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In Syria, a ruthless dictator is under siege. Will anyone step up to save him?

In Syria, a ruthless dictator is under siege. Will anyone step up to save him?

Across northern and central Syria this week, families who’ve been torn apart by more than a decade of civil war have been holding joyous reunions.

“I didn’t believe it, it was very emotional,” said Ismail Alabullah, a volunteer with the Syrian NGO the White Helmets, as he described returning to the city of Aleppo for the first time since 2013 and reuniting with his sister.

“I couldn’t believe I was seeing her again,” he told CBC News from northern Syria. “I lost my brother, my mother and father over the past two years — I couldn’t say goodbye to any of them. Now, it’s just me and my sister.”

The White Helmets, a first responders’ group best-known for rescuing and evacuating civilians from active war zones,  are considered arch enemies of the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.

Since 2016, Assad’s forces have controlled Aleppo. But with his army now retreating from territory where just days ago it seemed to be firmly in charge, families stranded on opposite sides of the front lines are able to be together again.

Dynamic situation

After years of stalemate, Syria’s map of control is being redrawn almost by the hour.

Rebel fighters hold weapons in front of the Hama governor’s building on Dec. 5 after Syrian rebels captured the city during their advance across northern Syria. (Mahmoud Hassano/Reuters)

First, Aleppo — a city of more than 2.3 million people and the second-largest in the country — fell to opposition forces on Nov. 27. In the days that followed, so did many towns to the south.

On Thursday, Assad’s forces abandoned the strategic centre of Hama when rebel forces pushed in.

Most observers expect an assault on a key Assad power base — the city of Homs, 40 kilometres to the south of Hama — is only hours away.

If opposition forces are successful, the move would cut off Assad’s strongholds along the Syrian coast from the capital, Damascus.

“It’s clear that the regime itself cannot defend these territories,” said Haid Haid, a Syria analyst with Chatham House, a London-based think-tank.

WATCH | What’s behind the flare-up in hostitilies in Syria: 

Syria is seeing a flare-up of violence: What’s driving it?

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Duration 5:53

Colin P. Clarke, director of research at The Soufan Group, explains what’s happening in Syria and why the long-running conflict is flaring up again.

This conclusion leads to inevitable speculation over whether Assad’s government may be hurtling faster than almost anyone expected toward its demise, after surviving years of intense fighting in a civil war. 

“No one can give any absolute answers,” Haid told CBC News from Istanbul. “I think it’s safe to say that Assad is not 100 per cent secure, but no one knows when and if the regime will collapse completely.”

Political dynasty

Assad and his family have ruled Syria with an iron fist for more than 50 years. Since he took over as president in 2000 after his father’s death, the UN says Assad’s forces have killed more than 350,000 opponents, jailed and tortured countless thousands more and used banned nerve gas on opposition towns to deter any challengers to his rule.

In 2011, Syria was rocked by anti-Assad protests, inspired by anti-regime demonstrations across the wider region, known as the Arab Spring.

A damaged poster of Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad is seen in Aleppo on Nov. 30. The Syrian army said dozens of its soldiers had been killed in a major attack by rebels who recently swept into the city. (Mahmoud Hassano/Reuters)

Assad responded with a violent crackdown that evolved into a full-scale civil war. By 2015, opposition groups — and forces of the Islamic State (IS) — had seized vast swaths of the country. But intervention from Russia turned the tide.

A devastating aerial bombing campaign by Vladimir Putin’s forces secured Assad’s position, but at a horrendous cost. Humanitarian groups accused Russia and Syria of war crimes for indiscriminately bombing civilians using cluster munitions.

After a concerted effort led by the Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces in the east — and with help from Russia — IS was eventually pushed back into a few pockets in the desert. 

Since 2016, the battle lines of the conflict have remained largely in stasis, with Assad’s Syrian Arab Army (SAA) in control of most of the country’s major cities.

Major successes

In Idlib province, next to Turkey, forces belonging to a one-time al-Qaeda spinoff, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), have controlled most of the territory. And the group has spearheaded most of the battlefield successes over the past 10 days.

Hayat Tahrir al-Sham has been listed as a terrorist entity by Canada since 2013. But more recently, its 42-year-old leader, Abu Muhammed al-Jolani, has disavowed any connection with the group or its radical ideology.

In a social media post on Thursday, HTS unusually referred to him by his given name — Ahmad al-Shara — rather than al-Jolani, which he uses in military settings. This appeared to showcase him as a statesman or politician rather than the leader of a banned militia.

