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Syrian Civil War (Graphic Photos/Vid Not Allowed)

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http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/tu...ria-.aspx?pageID=238&nID=105512&NewsCatID=352
Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and e Democratic Union Party (PYD) targets as part of Operation Euphrates Shield in northern Syria, the military said on Oct. 29.

The Turkish General Staff said in a statement that three Syrian opposition fighters were killed and four others were wounded during the clashes on Oct 28.

Turkey's Operation Euphrates Shield was launched in late August to clear Syria's northern border area of terrorists. It is now in its 67th day.

The operation has seen both ISIL and PKK/PYD targeted by the opposition Free Syrian Army plus Turkish tanks, artillery and aircraft.

The army said since the beginning of the operation in late August, 33 mines and 1,367 handmade explosives had been "neutralized."
October/29/2016
 
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Russia fights vs ISIS:

Cv4Of_2XEAASVxH.jpg

Is it possible for me to ask you (and others) to approach this thread in a military analysis style? Everyone here has already take their sides, and I doubt we can change each other's minds, so why not stick to discussions of military strategies.

For example, looking at that map, it would be military moronic for them to concentrate on the black parts for now. ISIS seems to pose no threat to the main parts of the government's control base. If I look at that map, it seems the main importance for the government is the part between Aleppo and Hama. Not only are the rebels there on the borders of Turkey, but they are threatening major population centers.

On the other hand, look at how many strikes we see at Dera'a on the south. There are strikes near Palmyra on ISIS land but no strike on Dera'a on the south.

If you look at this from a completely military strategic point of view, and you consider all non-pink areas as potential threats and lands to control, where would you concentrate your strikes on? Would it not be suicidal if Aleppo, Latakia, and Hama were ignored, and instead all strikes were done on Raqqa?

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SAA advances north in Aleppo, gaining 5 villages and 14 km of land (initial reports are that there was coordination with SDF)
Cv9ki08W8AANA8n.jpg
 
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Is it possible for me to ask you (and others) to approach this thread in a military analysis style? Everyone here has already take their sides, and I doubt we can change each other's minds, so why not stick to discussions of military strategies.

For example, looking at that map, it would be military moronic for them to concentrate on the black parts for now. ISIS seems to pose no threat to the main parts of the government's control base. If I look at that map, it seems the main importance for the government is the part between Aleppo and Hama. Not only are the rebels there on the borders of Turkey, but they are threatening major population centers.

On the other hand, look at how many strikes we see at Dera'a on the south. There are strikes near Palmyra on ISIS land but no strike on Dera'a on the south.

If you look at this from a completely military strategic point of view, and you consider all non-pink areas as potential threats and lands to control, where would you concentrate your strikes on? Would it not be suicidal if Aleppo, Latakia, and Hama were ignored, and instead all strikes were done on Raqqa?
Assad aka Khamenai could make truce with rebels and fight with ISIS. But they don't want. ISIS are their allies.

SAA advances north in Aleppo, gaining 5 villages and 14 km of land (initial reports are that there was coordination with SDF)
Cv9ki08W8AANA8n.jpg
For 2 years both ISIS and Assadists did not fire a single shot at each other in that area. Now ISIS hands 7 villages without fight.

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From Iraqi Baath (aka ISIS) to Syrian Baath (aka AssadKhamenai).

P.S. I have two news for you:

1) Good news. Trump most probably is going to win, so u could genocide Syrians freely for another 4 years (with Clinton there was some small chance that Obama policies would change).
2) Bad news. You are still going to lose.
 
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Assad aka Khamenai could make truce with rebels and fight with ISIS. But they don't want. ISIS are their allies.

Short term or case by case truces have been done in the past and probably will be done in the future. For example, there does seem to be a truce on the south, which you can see that there is rarely any action. There is also truce in certain pockets, which leads to negotiations of rebel withdrawals. There was also probably some understanding when Turkey-supported rebels entered from the north, as there was no clashes between SAA & rebels nor airstrikes on them.

