On
the Road to Aleppo
Where People Have Abandoned all in the Shadow of
Isis
By
Robert Fisk
February 21, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"The
Independent"
- You can drive these days from Damascus to
Aleppo but the road is a long one, it does not
follow the international highway and for almost a
hundred miles you whirr along with Isis forces to
the west of you and, alas, Isis forces scarcely
three miles to the east of you.
The moral of the story is simple: you will
learn a lot about Syria’s tragedy on the way, and
about the dangers of rockets, bombs and IEDS, and
you must drive fast – very fast – if you want to
reach Syria’s largest and still warring city without
meeting the sort of folk who’d put you on a
video-tape wearing an orange jump suite with a knife
at your throat.
The old road north as far as Homs is clear enough
these days. Syrian air strikes keep the men from
Isis away from the dual-carriageway. But once
you’ve negotiated the Dresden-like ruins of central
Homs – the acres of blitzed homes and apartment
blocks and shops and Ottoman houses, still dripping
with broken water mains and sewage – you must turn
right outside the city and follow the signposts to
Raqqa. Yes, Raqqa, the Syrian ‘capital’ of Caliph
Baghdadi’s cult-kingdom where no man – or no
westerner, at least – fears to tread. And then you
drive slowly through Syrian army checkpoints and
past thirty miles of ruins.
These are not the gaunt, hanging six-storey
blocks of central Hama. They are the suburbs and
the surrounding villages where the revolution began
almost six years ago and where it metamorphosed from
the ‘Free Syrian Army’ of which Dave Cameron still
dreams – all 70,000 of them – into the
al-Qaeda-affiliated Jabhat al-Nusra and then, like a
Victorian horror novel, into Isis. For all of those
30 miles – perhaps 40 if you count some outlying
hamlets in the dust-storms that blow across the
desert – I saw only feral children, two makeshift
sweet stores and a few still-standing homes. The
rest is crumpled concrete, sandwiched roofs,
weed-covered and abandoned barricades from wars
which no reporter witnessed and of which there is
apparently no visual record. They are the homes of
the poor, those who had no chance of salvation in
their own country.
It’s strange how the visual disconnect interrupts
you as you speed down the bumpy, pot-holed road.
Where have all the people gone, I kept asking
myself? Why are those who live here not rebuilding
their homes? And then I remembered the thousands of
Syrian refugees I saw and met streaming through the
hot cornfields of northern Greece last summer en
route to Macedonia, and the pictures of those tens
of thousands walking the frozen railway tracks north
to Germany, and of course it made sense. This is
the midden which those people left, the “Ground
Zero” they abandoned. This is the empty bedlam
which drove them to despair and to Europe. These are
not the homes of the internally displaced. They are
the homes of those who have abandoned all.
“Raqqa 240
kilometres,” says the official blue road marker
which flashes past us, and I look at my driver – his
name is Mohamed – and he casts me a look of both
humour and palpable unease. Straight north of Hama
is the international highway we should have been
travelling on, but – I missed all reports of this –
Isis has cut this road in several places. So we
head on north east on this uneasy road in near
silence.
Then the
wreckage starts. A burned-out bus on my side of the
car – “38 passengers were killed in that bus,”
Mohamed says, but he can’t remember if it was hit
with rocket-propelled grenades or drove over a
hidden mine left for the army. Mohamed’s wife is in
the back of the car and points east across the grey
desert to a swaddle of concrete two miles to the
east. “That’s al-Mabouji,” she says quietly. “Isis
went in there six months ago and massacred 65
civilians and took eight women away as slaves.
No-one has seen them since.” Another road sign. Raqqa
219 kilometres.
So now we
know that Isis is to the west of us on the old
highway and that Isis is scarcely three – at the
most eight – miles to the east of us. I begin to
count the Syrian army checkpoints, teenagers with
Kalashnikovs and the Syrian flag flying over their
concrete huts. This is how the government keeps the
road open – conscript soldiers and a series of
flying columns, open-top trucks mounted with heavy
machine guns and soldiers cowled behind scarves to
protect them from the desert wind. Most of the
transport trucks are travelling in convoy – patrols
at both ends – and a military column races down the
road towards Homs, trucks and armour with rifles
pointing like hedgehog quills from the military
lorries.
There’s
another village close by – Khanaifis – which Isis
shelled several weeks ago in an attempt to cut our
road, killing 45 civilians, mostly women and
children. “Raqqa”, says the next infuriating sign.
“167 kilometres”. And I remember that somewhere
over there to the east, on grey sand looking
identical to the stony earth around us, Isis put to
death those poor Western men on the videotapes with
knives to cut their heads off. The Syrians have
built little fortresses beside the highway now, tiny
castles of sand and concrete sprouting with machine
guns, a few Katyusha batteries and an occasional
tank. It becomes an obsessive task to count these
little protective ramparts. Could they really
disgorge a Syrian version of the US Cavalry if the
black flags of Isis suddenly appeared on the road?
The black flags did appear about a month ago but
the Syrians drove to the road-block and killed every
armed member of the world’s most fearful cult.
One of
Syria’s top soldiers, General Suhail, known to most
Syrians as “The Tiger” – he is now fighting in the
eastern desert far from here – blasted our two-lane
highway open two years ago and relieved the siege of
Aleppo and now it trails across the desert like a
single spider’s thread, a lifeline for the
government and its supporters. That’s why it’s
called the ‘Military Road’. There’s another
burned-out, overturned bus on the right and a
scattering of rusting oil tankers hit by rockets.
The passenger coaches that now race past us have
their curtains pulled, just like the old buses in
Afghanistan when the Taliban were on the hunt for
victims.
Then – and
I need not describe the sense of relief – we turn
left towards ancient Aleppo and there are bomb racks
from Syrian jet aircraft and discarded extra fuel
tanks and then a series of black smudges far to the
east where the Syrian army are beginning a series of
military operation against the al-Nusra. One of
them appears to be an oil fire and five chimneys of
a power station loom through the distant mist like a
goliath, over-chimneyed Titanic. A thousand people
have been killed by violence on this road in two
years. Isis desperately want to take it back.
We pass a
village where there were four suicide car bombs –
the place is now swamped with armour and police cars
– and then the countryside lights up and turns green
and the fields are dark with fresh earth and women
working in the strawberry fields and an old railway
track with all but 20 feet of track stolen by
theives. And we drive into Aleppo, the place still
thumped by the sound of shellfire – outgoing, from
the Syrian army, which is now winning ground around
the city – and I see a railway bridge behind which I
hid with Syrian soldiers two years ago from
night-time snipers.
No longer.
The city is reborn. There are smart military
policemen in red berets on the checkpoints, new
shops opened beneath crushed apartment blocks, and
the sound of incoming shellfire and ambulances
driving painfully through the traffic jams. Who
would believe we could be so happy to see this
dangerous old city and its burned medieval market
and decrepit hotels? Now that tells you something
about the war in Syria.
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