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Syrian government advances despite rebel cease-fire offer


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Posted

Syrian government advances despite rebel cease-fire offer

By SARAH EL DEEB and PHILIP ISSA

 

BEIRUT (AP) — Syria's government ignored a rebel cease-fire proposal for Aleppo on Wednesday as its forces captured new neighborhoods around the city center and squeezed some 200,000 tired and frightened civilians into a shattered and rapidly shrinking opposition enclave.

 

Facing a punishing and brutal defeat, rebel factions proposed a five-day cease-fire for the eastern parts of the city to evacuate the wounded and civilians wishing to flee.

 

"The artillery shelling is non-stop," a resident told The Associated Press by messaging service. He asked to conceal his name out of fear for his safety.

 

"The humanitarian situation is really tough. There are corpses on the streets. ... There is very little food. Bread is distributed every two or three days, six pieces per family. That's small, not enough for breakfast," he said.

 

Government officials had not directly addressed the rebel proposal by the evening.

 

"The decision to liberate all of Syria has been taken, and that includes Aleppo," Syrian President Bashar Assad told the state newspaper al-Watan.

 

Brig. Gen. Zeid al-Saleh told state TV that rebels must leave Aleppo or face death.

 

The Syrian government and its ally Russia have rejected previous cease-fires for the war-torn city, keeping up the military offensive that has forced rebel retreats and displaced at least 30,000 civilians in the past 11 days, according to U.N. figures. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov met Wednesday in Hamburg, Germany but did not release any statements.

 

The rebels made no offer to pull out of Aleppo, though their proposal promised to negotiate the fate of the city when the humanitarian crisis eases. A rebel spokesman said al-Qaida-linked group Fatah al-Sham Front, which has a limited presence among the fighters, will abide by the proposal.

 

Government forces and regional militias fighting alongside them, meanwhile, captured new ground in Aleppo's old city and its Bab al-Nairab district, home to one of the city's main water stations, according to monitoring groups and state media.

 

The rebels continued their shelling of the western government-held districts of the city. Syria's state news agency reported that 12 people were killed by mortar and rocket fire landing in western Aleppo.

 

Syrian military media said the government had captured three-quarters of the opposition's former enclave Tuesday. The U.N. estimated 275,000 people were still residing there before the start of the ground offensive.

 

The government is supported by Lebanon's militant group Hezbollah, Iraqi and Iranian militias, and Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards. Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV broadcast from Aleppo's iconic citadel in the late afternoon.

 

With the latest gains, the endgame for Aleppo, which has been carved up between the government and the rebel side for the past four years, appears to draw even closer. If Aleppo — the country's former commercial hub — is captured by government troops, it would be a turning point in the conflict, putting the five largest cities in Syria and the coastal region back under state control.

 

The Syrian government has been demanding the complete evacuation of all rebels from eastern Aleppo, but locals involved in the negotiations with the rebel factions said this has not been seriously considered.

 

"There's no point to the civilians staying without the protection of the Free Syrian Army," said Hamza al-Khatib, the spokesman for the civil society ad hoc Committee to Save Aleppo. He said he expected about half of the remaining population would evacuate under the terms of the proposal, if given the chance.

 

Al-Khatib himself, who is the hospital director for the now debilitated Quds Hospital, said he would remain. "If there is even one person remaining, then it is my duty to stay with them," he said.

 

Capt. Abdel-Salam Abdel-Razek of the rebel Nour el-Din el-Zinki faction — one of the largest operating inside Aleppo — said the cease-fire proposal was driven by humanitarian concerns.

 

The proposal called for the immediate evacuation of 500 seriously wounded residents and for allowing civilians wishing to leave to head to rural northern Aleppo province, where there is almost no government presence. Abdel-Razek said this proposed humanitarian pause would be monitored by the United Nations.

 

Wissam Zarqa, an English teacher in eastern Aleppo and an outspoken government opponent, said the rebel retreat from large parts of Old Aleppo was "concerning."

 

"We are exhausted. There is a lot of death and unprecedented destruction," he said.

 

Leaders of the U.S., Britain, Germany, Italy, France, and Canada also called for an immediate cease-fire for the city to allow the U.N. to deliver aid to the remaining besieged opposition districts.

 

"We condemn the actions of the Syrian regime and its foreign backers, especially Russia, for their obstruction of humanitarian aid," the leaders said in a joint statement, adding that hospitals and schools appeared to have been targeted "in an attempt to wear people down."

 

They called on the U.N. to investigate reports of war crimes and accused Russia of blocking efforts to halt the bloodshed.

 

The display of diplomatic unity appeared timed to build support for the rebels' proposed ceasefire, though White House press secretary Josh Earnest said the statement was not in response to any existing proposals to address the violence, but was drafted to demonstrate "clear, unified, international support" for a diplomatic arrangement to reduce bloodshed and allow humanitarian aid to flow.

