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Breakthrough in Syria: Assad is loosing ground very fast

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For most of the past two years, it looked like Bashar al-Assad's campaign to hold on in Syria was working. Syria's weak, uncoordinated, and increasingly Islamist rebels were being gradually pushed back. And while ISIS had seized vast parts of the country, it and Assad appeared to tolerate one another in a sort of tacit non-aggression pact designed to crush the Syrian rebels. It seemed that Syria, and the world, would be stuck with Assad's murderous dictatorship for the foreseeable future.

But in the past few weeks, things appear to have changed — potentially dramatically. The rebels have won a string of significant victories in the country's north. Assad's troop reserves are wearing thin, and it's becoming harder for him to replace his losses.

A rebel victory, to be clear, is far from imminent or even likely. At this point, it's too early to say for sure what this means for the course of the Syrian war. But the rebels have found a new momentum against Assad just as his military strength could be weakening, which could be a significant change in the trajectory of a war that has been ongoing for years.

Assad is losing ground
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A rebel fighter in Aleppo. (Ahmed Muhammed Ali/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

Bashar al-Assad's forces are losing ground against the rebels, for example in northern Idlib province, where two recent rebel victories show how strong the rebels have gotten. First, in late March, Assad's forces were pushed out of Idlib City, the region's capital. Second, in late April, rebels took Jisr al-Shughour, a strategically valuable town that lies on the Assad regime's supply line in the area and near its important coastal holdings.

"Jisr al-Shughour is a good example of how the regime is, indeed, losing ground," Noah Bonsey, a senior analyst at the International Crisis Group, told me. "Most observers were surprised at how quickly it fell, given that it is a town of some strategic importance."

While rebels' most dramatic victories are in Idlib, they're advancing elsewhere as well. They've seized towns in the south and have repelled Assad offensives around the country.

"Losses in Idlib and the southern governorate of Deraa have placed great pressure on Assad," Charles Lister, a fellow at the Brookings Doha Center, writes. "Frustration, disaffection and even incidences of protest are rising across Assad’s most ardent areas of support on Syria’s coast — some of which are now under direct attack."

Bonsey concurs. "Rebels have seized momentum in recent weeks and months," he says. "The regime is clearly weakening to an extent that was not widely reflected in the English-language narrative surrounding the conflict."

Rebels are more united as Assad troop losses mount
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Free Syrian Army rebels train. (Baraa al-Halabi/AFP/Getty Images)

Recent regime defeats reflect growing unity among the rebels as well as fundamental weaknesses on the regime's side.

The Idlib advance, in particular, was led by Jaish al-Fatah, a new rebel coalition led by several different Islamist groups. While the coalition includes Jabhat al-Nusra, al-Qaeda's Syrian franchise, the jihadis don't appear to dominate the group.

"The operations also displayed a far improved level of coordination between rival factions," Lister writes, "spanning from U.S.-backed Free Syrian Army (FSA) brigades, to moderate and conservative Syrian Islamists, to al Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra and several independent jihadist factions."

Rebel coordination is nothing new in Syria. But this coalition stands out for its size and breadth.

"The number of fighters mobilized for the initial Idlib city campaign has been significant, and that's been just as true in subsequent operations in the north," Bonsey says. "The level of coordination we've seen over several weeks, on multiple fronts, is something that we have rarely, if ever, seen from rebels in the north."

And as the rebels have gotten more united, the regime has gotten weaker. The basic problem is attrition: Assad is losing a lot of soldiers in this war, and his regime — a sectarian Shia government in an overwhelmingly Sunni country — can't train replacements quickly enough.

Bonsey calls this an "unsolvable manpower problem." As a result, he says, Assad is becoming increasingly dependent on his foreign allies — Iran and Lebanese Hezbollah specifically — to lead the ground campaign.

But Iran has shown limited willingness to commit heavily to areas like Idlib, and rather is concentrating principally on defending the regime's core holdings around Damascus and the coast. According to Bonsey, "it's a matter of priorities," which is to say that their resources aren't unlimited, and they've (so far) preferred to concentrate them in the most critical areas.

Iran's involvement in conflicts in Iraq and Yemen on top of Syria has left it "really overstretched," according to Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies. The cumulative resource investment has "certainly had an impact on Assad losing territory in Syria," he concludes.

"For the regime, the status quo militarily is not sustainable," Bonsey says, and "Iran's strategy in Syria does not appear sustainable. The costs to Iran of propping up Assad's rule in Syria are only going to rise with time, substantially. And what's happened with Idlib in recent weeks is only the latest indication of that."