Al-Jolani also gave a rare interview to a Western media outlet, telling CNN his goal is to overthrow Assad’s regime and replace it with a new government for all Syrians. 

Syrian Islamist rebel leader Abu Mohammed al-Jolani speaks at an unknown location in this still image from 2016 file video obtained on Dec. 5, 2024. (Orient TV/Reuters )

The Institute for the Study of War, a U.S.-based think-tank that studies global conflict zones, noted that a major reason HTS has gained territory so rapidly has been its willingness to negotiate deals with local communities to avoid fighting.

ISW said two majority-Christian towns and one largely Shia city had all come to agreements with HTS, allowing the group’s fighters to avoid costly combat in rural areas.

Longtime Syria watcher Charles Lister, who publishes a weekly newsletter on the Syrian conflict, has written that HTS has built a formidable diplomatic presence beyond its base in Idlib province, by engaging with local Syrian tribes and other social bodies to improve the group’s outreach. 

Lister says as a result, there have been few clashes with other Syrian opposition groups — particularly the powerful Kurds — as HTS’s forces have moved rapidly through the countryside.

Finally, Lister says al-Jolani has attempted to “replicate a sovereign government” in Idlib province, with HTS issuing ID cards, administering the banking system and taking on many of the functions usually performed by municipalities. 

Nonetheless, HTS’s listing as a terror entity has put NGOs and Western governments in a challenging position, with most unwilling to directly help the group, resulting in a worsening humanitarian situation in places such as Aleppo.

People queue to buy bread on Dec. 4 after rebels took the main northern Syrian city of Aleppo. (Karam al-Masri/Reuters)

Ismail Alabduallah, the White Helmet worker, told CBC News the city is already seeing food shortages.

“The situation is very difficult. Some NGOs we co-ordinate with have this responsibility, and now no one is distributing bread every day in Aleppo,” he said. “They are working to make the bakeries operate again as before.”

Foreign actors

With the city of Homs, another key power base for Assad, just a half-hour drive away from advancing HTS forces, the key question is whether any of the regime’s allies will intervene militarily to stop the latest opposition push.

The Iranian government has reportedly ordered some of the militias it controls in neighbouring Iraq to cross the border to help its ally Assad. But their presence on the battlefield has yet to be felt.

Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem said Thursday that his group will help Assad, and there reports that what the group calls “supervising forces” arrived in Syria overnight.

A poster depicting Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad is placed on a building in Damascus on Dec. 5, after last week’s seizure of Aleppo marked the biggest Syrian rebel offensive in years. (Firas Makdesi/Reuters)

Until recently, Iran-backed Hezbollah was arguably the most powerful militia in the Middle East. But Israeli assassinations of its top leadership and an immense aerial campaign against its fighters in southern Lebanon have severely weakened the group.

One neighbour Assad won’t be able to count on is Turkey. Its government has been a major supplier of weapons and money to several opposition groups, and on Friday, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he hopes the Syrian opposition forces continue to make gains.  

That leaves Vladimir Putin, who most observers credit with saving Assad the last time opposition forces encroached in 2016.

“It’s not clear where Moscow is heading or what its main priority is at this point,” said Chatham House’s Haid Haid.

Russian bombing of the Aleppo area and of the key approaches to Homs has resumed in recent days, but with Putin’s war in Ukraine a drain on its combat resources, Russia’s options for intervention may be limited.

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad at the Kremlin in Moscow, on July 24, 2024. (Sputnik/Valeriy Sharifulin/Pool via Reuters)

Russia has leased a naval base in the Syrian city of Tartus since the 1970s. It also has a sizeable airbase outside Latakia, further to the north.   

Both could be vulnerable to opposition forces if Assad’s lines continue to collapse.

Haid Haid says even if Assad manages to fend off the opposition advances, Russia has already emerged as one of major losers of renewed fighting.

“Russia’s past victories have been forgotten now because of the recent defeat of regime forces,” he said. “It means Russia has not been able to support its allies.”

Published at Fri, 06 Dec 2024 14:27:09 +0000

South Korea ruling party opposes impeachment despite its leader’s stunning comments about president

South Korea’s ruling party leader said President Yoon Suk Yeol needs to be removed from power for trying to impose martial law, though members of his People Power Party reaffirmed late on Friday its formal opposition to impeaching the president.

Yoon shocked the nation — and his own conservative PPP — on Tuesday, when he gave the military sweeping emergency powers in order to root out what he called “anti-state forces” and overcome obstructionist political opponents.

