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Al-Qaida, on the rise again, hits Assad where it hurts

By Ed Blanche, The Arab Weekly
Syrians shopping at the Bab Sreijeh market in the old city of Damascus, Syria, on March 19. The same day, Syrian military forces were engaged in fighting with rebels on the eastern outskirts of the city during which two suicide car bombs were detonated in the Jober district. Photo by Youssef Badawi/EPA
Syrians shopping at the Bab Sreijeh market in the old city of Damascus, Syria, on March 19. The same day, Syrian military forces were engaged in fighting with rebels on the eastern outskirts of the city during which two suicide car bombs were detonated in the Jober district. Photo by Youssef Badawi/EPA

BEIRUT, March 27 (UPI) -- Syrian rebel forces led by a swelling jihadist alliance built around al-Qaida's in­creasingly powerful affili­ate, Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, are pressing the Damascus regime in an offensive that triggered fierce fighting in the capital and in strate­gic Hama province.

The high-profile assaults by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (an alli­ance stitched together by al-Qaida) started in Damascus on March 11, took the government by surprise and demonstrated to President Bashar al-Assad that even though his Russian and Iranian allies have saved his 45-year-old dynasty from collapse, the rebels can still strike at the heart of his regime.

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Some analysts, most prominent­ly Charles Lister of the Middle East Institute, believe that a reconstitut­ed al-Qaida is now stronger than it has ever been. This is largely due to the upheaval wrought by the Syr­ian war, which allowed the organi­zation to recover from the killing of Osama bin Laden in 2011 and from being usurped by the Islamic State in 2014 and then embed itself with the anti-Assad opposition.

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"Al-Qaida's Syrian representa­tives... have been relentless and patient in pursuing their long-term objective: a merger of all armed Syrian opposition groups under its broad transnational Islamic um­brella," Lister observed in a March analysis published by Foreign Pol­icy.

"With a majority of armed oppo­sition groups holding back on the battlefield due to ongoing attempts to reach a political settlement, HTS's insistence on remaining mili­tarily active and in striking back hard at the heart of the regime is buying it invaluable popular cred­ibility...

"Given the very real possibility that substantive international sup­port for anti-Assad operations may soon be a thing of the past, HTS is presenting itself as the only sus­tainable model for continuing the fight that so many Syrians began in March 2011...

"Barring a major geopolitical shift, it is hard to see a future that does not give HTS more opportuni­ties to exploit its advantages," Lis­ter noted.

The offensive by HTS, which was put together by al-Qaida in Janu­ary to challenge the regime after its battlefield success courtesy of Russia and Iran, began on Feb. 25 with an assault in war-dev­astated Homs, Syria's third-largest city.

Teams of attackers burst into two security buildings where suicide bombers detonated their explosive belts – one of them killing Maj. Gen. Hassan Daabul, a senior security chief close to Assad. In­dependent press reports said more than 40 people were killed and 50 wounded.

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On March 11, two bombings in a Shia district of the Old City of Damascus killed another 74 people and wounded 120 more, one of the bloodiest attacks inside the heart of the capital.

Four days later, as the Syrian war entered its seventh year, 31 people were killed in a suicide bombing of the Palace of Justice, the main courthouse in the capital. Another 28 people, mostly women and chil­dren, were wounded when a bomb­er struck a popular restaurant.

The jihadists struck again in east Damascus on March 19, when two suicide bombers driving explo­sive-packed vehicles led an assault on the Jobar district in what was seen as the rebels' boldest assault on the city for several years. The attackers used tunnels under the city to infiltrate into government-held districts and advance into the neighboring Abbasid Square in the heart of a city where Assad has striven to maintain a veneer of normality.

The rebels were driven back un­der a ferocious aerial bombard­ment. They responded on Wednesday by attacking in Hama prov­ince in central Syria, a critical sec­tor for Assad because it separates rebel forces in jihadist-controlled Idlib province from Damascus to the south.

HTS was joined by other groups, including the powerful Islamist Ah­rar al-Sham and Faylaq al-Rahman, part of the Western-backed Free Syrian Army whose affiliates have been increasingly allying them­selves with al-Qaida.

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These assaults were a far cry from an all-out offensive aimed at securing territory. But the at­tacks concentrated on targets that symbolize the regime's authority and presumably intended to show that al-Qaida, in whatever guise it cloaks itself, is still a power to be reckoned with and can mount ma­jor operations to exploit the inher­ent weakness of Assad's military.

By attacking high-profile targets, such as state security facilities in Homs and the Palace of Justice in the capital, HTS, with its emphasis on Syrian nationalism rather than jihadist ideology, is also seeking to appeal to ordinary citizens to join it in toppling a long-discredited re­gime.

The recent attacks spearheaded by Jabhat Fateh al-Sham have bad­ly jolted the minority regime just as it was starting to feel secure after its foreign allies reconquered Syr­ia's major population centers and other strategic territory.

This article originally appeared at The Arab Weekly.

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