May 23, 2013

Deaths thrust Hezbollah more into Syria civil war

6fdb4b0b02615c34713d1e8c26dfa739 Deaths thrust Hezbollah more into Syria civil war
image provided by Aleppo Media Center AMC which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, show flames rising from a car that was attacked by Syrian government forces, in Bustan al-Qaser neighborhood, Aleppo, Syria, May 20, 2013.(Photo: Aleppo Media Center AMC via AP)

Story Highlights

Hezbollah is an ally of Syrian
between Sunni and Shiite Muslims is also intensifying in Iraq
Obama phoned Lebanon’s president to voice concern over Hezbollah’s involvement

BEIRUT (AP) — Hezbollah was pulled more deeply into Syria’s civil war as 28 guerrillas from the Lebanese Shiite militant group were killed and dozens more wounded while fighting rebels, Syria activists said Monday.

The intense battle drove rebels from large parts of the town of Qusair, part of a withering government offensive aimed at securing a strategic land corridor from Damascus to the Mediterranean coast.

Hezbollah-affiliated hospitals in Lebanon urged blood donations through mosque loudspeakers and ambulances raced along the Damascus road in a stark indication of the group’s increasingly prominent role in Syria.

The overt Hezbollah involvement — several funerals for group members were held Monday in Lebanon — edges the war further into a regional sectarian conflict pitting the Middle East’s Iranian-backed Shiite axis against Sunnis.

It also raised tensions considerably in Lebanon, where Hezbollah has come under for its involvement in the civil war next door.

A staunch ally of Syrian , Hezbollah is heavily invested in the survival of the Damascus regime and is known to have sent fighters to aid government forces. The Iranian-backed group’s growing role in the conflict also points to the deeply sectarian nature of the war in Syria, in which a rebellion driven by the country’s Sunni majority seeks to overthrow a regime dominated by Assad’s sect, an offshoot of .

Clashes continued for the second day in the northern city of Tripoli, Lebanon, where Sunnis and Alawites battled in a direct spillover from the fighting in Qusair.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which tracks Syria’s civil war, said that more than 70 Hezbollah fighters have also been wounded in the fighting around Qusair.

The White House said President Barack Obama telephoned Lebanon’s president and expressed concern about Hezbollah’s “active and growing role in Syria, fighting on behalf of the Assad regime, which is counter to the Lebanese government’s policies.”

More than 70,000 people have been killed and several million displaced since the uprising against Assad erupted in March 2011 and escalated into a civil war. The Syrian government and Hezbollah deny there is an uprising in Syria, portraying the war as a foreign-backed conspiracy driven by Israel, the U.S. and its gulf Arab allies.

In addition to the Hezbollah involvement, Iraqi Shiite fighters have for months trickled into Syria. Their relatives say they are drawn by a sense of religious duty to protect Shiite Muslim shrines in Syria.

Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah said in a recent speech that his fighters had a duty to protect the shrines. He also claims that supporters of the group were fighting in Shiite villages near the Lebanon border against the rebels, saying it was in self-defense.

The Observatory, which relies on a network of activists inside Syria, cited unidentified “sources close to the militant group” for its Hezbollah death toll Monday. It said at least 50 Syrian rebels also were killed in the battle for Qusair on Sunday.

Qusair has been the target of a Syrian government offensive in recent weeks, and the surrounding countryside has been engulfed in fighting as regime troops backed by Hezbollah fighters seized villages while closing in on Qusair itself.

The intensity of the fighting reflects the importance that both sides attach to the area. In the regime’s calculations, Qusair is strategically located between Damascus and the Alawite heartland near the Mediterranean. For the rebels, overwhelmingly Sunni Qusair has served as a conduit for shipments of weapons and supplies smuggled from Lebanon to inside Syria.

A Lebanese official close to Hezbollah told The Associated Press that the death toll figures were “exaggerated.” He added, however, that 14 Hezbollah members from southern Lebanon were killed in the fighting Sunday, adding that some of the fighters’ bodies were still in Syria. He spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals from Hezbollah, which maintains a shroud of secrecy on its security operations.

