Aleppo UniversityJanuary 01,
2015 "ICH"
- "Counterpunch"
- - Were a visitor to arrive at the
embattled city of Aleppo these frigid
and bleak days from the western
government controlled side of the 7000
year old city, even if blindfolded and
wearing tight earplugs the sightless and
deaf traveler would likely sense
something very different from what he
experiences in Damascus and other cities
in Syria.
Somehow, a visitor just feels it in
the ambient atmosphere.
Something–expectations, pressure,
anticipation, dread, anguish, excitement
is rapidly building and seemingly is
about to impact profoundly events in
this war that has killed nearly a
quarter million people, wounded more
than one million and forced more than 3
million to flee Syria while displacing
half of the remaining population that
once numbered 23 million. With no end
even faintly in sight.
Aleppo has been and remains, along
with Damascus, the strategic area which
is critical to both sides of the
chaotically stalemated conflict. The
victor in Aleppo will achieve momentum
which some military experts claim will
lead them to control much of Syria and
certainly nearly all of the major
population centers. Aleppo is crucial
for both sides as pressure builds daily
and as many Aleppines are expressing a
sense that some powerful dynamic in
about to occur leading toward a
resolution of the four year civil war or
perhaps leading to even more abject
horror.
None of us knows of course but this
observer wondered the other day if this
is what his host, the commander of
government forces in the old city souk
in Aleppo had in mind when he looked up
toward the nearby ancient Citidel where
his troops are finally stationed after
two years of fighting opposition forces.
But what did he mean when he cryptically
said, “In three days my friend you will
see something happen here that will have
major consequences, enshallah (god
willing) for the good of the Syrian
people and my country.”
Well, in the following three days
nothing particularly major seemed to
happen in the neighborhood where this
observer has been staying the western
section of Aleppo. The usual thuds of
mortars and artillery and aircraft
screaming across the sky followed by
bomb blasts and passersby often
squinting skyward and shrugging at
visitors as they hurry on their way.
On the third day in Idlib, rebels and
Nusra Front militants did seize at least
three government checkpoints near two
military bases, Wadi Deif and Hamidiyeh
which straddle an important supply route
in Idlib Province to the southwest. This
achievement suggests al Nusra achieves
occasional dominance over the Syrian
army. Yet almost immediately government
combat aircraft bombed the Bab town area
of Aleppo, an area controlled by Da’ish
(IS) which are increasingly
collaborating with Nusra in some areas.
Rebels hav also been active recently to
the southwest adding more pressure on
government forces that are currently
scattered over a large area vaguely
surrounding Allepo and fighting to
capture it from rebels still building up
their forces in the east, north and
northwest of the city.
Or did the commander mean the
reportedly rapid in-gathering of
Hezbollah and Iranian fighters who many
believe are preparing a Qalamoun type
offensive from the west aimed at cutting
supplies lines to rebels forces? Its
hard to know, but when we last visited
his compound on the fifth day, for sure
it had changed, presumably in
anticipation of something significant
about to be unleashed. The hallways of
his three level HQ were now neatly
stacked to the ceilings with rockets and
ammunition of various kinds. One of his
aides joked that he hoped Da’ish or
Nusra was not digging another tunnel in
the area. With a grimace, his commander
explained that his men have only a
little outdated Soviet era tunnel
detection equipment that does not work
well so they rely on literally keeping
their ears to the ground to detect
deadly tunneling sounds. Rebel tunneling
that led to the nearby 150 year old
Carlton Citadel Hotel being completely
demolished on 8 May 2014. The blast from
a tunnel underneath killed between 14
and 50 people depending of which source
one credits. Da’ish claims it was being
used as an army barracks. As this
observer stumbled alongside army guys
whispering into their radios as we
climbed through the Carlton Hotel rubble
in pitch blackness toward the Citadel,
he was advised that some bodies under
the rubble had still not been recovered
seven months later and he sensed fear in
his guides about tunnels being dug
below. A well-grounded nervousness
because on 12/30/14 a powerful blast
from explosives planted in a tunnel near
the HQ this observer visited reportedly,
by a new rebel coalition in Aleppo
called Jabha Shamiyeh, killed or wounded
more than 30 soldiers.