But truces in Aleppo or Hama or Latakia is probably more difficult as they are important for the future of the country. Both rebels & SAA probably want to take over the contested lands.

For example, ISIS in Raqqa is pretty much ignored by everyone for now. Rebels aren't attacking it, Kurds aren't attacking it, SAA isn't attacking it, Russians aren't attacking it, Turks aren't attacking it, Iranians aren't attacking it, Iraqis aren't attacking it, Americans aren't attacking it, Gulfies aren't attacking it, coalition aren't attacking it, and so forth. This doesn't mean that ALL of them are BFF with ISIS in Raqqa.

Eventually a battle for Raqqa will start, the same way battle for Mosul is gaining ground.
 
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Russian-Syrian air defense force
According to public sources, the combined Russian-Syrian AD force was deployed in the war zone as far back as November 2015, comprising:

  • Pantsir-S1 (SS-22 Greyhound) close-in SAM/AA systems;
  • Osa-AKM (SA-8 Gecko);
  • S-125 Pechora-2M (SA-3 Goa) short-range (SHORAD) SAM systems;
  • Buk-M2E (SA-17 Grizzly) medium-range SAM systems;
  • S-200VE Vega (SA-5 Gammon);
  • S-400 Triumph long-range SAM systems.
To a certain extent, there is the implementation of the territorial SAM-based air defense principle at Hmeymim AB.

Beefing up the Russian SAM element in Syria with a cutting-edge S-400 Triumph (SA-21 Growler) long-range SAM system has considerably improved the AD coverage of the key facility, Hmeymim AB, and allowed reaching targets flying at higher altitudes and speeds. In addition, the AD element’s survivability and immunity has grown sharply in terms of possible fires- and electronic countermeasures-heavy environment.

decision was made to add the S-300FM Fort-M (SA-N-20) SAM systems of the Moskva and Varyag (Slava-class) guided missile cruisers in Syria’s littorals in order to augment the air defenses in the wake of the Su-24M’s downing on November 24, 2015. To cap it all, Krasukha-4 electronic warfare (EW) systems were deployed in Hmeymim AB to protect it from hostile air and space reconnaissance assets.

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http://www.militarytimes.com/articl...qa-us-military-general-stephen-townsend-mosul
U.S. commanders in the Middle East are trying to determine whether 300 U.S. troops on the ground inside Syria will be enough to oust the Islamic State group from its self-proclaimed capital in Raqqa.

The U.S. has plenty of local allies willing to fight ISIS there. The challenge is convincing those groups to fight the militants rather than each other.

U.S. officials say the invasion of Raqqa will begin within weeks. They feel a sense of “urgency” because new intelligence suggests ISIS leaders in Raqqa are planning external attacks in the U.S. and Europe.

This will draw the U.S. military deeper than ever into the multi-sided Syrian civil war, a battlefield far more complex than the one in Iraq, which for years has been the main focus of the U.S. effort to defeat ISIS. The invasion of Raqqa will put the teams of U.S. special operations troops into a unique role managing the movements of rival allied factions that often have fought each other during the five-year-old conflict.

Small teams of American troops will attach to various allied elements, which could include the Turkish military, Syrian Kurdish militias, Sunni Arab tribal fighters and others linked to the so-called Syrian Defense Force, according to defense officials familiar with the planning.

Those teams of elite American troops will provide vital communication links between the groups as well as to the U.S.-led coalition’s centralized command and control system overseeing the operation.

“The U.S. can play a very pivotal role in negotiating this, and then the U.S. troops would help them deconflict it on the ground,” said Andrew Tabler, a Syria expert with the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

Turkish President Recep Erdoğan called President Obama and vowed to send Turkish troops to Raqqa. But it was unclear how much the Turkish military will coordinate with the American-led coalition, an ambiguity that has made the White House uncomfortable.