Evidence of the group’s heavy involvement in Syria was on full display Monday.

In the town of Nabi Sheet in eastern Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley, a Hezbollah stronghold, about 2,000 people attended the funeral of Hassan Shukur, an 18-year-old Hezbollah fighter.

Hezbollah comrades fired in the air in mourning and played the group’s funeral march as they carried Shukur’s coffin draped in a yellow Hezbollah flag through the streets at his funeral attended by senior members of the group.

“We will fight in all of Syria because we are fighting the Israeli enemy,” said Sheik Mohammed Yazbeck, a member of Hezbollah’s highest decision-making body, the Shura Council.

Shukur is the son of a Hezbollah official and a nephew of the head of the Lebanese branch of Syria’s ruling Baath Party. He was among several group members who were buried Monday.

The funeral in Nabi Sheet marked a rare acknowledgment by the group of its direct involvement in the Syria fighting.

In recent weeks, the group has held several low-key funerals in Lebanon for gunmen who it said were killed while “performing their jihadi duties,” without saying where or how they were killed.

In a sign of solidarity, Syria’s Grand Mufti Ahmad Badreddine Hassoun, the country’s top state-appointed Sunni Muslim cleric and an Assad loyalist, toured the families of slain Hezbollah members in south Lebanon on Monday.

On the mountain road linking Beirut with the Syrian border, ambulances carrying paramedics from Hezbollah’s Islamic Health Organization raced up and down the motorway, apparently bringing the group’s casualties into Lebanon.

Lebanese security officials said about 300 paramedics had undergone intensive training recently by Iranian experts in the Bekaa Valley on how to evacuate wounded fighters involved in street battles. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to give official statements.

In Hezbollah’s stronghold south of Beirut, people were urged through Shiite mosque loudspeakers to donate blood at the nearby Rasoul al-Azam hospital. In the southern market town of Nabatiyeh, residents were called upon to donate blood at the group’s Ragheb Harb hospital in the nearby village of Toul.

Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri, a top Sunni Lebanese leader, accused Hezbollah of “leading Lebanon to the abyss.”

The fighting in Qusair sparked battles between Sunni gunmen and Alawite fighters in Tripoli, Lebanon’s second-largest city, that left at least two people dead and 26 wounded, Lebanese security officials said.

Regime troops and Hezbollah fighters, who laid siege to Qusair weeks ago, launched an offensive to regain control of the town, with Hezbollah’s fighters advancing from the east and south, a Syrian opposition figure said.

He added that it took Hezbollah troops a few hours to take control of the town’s main square and municipal building. By the end of the day Sunday, they had pushed out rebel units, including the al-Qaida-affiliated Jabhat al-Nusra, from most of Qusair, he said Monday, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation by both sides.

He said fighting was focused in the northern part of the town on Monday.

The account matched that of Syria’s state news media, which said Assad’s troops took control of most of Qusair on Monday. State-run TV said forces restored stability to the entire eastern front of the town, killing scores of “terrorists” — the term used by the Syrian regime to refer to all rebels.

An official in the governor’s office told the AP that more than 60 percent of the city is in government hands after scores of gunmen were killed or surrendered Sunday. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not allowed to give information to the media during an ongoing military operation, said more than 1,500 residents fled the city due to intense fighting.

Qusair-based opposition activist Hadi Abdullah denied official reports that the army was advancing in the town, saying they were still trying to storm it.

“They go in and out. Until now I can say with confidence that they have not been able to enter the town and stay there,” Abdullah said.

An amateur video released by rebels showed the body of a bearded dead man with a tattoo of a Shiite saint on his arm.

A local commander who was identified as Muwaffaq Abul-Sous said: “We the people of Qusair have decided to make the city Hezbollah’s graveyard.” He added that rebels killed about 30 Syrian soldiers and Hezbollah fighters. The video appeared consistent with AP reporting.

