The
rebels are getting anti-aircraft missiles and as these weapons show up in one
area after another the Syrian Air Force must bomb from a higher altitude. This
means much less accurate attacks since the government does not have smart bombs.
Fewer rebel fighters and more civilians are being hit.
The army
still has several bases that are cut off from ground supply and surrounded by
rebels. The soldiers under siege are demoralized and many surrender the first
chance they get (away from officers who might shoot them). Losing these bases
is bad for morale, as is the fact that the army keeps losing everywhere, while
getting more and more bad publicity for air force attacks that kill mostly
civilians. While most Alawites are still determined to fight to the end no
matter what, a growing number are seeking another way out of this mess.
While
Sunni Arabs from many nations have come to fight for the rebels, many Shia
Arabs are being encountered fighting for the government. These include
Hezbollah men from Lebanon and Iraqi Shia from pro-Iranian militias in Iraq.
Hezbollah has been firing rockets across the border into rebel held Syrian
villages. Rebels claim that thousands of Hezbollah gunmen have moved into Syria
to fight for the Assad dictatorship. Meanwhile Iranians are taking over the
task of providing bodyguards for senior members of the Assad government. Too
many Syrians, including a growing number of Shia, want the Assads gone and the
Iranian bodyguards give the Iranians some more leverage on the Assads. But Iran
is basically tied to a lost cause.
Turkish
artillery continues to fire a few shells into Syria each day, to discourage
more Syrian fire into Turkey, including five killed on the 3rd. So far this
month over a dozen Turkish civilians have been killed or wounded by this Syrian
Army fire. Return fire by Turkish artillery has caused the Syrians to try real
hard to not fire in the direction of Turkey (despite the many rebel bases just
across the border in Turkey.)
Most
Syrian rebel groups have agreed to join a new military coalition that would
coordinate their efforts in taking down the Assad government. The main rebel
military organization, the FSA (Free Syrian Army) is largely for supplying
rebel fighters inside Syria. The FSA is based in Turkey and has less and less
control over combat leaders inside Syria. Turkey and Qatar were behind this new
deal, and applied lots of pressure to get many different rebels groups to
agree. But the deal has not been signed yet, and many not be for another week
or two. Meanwhile the FSA is constantly assuring donors that the Islamic
radical groups are under control. But everyone agrees that such control is
partial, and not complete. The general belief is that, once the rebellion is
over, the Islamic terrorists will go back to attacking those that disagree with
them (which includes almost everyone in the world.)
October
22, 2012: A Jordanian soldier was killed when his unit encountered a group of
armed men trying to cross the border into Syria and a gun battle broke out. The
twelve armed men were arrested. This was the first death of a soldier on the
border since the Syrian civil war began. It’s increasingly common for Sunni
Arabs in Jordan to join the rebels, usually after obtaining weapons in Jordan
(which means they can’t cross legally.)
Elsewhere
in Jordan police arrested 11 men and charged them with being Islamic terrorists
planning to attack targets in Jordan. The arrested men had obtained mortars and
assault rifles smuggled in from Syria. This was blamed on the growing number of
Islamic terrorist groups operating in Syria, who continue to support worldwide
Islamic rule. While these groups work with the rebels, they also plan to take
over Syria after the rebel victory and turn Syria into a religious dictatorship.
In the meantime, the Islamic terrorists support violence in neighboring
countries. A lot of the aid for the rebels, coming from groups in Saudi Arabia
and other oil-rich Gulf states, is earmarked for Islamic radical groups only.
This is causing problems for countries bordering Syria, where Islamic
terrorists are not welcome.
October
21, 2012: A car bomb went off in a
Christian neighborhood of the capital, near police headquarters, killing 13 and
wounding many more. This was the first bombing directed at Christians, who are
five percent of the populations and have generally sided with the Assads.
October
20, 2012: In Lebanon there was gunfire in the capital as a large anti-Syrian
demonstration took place, protesting the death of an anti-Syrian security
official the day before. Lebanon has long been divided over Syria. The Shia
minority (about 40 percent of the population) favored the Assad dictatorship in
Syria. Most Lebanese are hostile to Syria, in part because Syria occupied most
of the country from 1990 to 2005, as part of the peace deal that ended the
1975-90 civil war. The Syrians used the occupation to aid Hezbollah and operate
many criminal enterprises (some of which remained after Syrian troops were
forced by Lebanese and Syrian pressure to leave in 2005.) Another reason for
anti-Syrian sentiments is the desire by many Syrians to make Lebanon part of
Syria again. Over the last two thousand years, that was often the case. But for
most of the last century Lebanon has been independent and most Lebanese want to
keep it that way.
October
19, 2012: A bomb went off in a Christian neighborhood in the Lebanese capital,
killing a senior security official (and seven others) who was openly
anti-Assad. This angered many Lebanese who are still bitter about decades of
Syrian interference in Lebanese affairs. Police arrested a former government
official (Michel Samaha), long known as pro-Syria and accused him of planning
the operation. Police say Michel Samaha admitted he transported explosives from
Syria in his own automobile.
October
18, 2012: Warplanes bombed a residential area of Maaret Al Numan (a town near
the Turkish border that the rebels captured nine days ago) and killed over 40
civilians. One bomb hit a mosque, where women and children had gone to seek
shelter from the air raids. In the capital a suicide bomber detonated his
explosives near the Interior Ministry, but he was the only casualty.
October
17, 2012: Syrian airliners have been banned from operating at EU (the 27 member
European Union) airports. Syrian airliners can still fly through EU airspace,
and can land if there is an emergency. This is yet another effort by the EU to
force the Assad government to halt its attacks on Syrian civilians.
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