Yoon rescinded the declaration about six hours later after parliament, including some members of his party, voted to oppose the decree.

The main opposition Democratic Party has submitted a motion to impeach Yoon and scheduled a vote in parliament for Saturday, scheduled to begin at 3 a.m. ET. The PPP has vowed to oppose the motion, a position it reaffirmed following a lengthy meeting of its lawmakers — at least some of whom would need to back it for the motion to succeed — on Friday night.

South Korea’s ruling People Power Party leader Han Dong-hun, right, speaks during a news conference at the National Assembly in Seoul on Friday. Han is now showing support for suspending the constitutional powers of President Yoon Suk Yeol after he imposed martial law this week, which could make his impeachment more likely. (Jo Sung-bong/Newsis/The Associated Press)

PPP leader Han Dong-hun had earlier suggested the party’s stance on impeachment might be shifting, when he said there was “a high risk of extreme actions such as this emergency martial law being repeated” while Yoon remained in power.

He also cited “credible evidence” that Yoon had intended to arrest and detain political leaders at Gwacheon, just south of Seoul.

“I believe that President Yoon Suk Yeol’s immediate suspension of office is necessary to protect the Republic of Korea and its people in light of the newly revealed facts,” Han said.

He did not explicitly call for impeachment or respond to reporters when asked for clarification.

The presidential office later denied any such order to arrest prominent politicians had been given, the Yonhap news agency reported.

Yoon’s term would expire in 2027, but some PPP members urged Yoon to resign before the vote, saying they did not want a repeat of the 2016 impeachment of then-President Park Geun-hye, which triggered the implosion of the party and a victory by liberals in presidential and general elections.

“We cannot impeach the president tomorrow and hand over the regime to Lee Jae-myung’s Democratic Party,” PPP lawmaker Yoon Sang-hyun told reporters.

Lee said the opposition party has been contacting and persuading PPP members to join efforts to impeach Yoon. He downplayed the significance of Han’s comments, saying it will likely be “his individual opinion,” noting that PPP’s official position remains unchanged.

Yoon absent from meeting discussing his future

To succeed, an impeachment bill would need support from two-thirds of the 300-member assembly. Yoon’s party has 108 legislators, so eight would have to side with the opposition for the bill to pass.

If parliament votes to impeach, the president is suspended from exercising his powers until an impeachment trial is held by the Constitutional Court. The prime minister serves as leader in an acting capacity.

Yoon has not been seen in public since rescinding martial law early on Wednesday and did not attend the PPP meeting on Friday.

Protesters in Seoul hold up placards on Thursday that condemn Yoon’s push for martial law and call for his resignation from office. (Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters)

Police have launched investigations into the president and Kim Yong-hyun, the defence minister who allegedly encouraged him to declare martial law and who has since resigned.

The defence ministry said three army commanders were suspended over the imposition of martial law, while military prosecutors were seeking to bar 10 officers from travelling overseas.

Details were slowly emerging about the chaos that engulfed Seoul on Tuesday night following Yoon’s surprise declaration, which stirred painful memories of the country’s long years of military rule following the Second World War.

Kwak Jong-geun, the special warfare commander, said he defied an order from then-defence minister Kim to drag lawmakers out of parliament and instead ordered his troops not to enter the area where lawmakers were meeting.

WATCH l Scandals, assassination attempt before martial law in tumultuous year:

Martial law: How South Korean politics spun out of control | About That

3 days ago

Duration 9:52

In the past 24 hours, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol declared martial law, only for his decision to be unanimously rejected by a parliamentary vote. Andrew Chang explains the turmoil that led to the president’s declaration, and what it says about the state of South Korean politics.

Images supplied by Reuters and Getty Images.

Yoon’s approval ratings had swooned since his election, with damaging results in legislative elections earlier this year and a number of politically damaging stories. Yoon moved his presidential office to the defence ministry compound in central Seoul, a step estimated to cost $40 million, and his wife has been criticized for accepting luxury items as gifts

Ahn Gwi-ryeong, a spokesperson for the opposition Democratic Party, said she believed the people had already psychologically impeached Yoon.

“Who could trust a president declaring martial law, almost like a child playing games, or entrust the nation to such leadership?” she said to Reuters on Thursday.

A protester attends a rally in Seoul on Thursday to condemn Yoon. Opposition politicians have said Yoon’s martial law move caused serious damage to the country’s image and paralyzed foreign policy. (Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters)

Published at Tue, 03 Dec 2024 17:26:53 +0000

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