Ibrahim Bayram, an expert on Shiite affairs who writes about Hezbollah for Lebanon’s An-Nahar newspaper, said the group has decided to join the battle in Syria “having calculated the results.”

“It is a strategic decision for Hezbollah, which sees the battle in Syria as part of its own battle against Israel,” he said.

Afghan bomb kills 15, including 6 Americans

d57328b931fafa8eab1cfe487a5b166d Afghan bomb kills 15, including 6 Americans

Story Highlights

Suicide bomber strikes in
Muslim militant group claims responsibility
Deadliest attack to rock the Afghan capital in more than two months

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — A suicide car bombing tore through a U.S. convoy during rush hour in the Afghan capital on Thursday, killing at least 15 people, including six U.S. and two children, officials said. U.S. soldiers rushed to the scene to help, including some wearing only T-shirts or shorts under their .

An claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it was carried out by a new suicide unit formed in response to reports that the U.S. plans to keep permanent bases and even after the 2014 deadline for the end of the foreign . Hezb-e-Islami said its fighters had stalked the Americans for a week to learn their routine before striking.

It was the deadliest attack to rock the Afghan capital in more than two months and followed a series of other attacks against Americans that has made May the deadliest month for international forces this year. U.S.-led forces are increasingly leaving the fighting to their Afghan counterparts and focusing more on training mission in a bid to prepare the government forces to take over their own security after the international combat mission ends by the end of 2014.

The explosion was powerful enough to rattle buildings on the other side of the city, and left body parts scattered on the street.

. Bill Speaks, a spokesman for the U.S. Defense secretary, confirmed that two American soldiers were killed, while international security company DynCorp International said four of its American civilian contractors were among the dead. DynCorp International said its employees were working with U.S. forces training the Afghan military when the blast occurred.

Nine Afghan civilians also were killed, including two children, and 35 people were wounded, spokesman Kanishka Beektash Torkystani said.

The deaths pushed the monthly toll for the U.S.-led coalition to 18, making May the deadliest month so far this year. By comparison, 44 international troops were killed in the same period last year, reflecting the fact that the overall number of deaths has dropped as Afghan forces increasingly take the lead.

The suicide bomber detonated his explosives-laden car at about 8 a.m., Kabul provincial police spokesman Hashmad Stanakzi said. “The explosion was very big. It set the nearby buildings on fire,” he said.

Kabul Deputy Police Chief Daud Amin said it was difficult to count the dead because the blast tore apart many of the bodies.

“We saw two dead bodies of children on the ground,” Amin said. “But the rest of the (shattered) bodies were scattered around.”

It was the bloodiest attack in the Afghan capital since March 9, when suicide bombers struck near the Afghan Defense Ministry while U.S. Secretary of Defense was visiting.

President Hamid Karzai condemned the attack, saying it was the work of “terrorists and enemies of Afghanistan’s peace.”

A spokesman for Hizb-e-Islami, Haroon Zarghoon, told The Associated Press that one of the movement’s operatives carried out the attack on two vehicles of U.S. advisers.

Zarghoon says the militant group has formed a new cell to carry out suicide attacks on U.S. and other coalition troops.

“The cell had been monitoring the movement and timing of the American convoy for a week and implemented the plan Thursday morning,” Zarghoon said.

He said the cell was established in response to reports that the U.S. plans to keep permanent bases and troops in Afghanistan even after the NATO withdrawal.

The U.S. has said it wants no permanent bases in Afghanistan after 2014, but Afghan President Hamid Karzai raised eyebrows last week when he announced he had agreed to an American request to keep nine bases.

A small American force is expected to remain in the country to assist Afghans in keeping security, but the exact number or mission has not yet been decided.

Hizb-e-Islami, a fierce rival of the Taliban movement as well as the Americans, is headed by 65-year-old Gubuddin Hekmatyar, a former Afghan prime minister and onetime U.S. ally who is now listed as a terrorist by Washington. The militia has thousands of fighters and followers in the country’s north and east.