“We're mindful of how complicated this space is,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said on Thursday. “It's important that [Turkey’s military] actions are well coordinated to prevent any sort of unintended consequence or unintended escalation among competing interests in that region of the world.”

The next day, Turkey's prime minister, Binali Yildirim, said its military will not participate in the U.S. operation to invade Raqqa if Syrian Kurdish fighters are included. Turkey, he said, would support the fight, "however, if groups we classify as terrorist organizations like the PYD and YPG are included in the operation, we will not be there." Those acronyms refer to the Syrian Kurdish militias backed by the U.S.

Townsend said the invasion of Raqqa will involve far fewer U.S. troops than operations in Iraq, where about 5,000 American personnel are currently deployed, many supporting the invasion of Mosul that began Oct. 17.

“We’re also trying to keep a footprint that is very light there to avoid worsening any of the complicating, pre-existing conditions,” Townsend said.

Yet Anthony Cordesman, a defense exerts with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the Raqqa operation's success will ultimately depend on whether the U.S. and its allies can muster enough combat power on the ground.

“If we do not have a decisive ground component, it is not enough to deal with a problem like Raqqa,” Cordesman told Military Times recently.

The size of the American force may also have an important psychological impact on the fight for Raqqa's city center, said Bassam Barabandi, a former Syrian diplomat who now lives in Washington and advocates for Syrian rebels groups.

“The more Americans are involved, the more it will send a message that this is a serious fight," he said. "If people in Raqqa see that the American are coming, you are encouraging them to make revolution against [ISIS] inside the city."
 
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Short term or case by case truces have been done in the past and probably will be done in the future. For example, there does seem to be a truce on the south, which you can see that there is rarely any action. There is also truce in certain pockets, which leads to negotiations of rebel withdrawals. There was also probably some understanding when Turkey-supported rebels entered from the north, as there was no clashes between SAA & rebels nor airstrikes on them.

But truces in Aleppo or Hama or Latakia is probably more difficult as they are important for the future of the country. Both rebels & SAA probably want to take over the contested lands.

For example, ISIS in Raqqa is pretty much ignored by everyone for now. Rebels aren't attacking it, Kurds aren't attacking it, SAA isn't attacking it, Russians aren't attacking it, Turks aren't attacking it, Iranians aren't attacking it, Iraqis aren't attacking it, Americans aren't attacking it, Gulfies aren't attacking it, coalition aren't attacking it, and so forth. This doesn't mean that ALL of them are BFF with ISIS in Raqqa.

Eventually a battle for Raqqa will start, the same way battle for Mosul is gaining ground.
Genocidal maniacs AssadKhamenai never respected any truce except truce of 1973 with Israel when they were hammered by IDF. Thats only language they understand.

They agreed to truce in March and next day started dropping barrel bombs on Daraya.
 
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Abu Mahdi al Mohandis of the PMF and the military council stated they will pursue IS into Syria after the remaining area's in Iraq which is estimated at begin or February 2017. Iraq is militarily experienced but lacks the large numbers of equipment, though this is actually a necessity to secure Anbar especially from IS attacks. Goodf for Syria as well actually..
 
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Seems the new moderated beheader offensive in Aleppo fails, anyone know what are their gains at the moment?
 
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Seems the new moderated beheader offensive in Aleppo fails, anyone know what are their gains at the moment?

Latest report says that the moderate berrel bombers and genocidal maniacs of the assad regime are on retreat. Here's the full report:

Syria: Dozens dead as rebels try to break Aleppo siege
UN "appalled" with at least 17 children among those killed while some 1,500 rebels mass along Aleppo's western edges.


Syrian government troops and rebels were locked in fierce fighting on Sunday on Aleppo's western edges, where at least 41 civilians have been killed over the past three days.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a Britain-based monitor, said the death toll included at least 17 children, adding hundreds of mortars had been fired.

