Rebels’ Aleppo success complicates the strategies of Assad and Russia

A section of Syria’s war-ravaged city of Aleppo. PHOTO | FILE

What you need to know:

  • The sudden advance by fighters from western Syria into a military complex in southwest Aleppo on Saturday opened a corridor into the city, breaking the weeks-long siege and providing a launch pad for fresh attacks into government-held territory.

In breaking a Syrian government siege on opposition-held areas of Aleppo, insurgents have set back President Bashar al-Assad’s hopes of using Russian air power to reclaim a vital city and speed the end of the five-year conflict.

The sudden advance by fighters from western Syria into a military complex in southwest Aleppo on Saturday opened a corridor into the city, breaking the weeks-long siege and providing a launch pad for fresh attacks into government-held territory.

Whether they can hold, or even consolidate, their gains in a war marked by fluctuating fortunes is unclear, but the insurgents’ success showed they are capable of checking the momentum that Russia’s air campaign has given Assad in recent months.

In Aleppo the disparate groups fighting the Syrian government army demonstrated a rare unity, while also dealing a blow to Assad, Moscow and their Iran-backed allies who have invested heavily in a victory in what was the country’s most populous city before the war.

“It’s clear that Aleppo will be the toughest and most important battle and most dangerous battle and the longest of all the battles that have erupted,” said former Lebanese General Amine Hotait, a supporter of Assad, in an article in the Syrian daily Al-Thawra.

Aleppo is important not only because of its size but also for its location near Turkey, a powerful supporter of anti-Assad groups operating it the city. In addition, its rebel-held areas are the main stronghold of most opposition groups apart from the jihadists of Islamic State.

The defeat of the Aleppo insurgents could have been seen in Damascus and Moscow as a precursor to the collapse of the armed rebellion against Assad’s rule.

Government media have declared the fighting as “the mother of all battles”, while Assad’s ally in the war, the Lebanese Hezbollah movement, has called it “an existential struggle”.

For their part, the rebels speak of an “epic battle to liberate Aleppo”, rallying support by citing the plight of trapped civilians in the city being pummelled by air strikes which have regularly hit hospitals and market places.

By far the rebels’ biggest coordinated assault since the conflict began in 2011, the Aleppo campaign suggests they have strengthened their capabilities despite suffering heavy losses since Russia began striking against them almost a year ago.

An estimated 6,000-8,000 rebel fighters from different groups, using dozens of tanks, broke the Syrian army’s fortress-like defences at Ramousah in southwest Aleppo in only a few days. Suicide bombers led the advance.

The groups ranged from the Islamist alliance Jaish al-Fateh, which includes Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, known as the Nusra Front until it cut ties with al Qaeda two weeks ago, to the Free Syrian Army (FSA), vetted and backed by the West.

Jaish al-Fateh drove the army and its allies last year from Idlib province, southwest of Aleppo, before the Russian intervention in Syria turned the tide in Assad’s favour.

Last week’s success will raise the standing of the rebranded Nusra Front, whose change of name was made partly to narrow differences with mainstream rebels.

The rebel groups’ unity this time, however, seemed mostly to be born of unease at the gradual advances made by government forces since Russia’s entry into the war.

“We were divided and distanced. Today we are one and the goal is the regime. There are no longer problems between us and we have one enemy who can destroy us, so we became one hand against it,” said Alaa al Saqar, a senior military commander in Fatah Halab, the main umbrella group for FSA groups that are present in Aleppo.

The writer filed this article from Beirut