Jabhat al-Nusra's rising stock in Syria  
 
Even moderates back group with hard-line fighters despite radical ideology in 
absence of Western help to topple Assad.
Stephanie d'Arc TaylorLast Modified: 19 May 2013 14:45   
 
A fighter from the Islamist Syrian rebel group Jabhat al-Nusra walks among 
damaged houses in Aleppo [Reuters] 
Beirut, Lebanon - Last month, the leader of Syrian rebel group Jabhat al-Nusra 
- which has 
been steadily winning battles and gaining popular support since its 
inception in January 2012 - was forced to publicly clarify his group's 
relationship with al-Qaeda.
In a YouTube video posted on April 10, Abu Mohammed al-Jawlani stated: 
"The sons of Al-Nusra Front pledge allegiance to Sheikh Ayman 
al-Zawahiri," the former right-hand man of Osama bin Laden and the 
acting head of al-Qaeda.
With this declaration, Jawlani ratcheted up suspicions in the West that 
significant elements of the Syrian opposition are ideologically and 
tactically aligned with al-Qaeda. Nusra is now officially considered a 
"terrorist" organisation by the US State Department. 
With fierce fighters, including veterans of battles in Libya, Iraq and 
Afghanistan apparently among its ranks, Jabhat al-Nusra is considered one of 
the most 
effective groups battling the regime of Syrian President Bashar 
al-Assad. 
According to a report by the Quilliam Foundation, the group's roots can be 
traced back to the 
activities of deceased al-Qaeda leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi during the 
early 2000s. During a journey from Afghanistan to Iraq to fight US 
forces, Zarqawi is said to have amassed fighters, sending some to Syria 
and Lebanon to establish branches of his network; so-called 
"guesthouses" to train and funnel fighters to Iraq.
 Syria armed group claims allegiance to al-Qaeda 
  
When it became clear the Syrian uprising of 2011 would devolve into war, 
many of these experienced fighters in Iraq came to Syria, the report 
says, with the goal of overthrowing Assad and establishing an Islamic 
caliphate in the Levant.
The experience of many Jabhat al-Nusra fighters distinguishes them from the 
often rag-tag Free Syrian Army cadres they sometimes fight alongside. 
The Quilliam report concluded that al-Nusra's leaders "can use their experience 
as 
jihadists in other countries to plan, identify goals, and strategise 
effectively, making them one of the most efficient groups fighting in 
the revolution".
Their main tactics are reflective of their training in asymmetric warfare in 
Iraq - car bombs, suicide missions, and the targeting of security 
forces. They also engage in more regular military activities, such as 
the capture of Army Base 111 following a successful siege. 
Al-Qaeda fears
Jabhat al-Nusra has been regarded as a bogeyman in the West, and this 
preoccupation is readily apparent in statements from American 
policy-makers. 
Just one month after Jabhat al-Nusra announced its formation, then-head US 
diplomat Hillary Clinton cited it and similar groups in Syria as one 
reason to withhold aid from the Syrian opposition. In a February 2012 
interview with CBS, she said, "We know al-Qaeda's Zawahiri is supporting the 
opposition in Syria. Are we supporting al-Qaeda in Syria?" 
But Syrians, watching a well-disciplined and organised group of fighters 
gain more and more ground against the Assad regime, are increasingly 
throwing their support behind Jabhat al-Nusra - in spite of its Islamist 
ideology, several Syrian activists and commentators say. 
Support - or at least resigned acceptance - comes from many sides, some 
unexpected. Noor, a cosmopolitan young Syrian activist based in Turkey, 
said she's "not threatened by [al-Nusra] or their approach," as long as 
they continue to win battles against the regime.
Similarly, Ahmed Quseir, spokesman of the Homs branch of the General Authority 
of 
the Syrian Revolution, a network of opposition activists in Syria, says 
the Salafist leanings of al-Nusra "do not pose any risk" to the "freedom of 
Syrians", or the "type of power" that will emerge in Syria after the war.
In contrast, Abdelbaset Sieda, president of the Syrian National Council, 
emphasises that al-Nusra's radical ideology - a word he enunciates like 
an expletive - is "unacceptable" to Syria's "moderate social 
environment", which thrives on diversity, rather than narrow and literal 
interpretations of Islamic scripture.
'I do not have another choice'
Moderate Syrians' acceptance of Jabhat al-Nusra can be attributed to two main 
factors. First, they have all but given up hope of meaningful help 
coming from the West. Abdullah Alshamy, a member of the opposition 
affiliated with the Douma Revolution group as well as the Islamist Al-Faruq 
Brigades, said via Skype that 
given the increasingly dire situation Syrians find themselves in, "no 
one says no to help of any kind, whether it comes from al-Nusra or from 
America".
"Al-Nusra is just a group of people helping us against the Assad regime … I do 
not have another choice" but to support them, Alshamy said. 
Ma'moun Halal, an opposition member working with the Shahba Press Agency based 
in Aleppo, went further. "Jabhat al-Nusra fought Assad's regime at a 
time when the US and the West were saluting Bashar despite the 
massacres." 
Between the massacres, the scorched earth, and the food and petrol shortages, 
Syrians seem ready to throw their support behind any group that can 
protect them and provide basic provisions.
Sieda, the Syrian National Council head, echoes these sentiments. In a phone 
conversation, Sieda emphasised the "brutality of the regime, which is 
using all kinds of weapons, and the indifference of the international 
community" as leading to "despair" that has driven average Syrians into 
the weapons-laden and wealthy arms of al-Nusra.
He predicted that with "collaboration" - the exact nature of which he 
could not specify - "many fighters would leave Jabhat al-Nusra and join 
the united army troops".
But it seems that Syrians are attracted to al-Nusra as more than a last 
resort. Activist sources cite al-Nusra's army-like discipline and an 
ethical code that seeks to protect the people, rather than exploit them, as has 
been the case with some other Free Syrian Army brigades. Halal 
speaks of the "vandalism and robbery" perpetrated by FSA fighters, not 
to mention the more sinister spoils of war that observers have heard whispers 
of. 
Journalist Eli Kamisher relayed an anecdote told to him by a man in Kfranabel. 
"When Jabhat al-Nusra enter a village, all the thieves and rapists run 
away."
But Jawlani's declaration of allegiance to Zawahiri strikes even opposition 
figures sympathetic to al-Nusra as strange.  "The relationship [between the 
two] is not accepted here, and they know that," Alshamy says.
But apart from grumblings, analyst Aaron Zelin believes that Jawlani's 
declaration will have little impact on the situation in Syria in the 
short term. 
He contends that only introductions of Salafist ideology into the lives of 
moderate Syrians - such as "harsh punishments and narrow 
interpretations of sharia" - carry the potential to upset the cautious 
acceptance mainstream Syria has conferred onto al-Nusra. 
That is already happening in some areas of Syria. In places such as Mayadin, 
Raqqa, and Aleppo, people have been lashed or 
jailed for drinking alcohol, not attending prayers, or mixing with the 
opposite sex, Zelin says.
When asked what will happen to Jabhat al-Nusra members after the war is 
over, should the opposition win, Alshamy expresses optimism. "I think 
some of them will work in Syria under the law of the country, and others will 
go back to their countries." 
He admits, however, that thinking carefully about the post-Assad future is not 
high on many people's agendas. "All that is not important now. Now 
we should focus on staying alive."
Follow Stephanie d'Arc Taylor on Twitter: @sdarct  
 
Source: 
Al Jazeera  

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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