The northern city of Aleppo's frontline runs through the heart of the ancient city, dividing rebels in the east from government forces in the west.


Rebels, in an opposition offensive to break a devastating siege, have unleashed car bombs and salvos of rockets and mortar shells to break through government lines.

Syrian state media on Sunday accused opposition fighters of firing shells containing toxic gas into government-controlled districts. The rebels denied the allegations.

It was impossible for Al Jazeera to independently verify the claim.

State news agency SANA reported 35 people were suffering from shortness of breath, numbness, and muscle spasms after "toxic gases" hit the frontline district of Dahiyet al-Assad and regime-held Hamdaniyeh.

United Nations Envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura said he was "appalled and shocked by the high number of rockets indiscriminately launched" on civilian suburbs of government-held Aleppo.

"Those who argue that this is meant to relieve the siege of eastern Aleppo should be reminded that nothing justifies the use of disproportionate and indiscriminate weapons, including heavy ones, on civilian areas and it could amount to war crimes," de Mistura said.

The head of Aleppo University Hospital, Ibrahim Hadid, told state television "36 people, including civilians and combatants, were wounded after inhaling toxic chlorine gas released by terrorists".

Rebels deny accusations
The head of the political office of the Aleppo-based rebel group Fastaqim denied the reports. "This is a lie," said Zakaria Malahifjim of Fastaqim.

Syria's second city, Aleppo has been ravaged by some of the heaviest fighting of the country's five-year war, which has killed more than 300,000 people.

In a new death toll on Sunday, the SOHR monitor said fighting had also killed at least 55 government troops and allied fighters, as well as 64 Syrian rebels.

About 1,500 rebels have massed on a 15-km front along the western edges of Aleppo since Friday, scoring quick gains in the Dahiyet al-Assad district, but struggling to push east since then.

"The advance will be from Dahiyet al-Assad towards Hamdaniyeh," said Yasser al-Youssef of the Noureddin al-Zinki rebel faction.

Hamdaniyeh is a government-held district directly adjacent to opposition-controlled eastern neighbourhoods.

A state TV presenter, Shadi Halwi, said in a video post on his Facebook page that for the first time in government-held Aleppo, "the sound of clashes is strong, very loud."

OPINIONS: Aleppo and the myth of Syria's sovereignty

Chris Doyle, from the Council for Arab-British Understanding, a London-based advocacy group, said the failure to end the siege of Aleppo has unified the disparate rebel groups, with hard-line fighters taking the lead.

"They have won the narrative. They've said, "look the United States, Turkey - these other countries aren't going to help you, you have to work with us,'" he told Al Jazeera.

The situation for Aleppo residents on both sides of the frontline was bleak, he added.

"Civilians have been weaponised in this war. Both sides, but particularly the regime, have decided to use civilians as a tool, as a way of conducting the war. Instead of attacking military targets, they've attacked hospitals, schools. And we're seeing now some among the opposition fighters doing the same," said Doyle.

Russia and the Syrian government have halted air strikes on the eastern rebel-held part of Aleppo since last week to allow the evacuation of wounded civilians. But no evacuation took place and efforts to allow medical and food supplies into the besieged area also faltered.

Meanwhile, government troops kept up a ground offensive against rebel areas.

Ibrahim al-Haj - a member of the Syrian Civil Defense, or White Helmets, which operates in rebel-held Aleppo - said air strikes on Sunday on districts near the frontline caused material damage. He also said government artillery shelling killed three people and wounded seven.

'Massive, coordinated' assault
A government military source told AFP news agency the rebel assault was "massive and coordinated", but insisted it was unable to break into any neighbourhoods beyond Dahiyet al-Assad.



Mosul and Aleppo: A tale of two besieged cities
"They're using Grad missiles and car bombs and are supported by foreign fighters in their ranks," he said.

