rebel Groups Abandon Exile Leaders
 
Associated Press
Smoke rose after an airstrike in a village in Hama Province on Wednesday. 

By BEN HUBBARD and MICHAEL R. GORDON
Published: September 25, 2013 312 Comments

BEIRUT, Lebanon — As diplomats at the United Nations push for a peace 
conference to end Syria’s civil war, a collection of some of the country’s most 
powerful rebel groups have publicly abandoned the opposition’s political 
leaders, casting their lot with an affiliate of Al Qaeda. 


Readers’ Comments
  "These Islamists/terrorist groups are a far cry from democracy ... 
dictatorial, theocratic and terrorizing. If one has to choose between two 
evils, a military regime is by far better than these Islamists."
Nazan Fathy, Ottawa, Canada 
  a.. Read Full Comment »
As support for the Western-backed leadership has dwindled, a second, more 
extreme Al Qaeda group has carved out footholds across parts of Syria, 
frequently clashing with mainline rebels who accuse it of making the 
establishment of an Islamic state a priority over the fight to topple President 
Bashar al-Assad. 

The fractured nature of the opposition, the rising radical Islamist character 
of some rebel fighters, and the increasing complexity of Syria’s battle lines 
have left the exile leadership with diminished clout inside the country and 
have raised the question of whether it could hold up its end of any agreement 
reached to end the war. 

The deep differences between many of those fighting in Syria and the political 
leaders who have represented the opposition abroad spilled into the open late 
Tuesday, when 11 rebel groups issued a statement declaring that the opposition 
could be represented only by people who have “lived their troubles and shared 
in what they have sacrificed.” 

Distancing themselves from the exile opposition’s call for a democratic, civil 
government to replace Mr. Assad, they called on all military and civilian 
groups in Syria to “unify in a clear Islamic frame.” Those that signed the 
statement included three groups aligned with the Western-backed opposition’s 
Supreme Military Council. 

Mohannad al-Najjar, an activist close to the leadership of one of the 
statement’s most powerful signers, Al Tawhid Brigade, said the group intended 
to send a message of disapproval to an exile leadership it believes has 
accomplished little. 

“We found it was time to announce publicly and clearly what we are after, which 
is Shariah law for the country and to convey a message to the opposition 
coalition that it has been three years and they have never done any good for 
the Syrian uprising and the people suffering inside,” he said. 

The statement was issued just as Western nations are striving to raise the 
profile of the “moderate” Syrian political opposition, which is led by Ahmad 
al-Jarba. The United States and its allies have been reluctant to fully align 
with and arm the rebels because their ranks are heavily populated by Islamists. 

France has scheduled an event on Thursday on the sidelines of the annual 
session of the United Nations General Assembly at which Mr. Jarba is to speak 
along with foreign ministers who have backed him, including Secretary of State 
John Kerry. 

There was no immediate comment from Mr. Jarba, whose coalition is formally 
known as the National Coalition of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces. 
Mr. Jarba canceled a news conference that had also been scheduled for Thursday. 

A senior State Department official who accompanied Mr. Kerry to the United 
Nations meetings this week said the United States was still trying to 
strengthen Mr. Jarba’s coalition and suggested that some of the factions that 
had broken with him included extremists. 

“We, of course, have seen the reports of an announcement by some Islamist 
opposition groups of their formation of a new political alliance,” the State 
Department official said. 

“As we’ve already said clearly before, we’ve been long working toward unity 
among the opposition,” the official added. “But we also have had extreme 
concerns about extremists.” 

Another American official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he 
was discussing internal deliberations, said the coalition had recently made 
“real progress” in broadening its base by including an array of Kurdish parties 
as well as members of local councils in “liberated” areas of northern and 
eastern Syria. 

But the official acknowledged that the coalition had more to do to build up its 
credibility inside the country, since its headquarters are in Turkey and not 
Syria. 

The latest split in the opposition emerged as the United States, Russia and 
other permanent members of the United Nations Security Council were making 
progress on another front: drafting a Council resolution that would enforce an 
agreement on eliminating Syria’s vast chemical weapons arsenal. 

A Western diplomat said Wednesday that about 80 percent of the resolution had 
been agreed to and that he was “cautiously optimistic” that it would be settled 
this week. 

The rifts between the exile opposition and those fighting Mr. Assad’s forces 
inside Syria have raised questions about whether the opposition’s political 
leadership has sufficient influence in the country to hold up its end if an 
agreement is ever reached to end the civil war. 

“At this stage, the political opposition does not have the credibility with or 
the leverage over the armed groups on the ground to enforce an agreement that 
the armed groups reject,” said Noah Bonsey, who studies the Syrian opposition 
for the International Crisis Group. 

“You need two parties for an agreement, and there is no viable political 
alternative to the coalition,” he said, defining a disconnect between the 
diplomatic efforts taking shape in New York and the reality across Syria. 

Inside Syria, rebel groups that originally formed to respond to crackdowns by 
Mr. Assad’s forces on political protests have gradually merged into larger 
groupings, some commanded and staffed by Islamists. But differences in ideology 
and competition for scarce foreign support have made it hard for them to unite 
under an effective, single command. 

Seeking to build a moderate front against Mr. Assad, Western nations encouraged 
the formation of the opposition political coalition. Even though some of its 
leading members, like Mr. Jarba, have been imprisoned by the Assad government, 
the coalition has loose links to many of the rebel fighters on the ground. 

The rebel groups that assailed the political opposition are themselves diverse 
and include a number that are linked to the coalition’s Supreme Military 
Council. More troubling to the West, they also include the Nusra Front, a group 
linked to Al Qaeda. At the same time they include groups that remain opposed to 
another group linked to Al Qaeda: the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. 

“The brigades that signed have political differences with Nusra, but we agree 
with them militarily since they want to topple the regime,” said a rebel who 
gave his name as Abu Bashir. 

A coalition member and aide to Mr. Jarba said the opposition was still studying 
the development but was surprised by some of the groups that had signed on with 
the Nusra Front. 

“The Islamic project is clear and it is not our project,” said the coalition 
member, Monzer Akbik. “We don’t have a religious project; we have a civil 
democratic project, and that needs to be clear.” 

Further complicating the picture is the rise of the new Qaeda franchise, the 
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, which has established footholds across 
northern and eastern Syria with the intention to lay the foundations of an 
Islamic state. 

In recent months, it has supplanted the Nusra Front as the primary destination 
for foreign jihadis streaming into Syria, according to rebels and activists who 
have had contact with the group. 

Its fighters, who hail from across the Arab world, Chechnya, Europe and 
elsewhere, have a reputation for being well armed and strong in battle. Its 
suicide bombers are often sent to strike the first blow against government 
bases. 

But its application of strict Islamic law has isolated rebels and civilians. 
Its members have executed and beheaded captives in town squares and imposed 
strict codes, forcing residents to wear modest dress and banning smoking in 
entire villages. 


Ben Hubbard reported from Beirut, and Michael R. Gordon from the United 
Nations. Karam Shoumali contributed reporting from Istanbul.

A version of this article appears in print on September 26, 2013, on page A1 of 
the New York edition with the headline: Syrian Rebels Will Abandon Exile 
Leaders.

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