 

Rebel defenses in eastern Aleppo have collapsed rapidly in the face of a massive government assault.

 

On Tuesday, Syrian government forces captured Aleppo's centrally located al-Shaar neighborhood, securing about 45 square kilometers (17 square miles) of the besieged enclave less than two weeks after launching their ground offensive.

 

The offensive was preceded by an intensive bombing campaign that knocked out medical facilities and left the civilian population reeling. According to the Observatory, 369 civilians, including 45 children, have been killed in eastern Aleppo since Nov. 15. The Observatory said 92 civilians, including 34 children, were killed by rebel shelling in government-controlled western Aleppo.

 

Also Wednesday, the state SANA news agency said several Israeli surface-to-surface missiles struck a military airport west of Damascus. No injuries were reported.

 

SANA said the missiles fell within the perimeter of the Mezzeh military airport, the main air base for the capital. The base has come previously under rebel fire.

 

It was the second such Israeli strike into Syria recently, according to the Syrian government, following two missiles fired from Lebanese airspace toward the outskirts of Damascus last week.

 

But Wednesday's attack is believed to be the first from Israel into the vicinity of Damascus in years. Israel is widely believed to have carried out a number of airstrikes in Syria in the past few years that have targeted advanced weapons systems, including Russian-made anti-aircraft missiles and Iranian-made missiles.

 

Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman did not acknowledge any responsibility for the strike and reiterated his government's position not to get involved in the Syrian war.

___

Associated Press writers Dominique Soguel in Istanbul, Albert Aji in Damascus, Syria, Nataliya Vasilyeva in Moscow, and Ian Deitch in Jerusalem contributed to this report.

 
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-- © Associated Press 2016-12-08
Posted

It's way too late for cease-fire.  Syrias strategic and tactical position is much too strong to consider negotiations.  ISIS resistance will crumble rapidly at this point ... a good thing so the bombing and shelling can stop.  Time for the "moderate" rebles to move on and not prolong the conflict and the human suffering.  After all, they will be the next target after ISIS is removed from the battle field.  

Posted
17 hours ago, elgordo38 said:

They do not wish to shake your hand they wish to annihilate you. That is why Assad is so beloved by all. 

Blanket statements like that almost always prove to be false.  If he was loved by all, there'd be no civil war! LOL

 

Hard for civilians to leave when Assad and Russia are still bombing:

http://www.thaivisa.com/forum/topic/957659-russia-says-aleppo-combat-suspended-residents-say-no-let-up/

Quote


Russia said the Syrian army was suspending combat operations in Aleppo late Thursday to allow for the evacuation of civilians from besieged rebel-held neighborhoods, but residents and fighters reported no let-up in the bombing and shelling campaign on the opposition's ever-shrinking enclave.

 

 

Posted
11 hours ago, Grubster said:

Time for the west to pull out and let Assad  and Putin deal with the aftermath.

So you are saying Russia is going to pay for the reconstruction after the war is finished?:rolleyes:

Posted
9 hours ago, chilli42 said:

It's way too late for cease-fire.  Syrias strategic and tactical position is much too strong to consider negotiations.  ISIS resistance will crumble rapidly at this point ... a good thing so the bombing and shelling can stop.  Time for the "moderate" rebles to move on and not prolong the conflict and the human suffering.  After all, they will be the next target after ISIS is removed from the battle field.  

Anybody who thinks bombing Allepo into the ground will end this war is fooling themselves.  Good article worth reading.

 

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-38209766

Quote

 

But will the defeat of IS in Mosul and Raqqa, or the recapture of Aleppo by the Syrian government, actually bring peace any closer?

 

The grim truth is that they may simply herald the next equally bitter stage in the conflict.

 

 

Posted
3 hours ago, craigt3365 said:

Blanket statements like that almost always prove to be false.  If he was loved by all, there'd be no civil war! LOL

 

Hard for civilians to leave when Assad and Russia are still bombing:

http://www.thaivisa.com/forum/topic/957659-russia-says-aleppo-combat-suspended-residents-say-no-let-up/

 

Yes I could have phrased that better. Soo the Russians love him and are backing him to the hilt.  The Russian bear fights with the American eagle to keep him in power.  He refuses to budge thus a stalemate.

Posted
5 minutes ago, elgordo38 said:

Yes I could have phrased that better. Soo the Russians love him and are backing him to the hilt.  The Russian bear fights with the American eagle to keep him in power.  He refuses to budge thus a stalemate.

More like Russia fights with Turkey, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Lebanon, and a multitude of countries that make up the coalition.  It's an absolute mess.  It's a stalemate and the civilians are the ones suffering.

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