Those engaged in the assault include Aleppo rebels and reinforcements from Idlib province to the west, among them Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, which changed its name from al-Nusra Front after breaking ties with al-Qaeda.

Much of the once-bustling economic hub has been reduced to rubble by artillery and air bombardment, including barrel bombs - crude unguided explosive devices that also kill indiscriminately.

In late September, government troops launched an assault to recapture all of the eastern rebel-controlled territory, backed by air strikes from Russia, which began an air war in 2015 to support President Bashar al-Assad's forces.

That onslaught spurred massive international criticism of both Moscow and Damascus.

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/...ebels-break-aleppo-siege-161030164621486.html
 
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Latest report says that the moderate berrel bombers and genocidal maniacs of the assad regime are on retreat. Here's the full report:

Syria: Dozens dead as rebels try to break Aleppo siege
UN "appalled" with at least 17 children among those killed while some 1,500 rebels mass along Aleppo's western edges.


Syrian government troops and rebels were locked in fierce fighting on Sunday on Aleppo's western edges, where at least 41 civilians have been killed over the past three days.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a Britain-based monitor, said the death toll included at least 17 children, adding hundreds of mortars had been fired.

The northern city of Aleppo's frontline runs through the heart of the ancient city, dividing rebels in the east from government forces in the west.


Rebels, in an opposition offensive to break a devastating siege, have unleashed car bombs and salvos of rockets and mortar shells to break through government lines.

Syrian state media on Sunday accused opposition fighters of firing shells containing toxic gas into government-controlled districts. The rebels denied the allegations.

It was impossible for Al Jazeera to independently verify the claim.

State news agency SANA reported 35 people were suffering from shortness of breath, numbness, and muscle spasms after "toxic gases" hit the frontline district of Dahiyet al-Assad and regime-held Hamdaniyeh.

United Nations Envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura said he was "appalled and shocked by the high number of rockets indiscriminately launched" on civilian suburbs of government-held Aleppo.

"Those who argue that this is meant to relieve the siege of eastern Aleppo should be reminded that nothing justifies the use of disproportionate and indiscriminate weapons, including heavy ones, on civilian areas and it could amount to war crimes," de Mistura said.

The head of Aleppo University Hospital, Ibrahim Hadid, told state television "36 people, including civilians and combatants, were wounded after inhaling toxic chlorine gas released by terrorists".

Rebels deny accusations
The head of the political office of the Aleppo-based rebel group Fastaqim denied the reports. "This is a lie," said Zakaria Malahifjim of Fastaqim.

Syria's second city, Aleppo has been ravaged by some of the heaviest fighting of the country's five-year war, which has killed more than 300,000 people.

In a new death toll on Sunday, the SOHR monitor said fighting had also killed at least 55 government troops and allied fighters, as well as 64 Syrian rebels.

About 1,500 rebels have massed on a 15-km front along the western edges of Aleppo since Friday, scoring quick gains in the Dahiyet al-Assad district, but struggling to push east since then.

"The advance will be from Dahiyet al-Assad towards Hamdaniyeh," said Yasser al-Youssef of the Noureddin al-Zinki rebel faction.

Hamdaniyeh is a government-held district directly adjacent to opposition-controlled eastern neighbourhoods.

A state TV presenter, Shadi Halwi, said in a video post on his Facebook page that for the first time in government-held Aleppo, "the sound of clashes is strong, very loud."

OPINIONS: Aleppo and the myth of Syria's sovereignty

Chris Doyle, from the Council for Arab-British Understanding, a London-based advocacy group, said the failure to end the siege of Aleppo has unified the disparate rebel groups, with hard-line fighters taking the lead.

"They have won the narrative. They've said, "look the United States, Turkey - these other countries aren't going to help you, you have to work with us,'" he told Al Jazeera.

The situation for Aleppo residents on both sides of the frontline was bleak, he added.