Hekmatyar’s government was heavily financed by the U.S. during Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s. He is now is being hunted by Afghan and NATO troops. U.S. bombs have targeted his military chief, Kashmir Khan, in Kunar province in northeastern Afghanistan on the border with Pakistan. Khan was wounded but survived.

However, Hekmatyar’s son-in-law has held peace talks with Karzai and American officials. In a further sign of the complexities of the Afghan insurgency, Hizb-e-Islami is also a rival to the Taliban insurgency, even though both movements share the goal of driving out foreign troops and establishing a state that would follow a strict interpretation of Islamic law.

Hekmatyar and the Taliban supreme leader, Mullah Omar, are said to be bitter personal enemies.

Thursday’s attack was the second in eight months claimed by Hizb-e-Islami. In September, the militant group claimed responsibility when a female suicide car bomber killed least 12 people. At the time, Hizb-e-Islami said the attack was revenge for the film “Innocence of Muslims,” which was made by an Egyptian-born American citizen and infuriated Muslims for its negative depiction of the Prophet Muhammad.

After bombings,Turkey says world must act against Syria

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() – Turkey accused a group with links to Syrian intelligence of carrying out that killed 46 people in a Turkish , and said on Sunday it was time for the world to act against the government of President Bashar al-.

The two car bombs, which ripped through crowded shopping streets in Reyhanli on Saturday, increased fears that Syria’s civil war is dragging in neighboring states, despite renewed diplomatic moves to end it.

denied involvement, but Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said those behind the attacks were from an “old Marxist terrorist organization” with ties to Assad’s administration.

“It is time for the international community to act together against this regime,” he told a news conference during a visit to Berlin.

said in a speech broadcast later on Turkish television: “We will not lose our calm heads, we will not depart common sense, and we will not fall into the trap they’re trying to push us into.”

But he added: “Whoever targets Turkey will sooner or later pay the price.”

NATO-member Turkey has fired back at Syrian when mortars have landed on its soil, but despite its strong words has appeared reluctant to bring its considerable military might to bear in the conflict.

It is struggling to cope with more than 300,000 refugees but is not alone in fearing the impact of Syria’s war, which is stirring the Middle East’s cauldron of sectarian, religious and nationalist struggles.

“We, like Jordan, are hosting hundreds of thousands of Syrians. Security risks to neighboring countries are rising,” Davutoglu said.

The bombings took place as prospects appeared to improve for diplomacy to try to end the war, after Moscow and Washington announced a to bring government and rebels to an international conference.

Officials from Syria’s opposition coalition, in crisis since its president resigned in March, said it would meet in Istanbul on May 23 to decide whether to participate.

A Syrian opposition group said the toll from two years of civil war had risen to at least 82,000 dead and 12,500 missing.

Syrian Omran Zubi, speaking on , held Turkey responsible for the bloodshed in Syria by aiding al Qaeda-led rebels. He said Damascus had no hand in Saturday’s bombings.

“Syria did not and will never do such a act because our values do not allow this. It is not anyone’s right to hurl unfounded accusations,” he said.

Authorities have arrested nine people, all Turkish citizens and including the alleged mastermind of the attacks, Turkey’s deputy prime minister Besir Atalay told reporters.

Interior Minister Muammer Guler said the bombings – the deadliest incident on Turkish soil since Syria’s war began – were carried out by a group with direct links to Syria’s Mukhabarat intelligence agency.

The blasts scattered concrete blocks and smashed cars as far as three streets away.

LOCAL ANGER

There was a heavy police and military presence on Sunday in Reyhanli, where security forces cordoned off both blast sites while bulldozers shifted the rubble and shattered glass.

Men stood loitering around the town, looking on and discussing, often heatedly, the previous day’s events.

There was palpable anger against the tens of thousands of Syrian refugees in the town, which has become a logistics base for the rebels fighting Assad just over the border.