Both sides and their allies are
getting exhausted with reported
increased desertions from both sides and
intensifying complaints from the
population. Syria’s allies are growing
weary of a conflict that could last
decades without clear benefits to any
side. Russia is tired with major
economic problems looming. The recent
collapse in oil prices and Western
sanctions have battered the Russian
economy which has fallen into decline
for the first time in five years,
according to official figures. This
forced drastic interventions from the
Russian Central Bank and appears to be
creating the biggest crisis in Vladimir
Putin’s leadership of the country.
Russia’s economy ministry said GDP had
fallen by 0.5pc in the year to November,
the latest sign that the country is
heading for recession.
With respect to Iran, despite
repeated assurances from its leaders
that the US led sanctions have been
defeated, it still faces severe economic
problems as well as the growing loss of
al Quds commanders in Syria and Iraq
leading to increasing criticism of the
regimes involvement in both countries
and even Lebanon from the Iranian
people.
Iran’s worst nightmare in Iraq and
Syria and perhaps soon in Lebanon is
Da’ish (IS) and Nusra black flags
fluttering on the horizon Both have left
little doubt that they view Shia as a
cult of apostates who tried to hijack
Islam in the 7th Century and need to be
eradicated or at a minimum converted and
watched closely. On 12/19/14 a suicide
bomber, presumably from Da’ish (IS) or
Nusra attacked Shiite pilgrims on their
way to a shrine at Samarra in the Taji
area north of Baghdad again, this time
killing at least 17 people and wounding
more than 35. This as they have recently
launched a campaign to liberate Syria
and Iraq from what they claim now nearly
total Iranian occupation. Da’ish has
launched a social media campaign among
Sunni tribes to eliminate once and for
all Shia and return Islam to the
Caliphate of and by Mohammad the
Prophet. One Da’ish adviser discussed
with this observer how Iran’s regime has
become vulnerable and ripe for removal
by the people of Iran due to the same
forces plaguing Hezbollah. That is
trying to justify to their supporters
why they are in Iraq and Syria killing
Sunni and Shia alike instead of getting
serious about dialogue and salvaging
these countries. Time is claimed to be
on the side of Da’ish by its spokesmen
given the perceived depth of corruption
and illegitimacy of rulers in the region
and increasingly restive populations.
One student I met at the restaurant
in Aleppo explained as only an inspired
student seems to be able and willing to
do these days: “Change is coming. Deep
change. The corrupt incompetents and
religious fanatics on all both sides
will be swept away. What you are seeing
these days in our region are only mild
soft tremors presaging the next phase.
Frankly, I put religions at the top of
my personal Terrorism List.”
Hezbollah is under increasing
pressure, even within the Shia
community, to leave Syria and Iraq
partly because their supporters have
tired of seeing posters of their dead
sons plastered around the Bekaa, South
Beirut, and South Lebanon. Hezbollah
leaders have never really convinced many
people of its necessity to fight in
Syria and Iraq to keep the “terrorist
and takfiris” out of Lebanon. According
to virtually every poll taken, a
majority of Lebanese believe the
opposite- believing that IS and Al Nusra
are coming here because Hezbollah went
there and created a magnate for
jihadists to fight them and target their
strongholds. Meanwhile some right-wing
Israeli politicians, if not the Northern
Command, reportedly claim Hezbollah is
over stretched and they fantasize about
‘ turf furloughing’ in Lebanon’ and
carpet bombing Hezbollah much more
severely than during its most recent
genocidal ‘lawn-mowing’ in Gaza.
Against this backdrop, maybe the
subject most frequently discussed these
days with foreign visitors to Aleppo is
the urgent need for a ceasefire leading
to a negotiated settlement. So the time
may be ripe for a ceasefire in Aleppo.
