Russian firepower helps Syrian forces edge towards Turkey border
The Syrian army
advanced towards the Turkish border on Monday in a major offensive
backed by Russia and Iran that rebels say now threatens the future of
their nearly five-year-old insurrection against President Bashar
al-Assad.Iranian
backed-militias played a key role on the ground as Russian jets
intensified what rebels call a scorched earth policy that has allowed
the military back into the strategic northern area for the first time in
more than two years.
"Our
whole existence is now threatened, not just losing more ground," said
Abdul Rahim al-Najdawi from Liwa al-Tawheed, an insurgent group. "They
are advancing and we are pulling back because in the face of such heavy
aerial bombing we must minimise our losses."
The
Russian-backed Syrian government advance over recent days amounts to
one of the biggest shifts in momentum of the war, helping to torpedo the
first peace talks for two years, which collapsed last week before they
had begun in earnest.
The Syrian
military and its allies were almost five km (3 miles) from the
rebel-held town of Tal Rafaat, which has brought them to around 25 km
(16 miles) from the Turkish border, the rebels, residents and a conflict
monitor said.
The assault around
the city of Aleppo in northern Syria has prompted tens of thousands to
flee towards Turkey, already sheltering more than 2.5 million Syrians.
In
the last two days escalating Russian bombardment of towns northwest of
Aleppo, Anadan and Haritan, brought several thousand more, according to a
resident in the town of Azaz.
Aleppo,
Syria's largest city before the war with 2 million people, has been
divided for years into rebel and government-held sections. The
government wants to take full control, which would be its biggest prize
yet in a war that has already killed at least 250,000 people and driven
11 million from their homes.
Rebel-held
areas in and around Aleppo are still home to 350,000 people, and aid
workers have said they could soon fall to the government.
Turkish
President Tayyip Erdogan was quoted at the weekend as saying Turkey was
under threat, and Ankara has so far kept the border crossing there
closed to most refugees.
There are now around 77,000 refugees taking
shelter in camps on the Syrian side of the Turkish border, Turkish
Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said on Monday. He said that a
worst-case scenario could see as many as 600,000 at Turkey's border.
After
around a week of heavy Russian air strikes, Syrian government troops
and their allies broke through rebel defences to reach two Shi'ite towns
in northern Aleppo province on Wednesday, choking opposition supply
lines from Turkey.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel said she was "appalled" by the suffering of
Aleppo, blaming primarily Russian bombing and suggesting it violated a
U.N. Security Council resolution Moscow signed in December.
Kerem
Kinik, Vice President of the Turkish Red Crescent, told reporters at
the Oncupinar border crossing that Syrians were fleeing Russian strikes
in panic. The closure of the road to Aleppo risked a much larger scale
repeat of crises in Ghouta, a besieged Damascus suburb, or even Madaya, a
blockaded town were residents have starved.
"The
route to Aleppo is completely closed and this is a road that was
feeding all the main arteries inside Syria. Unless this is reopened, you
will see Aleppo falling day by day into a similar situation as in
Madaya and Ghouta and you will see a deepening humanitarian crisis," he
said.
"They are hitting any
vehicles that are on the move, they are hitting aid trucks," he added.
"We really urge that the Russian attacks on Azaz and Aleppo should stop,
because if there is such a policy to clear this area of all human
beings... then we may not be able to cope with the influx."
SUPPLY LINE
The
Syrian army's success in opening a route to the Shi'ite towns of Nubul
and Zahraa enabled it to cut a highway that linked rebel held areas in
the northern countryside with the eastern part of Aleppo held by
insurgents since 2012.
The latest
gains by the Syrian government bring it to the closest point to the
Turkish border since August 2013, the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights said.
The capture of the
towns of Mayer and then Kafin, just north of Nubul and Zahraa, in the
past 24 hrs have opened the road towards Tal Rifaat, the next focus of
the army assault. The capture of that would leave only the town of Azaz
before the Turkish border itself.
The loss of Azaz, just a few miles from the
Bab al Salama border crossing, would virtually wipe out insurgents from
one of their main strongholds in northwest Syria, though they still
control much of nearby Idlib province.
Russian
bombing has for weeks targeted rebel routes to the main border
crossing, once a major gateway from Europe and Turkey to the Gulf and
Iraq, lately a lifeline for rebel-held areas in Idlib and Aleppo
provinces.
The army's advance
has also been indirectly helped by Kurdish-led YPG fighters who control
the city of Afrin, southwest of Azaz. They have seized a string of
villages in recent days, rebels and the Observatory said.
In
a multi-sided civil war that has drawn in global and regional powers,
the Kurds are the strongest allies on the ground in Syria of a U.S.-led
coalition bombing Islamic State in eastern Syria and northern Iraq.
Turkey supports other rebel groups against Assad and is hostile to the
Syrian Kurds, which it sees as allies of its own Kurdish separatists.
Russia
joined the war last year with air strikes that it says are aimed at
Islamic State, but which Turkey, Arab states and the West say are aimed
mostly at other opponents of Assad.
Four
months of Russian air strikes have tipped momentum Assad's way. With
Moscow's help and allies including Lebanon's Hezbollah and Iranian
fighters, the Syrian army is regaining areas on key fronts in the west.
United
Nations investigators called for new sanctions on Syrian officials as
well as leaders of the two most hardline rebel groups, Islamic State and
the Nusra Front, accusing the three of mass killings, torture and
disappearances of civilians in custody.
Speaking
in Ankara, Merkel, under fire at home over the refugee crisis, said
Europe needed to follow up quickly on pledges of aid to help Turkey cope
with the Syria exodus, and also urged Ankara to act fast to improve the
situation for refugees.
(Additional reporting by Nick Tattersall in Istanbul, Yesim Dikmen and
Ercan Gurses in Ankara and Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva; writing by
Suleiman al-Khalidi and Philippa Fletcher
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