As the conflict has dragged on, local people have grown increasingly resentful over stretched economic resources and the violence being brought to their door.

Some smashed Syrian car windows, and others railed against Turkey’s foreign policy.

“We don’t want the Syrians here any more. They can’t stay here. Whether we even wanted them or not, they can’t stay after this,” said a teacher in Reyhanli, who gave his name as Mustafa.

He said the prime minister’s Syria policy was to blame.

“It’s Tayyip Erdogan’s politics that have done this. Turkey should never have got involved in this mess. We have a 900-km (550-mile) border with Syria. They come and go in wherever they like. Everyone here is in fear.”

Syrian families stayed inside their homes on Sunday, too afraid to come out.

SUNNI-SHI’ITE TENSIONS

Davutoglu said the Reyhanli bombers were believed to be from the same group that carried out an attack on the Syrian coastal town of Banias a week ago in which at least 62 people were killed.

Syria’s conflict has fuelled confrontation across the region between Sunni and Shi’ite Muslims, with Shi’ite Iran supporting Assad, and Sunni powers like Saudi Arabia backing the rebels.

Israel launched air strikes a week ago, aimed at stopping Iranian missiles near Damascus from reaching Tehran’s Lebanese allies Hezbollah for possible use against the Jewish state.

Days later, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said his forces would support any Syrian effort to recapture the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, raising the prospect of renewed conflict after decades of calm on that border.

In a separate development on Sunday, Syrian rebels freed four Filipino U.N. peacekeepers whom they had captured on the ceasefire line between Syria and the Golan last week.

(Additional reporting by Mehmet Emin Caliskan in Reyhanli, Ece Toksabay in Istanbul and Khaled Yacoub Oweis in Amman; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

Impact of arming Syria would be slow, analysts say

 Impact of arming Syria would be slow, analysts say
Free Syrian Army fighters take their positions at the front line of Maaret al- in Idlib province, Syria, on Feb. 26.(Photo: Hussein Malla, AP)

Story Highlights

Saudi Arabia and Qatar already supply rebels with weapons and ammunition
U.S. officials fear sophisticated weapons could end up in the
Islamist elements make up part of the Syrian rebel coalition

(PhatzNewsRoom / USA Today) — WASHINGTON – If the United States decides to supply Syrian rebels with arms, it probably won’t include the sophisticated weapons that would give them a decisive edge in their fight against , analysts say.

Rebels are already being supplied with basic weapons and ammunition from Saudi Arabia and Qatar, but they lack sophisticated anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles, which have the potential to turn the tide of war.

U.S. officials are reluctant to provide portable anti-aircraft missiles for fear they may fall in the wrong hands.

“We’re never going to be hot on the idea of giving them shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles,” said Jeffrey White, an analyst at the and a former official.

The Obama administration has said it has not made a decision on arming the rebels. “He is looking at a range of options, and he is not removing any option from the table,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said of the president.

The administration provides “non-lethal” aid to .

Arming rebels and other have gained urgency in the wake of a U.S. that said the regime of probably used . The administration had said such use would cross a “.”

Republicans, such as Sen. John McCain of Arizona, have pushed the administration to take stronger action, such as arming rebels or creating a no-fly zone.

Sophisticated weapons are needed by the rebels because they would help ground Assad’s aircraft and make it more difficult to maneuver tanks, taking away key regime advantages, said Mustafa Alani, director of national security for the Gulf Research Center in Geneva.

“The Syrian army relies on tanks and aircraft,” Alani said. “This would change the whole situation on the ground.”

Providing any arms to the rebels would be complex. The administration is worried about the presence of al-Qaeda-allied rebel groups, including the al-Nusra Front, a rebel group with Islamist ties.

Vetting those groups to determine how to distribute arms would be a complex task because the opposition is fractured and operates with little coordination or central leadership.