How Assad could ride this out: with Iran's help
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Iranian Revolutionary Guard. (Atta Kenare/AFP/Getty Images)

Bonsey, like most Syria experts, does not believe Assad is on the road to inevitable defeat.

"While much of the subsequent commentary [to the Idlib offensive] proclaimed this as the beginning of the end for President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, we are still a long way from that," Lister writes.

For one thing, Iran sees the survival of the Assad regime as a critical strategic priority, as it allows Iran to supply Hezbollah and maintain a close ally in the Levant. Any post-Assad government is likely to be Sunni-dominated,and quite hostile to Iran. Tehran is probably willing to go to some lengths to keep that from happening, and Iranian intervention in the war has been a significant force.

"In strict military terms, there isn't yet a direct threat on the strategically essential territory that the regime and its backers continue to control," Bonsey says, "and there isn't yet a reason to think the rebels are capable of threatening" such a region.

Since Assad can't crush the rebels in their strongholds, then, the conflict is looking a lot like a stalemate — which it already was before this rebel offensive began.

Moreover, the unity of this new rebel coalition could collapse. The broad alliance we've seen in Idlib is held together by victory: the more they push back Assad, the more willing they are to cooperate. But if Assad's forces start beating them, the ideological and political fault lines in the coalition could cause rebel groups to turn on one another. It's happened — many times — before.

The "big question now," according to Bonsey, is "how the regime and its backers choose to respond to these defeats." A major decider, in other words, is Iran. But as long as they see protecting the Assad regime as vital, they are likely to do what it takes to keep his core territory intact.
Bashar al-Assad is losing ground in Syria - Vox

We will see a breakthrough in Syria if Assad doesn't get sectarian fighters from Iran. With or without no-flyzone Assad will fall. If NATO decides to implement no-fly zone Assad will fall within days.
If not it will take a little bit more time. International community needs to put more pressure on Iran to change its behavior so the sectarian war in the middle-east can stop.
 
All the big cities like Homs, Hama, Damascus, west part of Aleppo, most of Daraa are held by the government. Sure, insurgents may have made some advances, but it is too early to call it a day. Syria is no Libya. If Assad resquests it, Russian air strikes and cruise missiles strikes could help to defend western and central Syria.

Syrian_civil_war.png
 
All the big cities like Homs, Hama, Damascus, west part of Aleppo, most of Daraa are held by the government. Sure, insurgents may have made some advances, but it is too early to call it a day. Syria is no Libya. If Assad resquests it, Russian air strikes and cruise missiles strikes could help to defend western and central Syria.

Syrian_civil_war.png
Russia can't do much if it doesn't want to be crushed by sanctions. Also how can Russia do airstrikes in Syria? It didn't even intervene in Ukraine. There is not much Russia or Iran can do. Financing Assad is becoming more and more expensive and more and more Syrians are being trained to kick Assad out. All of the Iranian Shia trained terrorist from Afghanistan are already crushed or are very ineffective. Assad doesn't have more than 1 year. Shorter than 1 year if NATO implements no-fly zone.
 
Russia can't do much if it doesn't want to be crushed by sanctions. Also how can Russia do airstrikes in Syria? It didn't even intervene in Ukraine. There is not much Russia or Iran can do. Financing Assad is becoming more and more expensive and more and more Syrians are being trained to kick Assad out. All of the Iranian Shia trained terrorist from Afghanistan are already crushed or are very ineffective. Assad doesn't have more than 1 year. Shorter than 1 year if NATO implements no-fly zone.


Sanctions do nothing. Modern economics is nothing but a number in a digital computer. It is the US that made economics the way it is today. So blame it on the US.

Doesn't have 1 year you say? You've been saying that for years. Fine, next year we'll see if your 1 year works :laugh:

BTW, I'm no middle easterner. I don't give a D what happens in Syria. :p:
 
Sanctions do nothing. Modern economics is nothing but a number in a digital computer. It is the US that made economics the way it is today. So blame it on the US.

Doesn't have 1 year you say? You've been saying that for years. Fine, next year we'll see if your 1 year works :laugh:

BTW, I'm no middle easterner. I don't give a D what happens in Syria. :p:
Super boy U just arguing for the sake of an argument we all know he is loosing ground with that speed Assad can't linger for long time or this country will torn to many pieces .
 