"Civilians have been weaponised in this war. Both sides, but particularly the regime, have decided to use civilians as a tool, as a way of conducting the war. Instead of attacking military targets, they've attacked hospitals, schools. And we're seeing now some among the opposition fighters doing the same," said Doyle.

Russia and the Syrian government have halted air strikes on the eastern rebel-held part of Aleppo since last week to allow the evacuation of wounded civilians. But no evacuation took place and efforts to allow medical and food supplies into the besieged area also faltered.

Meanwhile, government troops kept up a ground offensive against rebel areas.

Ibrahim al-Haj - a member of the Syrian Civil Defense, or White Helmets, which operates in rebel-held Aleppo - said air strikes on Sunday on districts near the frontline caused material damage. He also said government artillery shelling killed three people and wounded seven.

'Massive, coordinated' assault
A government military source told AFP news agency the rebel assault was "massive and coordinated", but insisted it was unable to break into any neighbourhoods beyond Dahiyet al-Assad.



Mosul and Aleppo: A tale of two besieged cities
"They're using Grad missiles and car bombs and are supported by foreign fighters in their ranks," he said.

Those engaged in the assault include Aleppo rebels and reinforcements from Idlib province to the west, among them Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, which changed its name from al-Nusra Front after breaking ties with al-Qaeda.

Much of the once-bustling economic hub has been reduced to rubble by artillery and air bombardment, including barrel bombs - crude unguided explosive devices that also kill indiscriminately.

In late September, government troops launched an assault to recapture all of the eastern rebel-controlled territory, backed by air strikes from Russia, which began an air war in 2015 to support President Bashar al-Assad's forces.

That onslaught spurred massive international criticism of both Moscow and Damascus.

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/...ebels-break-aleppo-siege-161030164621486.html


Firstly, the moderate child beheaders are not making any significant gains if any at all. In fact many attacks have failed.

Second, those dead civilians are mostly from the "rebels" shelling civilian areas with GRAD rockets, mortars and toxic gas.
 
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Firstly, the moderate child beheaders are not making any significant gains if any at all. In fact many attacks have failed.

Second, those dead civilians are mostly from the "rebels" shelling civilian areas with GRAD rockets, mortars and toxic gas.

That is according to the barrel bombing children and women slaughterers.
 
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Latest report says that the moderate berrel bombers and genocidal maniacs of the assad regime are on retreat. Here's the full report:

Syria: Dozens dead as rebels try to break Aleppo siege
UN "appalled" with at least 17 children among those killed while some 1,500 rebels mass along Aleppo's western edges.


Syrian government troops and rebels were locked in fierce fighting on Sunday on Aleppo's western edges, where at least 41 civilians have been killed over the past three days.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a Britain-based monitor, said the death toll included at least 17 children, adding hundreds of mortars had been fired.

The northern city of Aleppo's frontline runs through the heart of the ancient city, dividing rebels in the east from government forces in the west.


Rebels, in an opposition offensive to break a devastating siege, have unleashed car bombs and salvos of rockets and mortar shells to break through government lines.

Syrian state media on Sunday accused opposition fighters of firing shells containing toxic gas into government-controlled districts. The rebels denied the allegations.

It was impossible for Al Jazeera to independently verify the claim.

State news agency SANA reported 35 people were suffering from shortness of breath, numbness, and muscle spasms after "toxic gases" hit the frontline district of Dahiyet al-Assad and regime-held Hamdaniyeh.

United Nations Envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura said he was "appalled and shocked by the high number of rockets indiscriminately launched" on civilian suburbs of government-held Aleppo.

"Those who argue that this is meant to relieve the siege of eastern Aleppo should be reminded that nothing justifies the use of disproportionate and indiscriminate weapons, including heavy ones, on civilian areas and it could amount to war crimes," de Mistura said.

The head of Aleppo University Hospital, Ibrahim Hadid, told state television "36 people, including civilians and combatants, were wounded after inhaling toxic chlorine gas released by terrorists".