Rebel groups face spot shortages but generally have enough basic weapons and ammunition, which they get from captured Syrian army stocks or from Gulf countries, such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

Most of it is small arms, such as assault rifles, and rocket-propelled grenades. Alani said the Americans have discouraged the Saudis and Qataris from providing sophisticated weapons, such as shoulder-fired anti-air weapons.

White said there are options short of providing shoulder-fired missiles, including providing training on the use of heavy machine guns that could be used against armor and aircraft.

The Assad regime gets arms from Iran.

“The sources of weapons which are pouring into Syria are endless,” said Ephraim Sneh, a military analyst and former deputy minister in Israel’s Defense Ministry.

Even if it doesn’t immediately change the balance of power, a decision to arm the rebels could be a demonstration of American commitment, suggesting the United States could increase shipments in the future, said Michael O’Hanlon, an analyst at Brookings Institution.

He said if the types of weapons are sharply limited, it could demonstrate the limits of American involvement.

“If we only supply the most minimal kind of equipment, you’ve created a new sense of restraint,” O’Hanlon said.

Contributing: David Jackson

Rebels attack sprawling air base in northern Syria

418c3f329a364172578e8bbc91eb76c0 Rebels attack sprawling air base in northern Syria

BEIRUT (AP) — Syrian rebels attacked a sprawling military air base in the country’s northwest on Saturday, while in the south opposition forces assaulted a string of army and positions, activists said.

The raids follow nearly two weeks of advances by Syrian troops, mostly in the suburbs of the capital, , and areas near the Lebanese border in the central province of Homs.

In Moscow, Syria’s Information Minister al- denied recent U.S. charges that Syrian troops used chemical weapons against the rebels, saying Washington had leveled the accusation as a result of the latest victories by the army.

“The American hysteria about the use of chemical weapons was caused by the success of the Syrian Arab Army in striking terrorists,” al-Zoubi was quoted by state TV as saying. He was using the term that the government uses to refer to rebels.

The Obama administration said Thursday that intelligence indicates likely used the in two attacks.

Washington’s declaration was its strongest on the topic so far, although the administration said it was still working to pin down definitive proof of the weapons’ use. It held back from saying Damascus had crossed outright what President has said would be a “” prompting tougher action in Syria.

The rebels accuse regime forces of firing chemical agents on at least four occasions since December, killing 31 people in the worst of the attacks. They say world would only encourage Assad to use the weapons on a larger scale.

The regime countered that it was the rebels who fired chemical weapons — pointing to their capture of a chemical factory last year as proof of their ability to do so.

In Saturday’s fighting at the Abu Zuhour air base in northwestern Idlib province, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said there were casualties on both sides. The base has been under for months.

The Observatory and the Local said the Syrian air force conducted several air raids during the fighting to ease pressure on government troops inside the air base.

State-run news agency SANA quoted a military official as saying the troops repelled the attack and inflicted “great losses” on the attackers.

Rebels control much of Idlib province, which borders Turkey, although government forces still hold some areas, including the provincial capital that carries the same name.

Elsewhere, the Aleppo Media Center said rebels had entered the Kweiras military air base in Aleppo province and destroyed its operations room. The base has also been under siege for months.

In the southern province of Daraa, also known as the Houran plains, the Observatory and the LCC said rebels had launched a new offensive called “the Houran Volcano” in which they are targeting army checkpoints and positions.

The Observatory said there were losses on both sides but had no immediate breakdown.

An amateur video posted online showed rebel artillery fire hitting al-Khudr military base, located on a hill near the town of Dael, also in the province. Cracks of gunfire could be heard from a distance.

The video appeared genuine and corresponded to other AP reporting on the events depicted.

Syria’s conflict started with largely peaceful anti-government protests in March 2011 but eventually turned into a civil war. More than 70,000 people have been killed, according to the United Nations.

Analysis: Crossing Obama’s “red line” on Syria will require concrete proof

 Analysis: Crossing Obamas red line on Syria will require concrete proof

() – While President has declared a “” over Syrian use of chemical weapons, U.S. officials suggested on Tuesday that Washington was unlikely to respond without clear-cut evidence of such use – evidence that may be very hard to come by.