Sanctions do nothing. Modern economics is nothing but a number in a digital computer. It is the US that made economics the way it is today. So blame it on the US.

Doesn't have 1 year you say? You've been saying that for years. Fine, next year we'll see if your 1 year works :laugh:

BTW, I'm no middle easterner. I don't give a D what happens in Syria. :p:

meaning you are just a busy body kind of person

shooo..........shoooooooooo.................go away......................
 
Syrians are stupid people. For removing one man from government they have destroyed their own country and killed thousands of own people. Even if Asad goes today it will take syria many decades to recover from the ruins they are now.
 
Syrians are stupid people. For removing one man from government they have destroyed their own country and killed thousands of own people. Even if Asad goes today it will take syria many decades to recover from the ruins they are now.

the person that his/her love one have not been massacre by his/her own government tell others that his/her love one have been massacred by his/her own government as a stupid because of fight back

the world is full of hypocrite
 
Syrians are stupid people. For removing one man from government they have destroyed their own country and killed thousands of own people. Even if Asad goes today it will take syria many decades to recover from the ruins they are now.
Easy for you to say while sitting in a country where you can say whatever you want. Live in a country you can't and see what will happen to you.
 
All the Arab countries can't beat Israel. I don't see how FSA can beat Baatthists. In big cities like western Aleppo, Daraa, Homs, Hama, Damascus, Baathist support is strong, which is why FSA has no foothold in such places.
 
All the big cities like Homs, Hama, Damascus, west part of Aleppo, most of Daraa are held by the government. Sure, insurgents may have made some advances, but it is too early to call it a day. Syria is no Libya. If Assad resquests it, Russian air strikes and cruise missiles strikes could help to defend western and central Syria.

Syrian_civil_war.png

You clearly dont understand anything that was said in this article, Assad is loosing his ability to replenish his troops.


Sanctions do nothing. Modern economics is nothing but a number in a digital computer. It is the US that made economics the way it is today. So blame it on the US.

Doesn't have 1 year you say? You've been saying that for years. Fine, next year we'll see if your 1 year works :laugh:

BTW, I'm no middle easterner. I don't give a D what happens in Syria. :p:

It also is clear you have no idea about economics as well, nothing more than a keyboard warrior arguing for the sake of argument. Ask Iran, and see if they really didn't felt the grip of these economic sanctions.

Syrians are stupid people. For removing one man from government they have destroyed their own country and killed thousands of own people. Even if Asad goes today it will take syria many decades to recover from the ruins they are now.

Who are we to judge, they wanted more power for the people and it was Assad who choose to resort to violence. Now with hundreds of thousands killed, Syria will never be the same. Even when Assad is removed from power, forever the fabric of syrian society is torn. Alawaites have hard times once, Assad is gone.
 
All the big cities like Homs, Hama, Damascus, west part of Aleppo, most of Daraa are held by the government.
Aleppo, the biggest city - half rebel.
Damascus - large parts rebel.
Homs - more than half destroyed and depopulated.
Dar'a - half rebel
Deir ez Zor - mostly ISIS/destroyed
Hasaka - mostly Kurd
Raqqa - all ISIS.
Idlib - all rebel

Euphrates river with dams - ISIS
Oil - ISIS and Kurds
Countryside - rebels

The only province in Syria fully controlled by Assad is Tartus :)

Alawis have two choices:

1) Kick *** of Assad, cut ties with Iran and make peace with Sunnis.
2) Keep dying for Iran.
 
All the big cities like Homs, Hama, Damascus, west part of Aleppo, most of Daraa are held by the government. Sure, insurgents may have made some advances, but it is too early to call it a day. Syria is no Libya. If Assad resquests it, Russian air strikes and cruise missiles strikes could help to defend western and central Syria.

Syrian_civil_war.png

The idea is to draw out the Iranians and the Russians into this conflict and make them bleed for a decade.

Thr Russians are getting trapped in Ukraine while Iran is being scared into going into Iraq. If only both Russia and Iran can be persuaded to openly intervene in Syria and trap them there... that'll achieve the main goal.
 
The idea is to draw out the Iranians and the Russians into this conflict and make them bleed for a decade.

Thr Russians are getting trapped in Ukraine while Iran is being scared into going into Iraq. If only both Russia and Iran can be persuaded to openly intervene in Syria and trap them there... that'll achieve the main goal.

That's a stupid idea, because the only one bleeding are Syrians.
 

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