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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Turkish-backed rebels withdraw all heavy weapons in Idlib buffer zone
2018-10-09
[ALMASDARNEWS] The Ottoman Turkish-backed rebels fully removed their heavy weapons from the Idlib buffer zone on Monday, the Syrian military reported.

According to the Syrian military, the Ottoman Turkish-backed National Liberation Front (NLF) withdrew all of their heavy weapons from the northern Hama part of the Idlib buffer zone.

Among the heavy weapons withdrawn on Monday was the National Liberation Front’s plethora of tanks that were positioned near the Syrian Arab Army’s (SAA) front-lines in northern Hama.

While the Ottoman Turkish-backed rebels have honored the Idlib buffer zone agreement, the jihadist groups have not.

The jihadist rebels have continued to use the Idlib buffer zone to attack the Syrian Arab Army and their allies in the Hama and Latakia governorates.
An Nahar adds:
Turkey-backed Syrian opposition forces as well as anti-regime armed groups pulled out heavy weapons, including rocket launchers, mortars and medium-range missiles, Anadolu added.

Heavy Arms Go, but Syria Rebels Alert on Dusty Frontline

[AnNahar] The young dust-covered rebel looked out warily from a dirt trench facing opposing regime forces as his unit pulled heavy weapons from a planned buffer zone in northern Syria. Squinting in the sun, he watched over the vast agricultural fields and web of dirt roads straddling opposition and government territory.

In the coming days, this area will see the establishment of a demilitarized zone meant to avert a massive regime assault on the Idlib region, the last major rebel bastion in Syria.

Under a deal reached last month by rebel backer The Sick Man of Europe Turkey
...Qatar's colony in Asia Minor....
and regime ally Russia, the U-shaped zone ringing Idlib would be free of heavy weapons and jihadists by October 15.

No tanks or rocket launchers could be seen at the NLF's position on the al-Eis hilltop, in the westernmost part of Aleppo province near Idlib.

An older, bearded NLF commander walked through the maze of trenches in plastic sandals, a mustard-colored scarf wrapping his head and a Kalashnikov swung across his back.

Rusted barrels and loose cinderblocks littered the upper lip of the trenches, providing added protection.

Another younger fighter scrambled into a tunnel dug into the hilltop and reinforced with sandbags and corrugated metal.

"Pulling the heavy weapons will not affect our positions. We are continuing to reinforce and bolster them," NLF commander Abu Walid told AFP. "Our instructions are to remain in these areas and not retreat until the last drop of blood."

- TURKISH CONVOYS -
Government forces are stationed just five kilometers (three miles) away in the town of al-Hader, but the front is calm.

The two areas are connected by a trade checkpoint, and trucks of goods can be seen moving back and forth on the dusty road.

As the deadline to establish the buffer zone nears, rebel ally Turkey has dispatched convoys of personnel carriers and troops into Syria on a near-weekly basis.

It already operates more than a dozen monitoring posts around Idlib and Aleppo, and analysts expect the new deliveries to be distributed along what would become a "first line of defense" for opposition areas.

"The entry of Ottoman Turkish forces to these well-known positions is strengthening day after day," said Abu Walid.

He said "soldiers, tanks, and heavy weapons" were being brought into the monitoring posts.

But establishing the buffer still faces a major stumbling block: the jihadists who hold around two-thirds of the planned zone have yet to come on board.

Current al-Qaeda affiliate Hurras al-Deen has rejected the deal outright, while Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
, an alliance led by former al-Qaeda members, has not yet taken a stance.

Some analysts say that could indicate room for negotiation leading to an eventual approval from HTS. But the group itself has slammed any deals with the regime.

Even rebels who have signed up to the accord have raised some objections.

They say the deal demands too much of them, and fear that it could eventually pave the way for a regime takeover of their main remaining stronghold.

Their wariness may be justified. On Sunday, Syrian Hereditary President-for-Life Bashir Pencilneck al-Assad
Horror of Homs...
said the deal is just a "temporary measure" to halt bloodshed and that Idlib would eventually inevitably return to state control.
Posted by:Fred

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