One idea is to establish a ‘stand down
models’ or ‘freeze zones” to be put into
place across Syria in order to stop the
seemingly interminable slaughter. UN
envoys UN Envoy Staffan De Mistura’s
proposal for a ‘freeze’ and the fast
approaching Jan. 26-29 Moscow talks
could be what the army commander had in
mind. Part of De Mistura’s goal is to
secure a ceasefire that would allow
humanitarian aid to reach those in dire
need. He has warned the fall of Aleppo
would likely create an additional
400,000 refugees.
The ‘freeze’ proposal was within
three days of the commanders prediction
and if adopted by the parties could
spread to other areas and conceivable
lead to a ceasefire and then to peace
talks as being promoted by Russia and
being studied by the Assad government.
The Foreign Ministry told the media this
week that “Syria is ready to participate
in preliminary consultations in Moscow
in order to meet the aspirations of
Syrians to find a way out of crisis.”
One example of ‘freezing the conflict
in Aleppo” movement, as a step toward a
broader settlement along the lines
proposed by is the 12/29/14 action by
Syrian army allowing more than 30
besieged families and some armed men who
surrendered, “safe passage” out of from
Douma and Zibdin in Eastern Ghouta
adjoining Damascus. There are also
rumors that male evacuees might be
recruited into a pro-regime militia. The
evacuation was the second since December
9, when 76 families were allowed out of
Douma.
According to Freeze proponents, this
plan to freeze the fighting in Aleppo is
the only hopeful one available. De
Mistura has said he sees no hope for
another plan and it is the only plan
capable of freezing the fighting,
securing people’s needs and returning
the displaced people who are burdening
neighboring areas and states. It will
also allow for the eventual process of
reconstruction he and many others
insist. Regime supporters argue that
Syrian President Assad is showing
readiness to ensure the success of the
international plan in Aleppo, and that
he convinced Russian President Vladimir
Putin of the plan while convincing his
Iranian allies as well.
The White House, despite
reservations, appears more flexible this
week, linking their approval with that
of some of their regional allies,
meaning Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the
Persian Gulf countries. Two rounds of
Geneva talks early in 2014 failed to
halt the conflict and some claimed
actually inflamed it.
A Syrian gentleman who speaks
regularly to security officials and
leaders from Mr. Assad’s minority
Alawite sect, an important component of
his base, said recently that a growing
numbers across the political spectrum
now are insisting on a political
settlement despite others still
insisting on a fight to the death. One
angry gentleman, exhibiting a ‘no
turning back’ mentality and who lost his
home, family and all hope for recovery,
emphasized to this observer, that, “What
happens to us during this period is not
important. What matters is how history
will judge us 1000 years from now.”
And so the Syrian civil war goes on.
As Red Cross Dr David Nott who returned
to Aleppo recently to help treat victims
presented a gloomy assessment while
describing the nearly complete breakdown
of medical treatment in the city. He
explained that more than 80% of patients
requiring urgent treatment now die as a
result of their injuries or lack of
basic care, medicine and equipment. A
plunge in vaccination rates from 90
percent before the war to 52 percent
this year and contaminated water is
allowing typhoid and hepatitis to spread
and over half of public hospitals are
closed resulting in treatments for
diseases and injuries being erratic.
More than 6,500 cases of typhoid and
4,200 cases of measles, the deadliest
disease for Syrian children, being
reported in 2014 across Syria.
One can only wish Envoy De Mistura
and like-minded proponents of the
immediate establishment of a “freeze
zone” in Aleppo, to be replicated across
Syria as strongly favored by army
commanders with whom this observer
recently discussed the subject, the very
best of luck in the New Year.
Freezing hostilities in Aleppo could
possibly achieve the same for Syria.
It’s worth a try.
Franklin Lamb’s most
recent book, Syria’s Endangered
Heritage, An international
Responsibility to Protect and Preserve
is in production by Orontes River
Publishing, Hama, Syrian Arab Republic.
Inquires c/o
orontesriverpublishing@gmail.com.
The author is reachable c/ofplamb@gmail.com