Rebels deny accusations
The head of the political office of the Aleppo-based rebel group Fastaqim denied the reports. "This is a lie," said Zakaria Malahifjim of Fastaqim.

Syria's second city, Aleppo has been ravaged by some of the heaviest fighting of the country's five-year war, which has killed more than 300,000 people.

In a new death toll on Sunday, the SOHR monitor said fighting had also killed at least 55 government troops and allied fighters, as well as 64 Syrian rebels.

About 1,500 rebels have massed on a 15-km front along the western edges of Aleppo since Friday, scoring quick gains in the Dahiyet al-Assad district, but struggling to push east since then.

"The advance will be from Dahiyet al-Assad towards Hamdaniyeh," said Yasser al-Youssef of the Noureddin al-Zinki rebel faction.

Hamdaniyeh is a government-held district directly adjacent to opposition-controlled eastern neighbourhoods.

A state TV presenter, Shadi Halwi, said in a video post on his Facebook page that for the first time in government-held Aleppo, "the sound of clashes is strong, very loud."

OPINIONS: Aleppo and the myth of Syria's sovereignty

Chris Doyle, from the Council for Arab-British Understanding, a London-based advocacy group, said the failure to end the siege of Aleppo has unified the disparate rebel groups, with hard-line fighters taking the lead.

"They have won the narrative. They've said, "look the United States, Turkey - these other countries aren't going to help you, you have to work with us,'" he told Al Jazeera.

The situation for Aleppo residents on both sides of the frontline was bleak, he added.

"Civilians have been weaponised in this war. Both sides, but particularly the regime, have decided to use civilians as a tool, as a way of conducting the war. Instead of attacking military targets, they've attacked hospitals, schools. And we're seeing now some among the opposition fighters doing the same," said Doyle.

Russia and the Syrian government have halted air strikes on the eastern rebel-held part of Aleppo since last week to allow the evacuation of wounded civilians. But no evacuation took place and efforts to allow medical and food supplies into the besieged area also faltered.

Meanwhile, government troops kept up a ground offensive against rebel areas.

Ibrahim al-Haj - a member of the Syrian Civil Defense, or White Helmets, which operates in rebel-held Aleppo - said air strikes on Sunday on districts near the frontline caused material damage. He also said government artillery shelling killed three people and wounded seven.

'Massive, coordinated' assault
A government military source told AFP news agency the rebel assault was "massive and coordinated", but insisted it was unable to break into any neighbourhoods beyond Dahiyet al-Assad.



Mosul and Aleppo: A tale of two besieged cities
"They're using Grad missiles and car bombs and are supported by foreign fighters in their ranks," he said.

Those engaged in the assault include Aleppo rebels and reinforcements from Idlib province to the west, among them Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, which changed its name from al-Nusra Front after breaking ties with al-Qaeda.

Much of the once-bustling economic hub has been reduced to rubble by artillery and air bombardment, including barrel bombs - crude unguided explosive devices that also kill indiscriminately.

In late September, government troops launched an assault to recapture all of the eastern rebel-controlled territory, backed by air strikes from Russia, which began an air war in 2015 to support President Bashar al-Assad's forces.

That onslaught spurred massive international criticism of both Moscow and Damascus.

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/10/aleppo-dozens-dead-rebels-break-aleppo-siege-161030164621486.html

It seems even the western media & organizations are finally getting tired of the rebels,

Syrian rebels' Aleppo offensive could amount to war crimes, UN envoy warns

The United Nations envoy for Syria has said he is “appalled and shocked” by indiscriminate rocket warfare targeting civilians in Aleppo after three days of a fresh rebel offensive in which dozens have died.

Staffan de Mistura said: “Those who argue that this is meant to relieve the siege of eastern Aleppo should be reminded that nothing justifies the use of disproportionate and indiscriminate weapons, including heavy ones, on civilian areas and it could amount to war crimes.”
 
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