Israel’s top military said in Tel Aviv on Tuesday that forces had used chemical weapons – probably the – in their fight against rebels trying to force out President Bashar al-Assad.

He cited photographic evidence of victims foaming at the mouth, their pupils contracted.

The Israeli allegations, which came during a week-long visit by Defense Secretary to the Middle East, followed similar concerns of chemical weapons use voiced by Britain and France.

But so far, those assessments appear to lack the Washington would need to accept the kind of deeper U.S. involvement in Syria’s civil war that Obama has resisted. That, in turn, raises questions about just how well-defined the president’s “red line” is.

Jay Carney walked a cautious line speaking to reporters, making clear that Washington was taking the Israeli accusations seriously but would require “” before deciding whether to move forward.

“We have not come to the conclusion that there has been that use,” Carney said. “But it is something that is of great concern to us, to our partners, and, obviously, unacceptable as the president made clear.”

A senior U.S. defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that “low confidence” assessments by foreign governments could not be the basis for U.S. action.

Officials appeared to play down the extent of any evidence of chemical weapons use provided by British and French diplomats in a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s office on March 21. An Obama administration official noted it was based on second-hand sources and third-party information.

“The letter did not provide conclusive evidence of chemical weapons use, but did request a U.N. investigation into all allegations of use in Syria,” the defense official said.

A U.N. team of specialists has been prevented from going to Syria to investigate the claims because of a dispute with the government over access.

MEMORIES OF IRAQ

On a visit to Israel last month, Obama said of reports the Syrian government may have used chemical weapons, “Once we’ve established the facts, I have made clear the use of chemical weapons is a game-changer.”

The Obama administration’s determination to avoid committing itself without air-tight proof, plus international backing, is due in part to the lessons of Iraq, a source close to White House policymaking said recently.

Then, the George W. Bush administration used faulty intelligence to justify the Iraq invasion in pursuit of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons that turned out not to exist.

“There will be no rush to judgment,” the source said.

U.S. officials and experts have cited the difficulty for the United States in confirming chemical weapons use in Syria.

For example, officials have said they are reluctant to give much credence to information on alleged chemical weapons use that emanates from the Syrian opposition, considering such claims suspect because of a vested interest to get Washington involved militarily.

So far, the United States has limited itself to mostly non-military support for the opposition. Last weekend, Secretary of State John Kerry announced a new package of non-lethal aid partly destined to rebel fighters. That has fallen far short, however, of what some U.S. lawmakers, U.S. allies like Britain and France and Syrian opposition leaders themselves have sought.

Washington could face further criticism if it is perceived to have failed to enforce Obama’s chemical weapons ultimatum to Assad, who has clung to power despite repeated U.S. calls to step down.

Raymond Zilinskas, a chemical and biological weapons expert at the Monterey Institute’s James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, said photographic evidence cited by the Israeli official – with victims foaming at the mouth – showed symptoms consistent with the use of a nerve agent such as sarin gas.

But he questioned whether photographic evidence alone could prove chemical weapons use.

“The difficult part is – what you really need are samples,” said Zilinskas.

Sarin or other nerve agents would linger in blood and tissue samples for some time, and probably longer in hair samples, he said. “That’s almost like a smoking gun.”

It is not known if Western intelligence agencies, perhaps with aid from Syrian rebels, have procured biological or soil samples from the sites of the alleged attacks last month.

Even if proof of chemical weapons use met Washington’s standards of proof, U.S. action might further be delayed while intelligence analysts try to figure out how widespread it was – a factor that would determine the extent of any U.S. response.

While contingency plans have been crafted, U.S. officials have continued grappling with questions such as whether U.S. forces would be able to locate enough of Assad’s stockpile and whether the material could be “safe-guarded” inside Syria in the midst of civil war or whether it would have to be taken out.

Another wild card could be how Israel might respond. Carney declined to answer a question whether the White House had been aware that Israel would go public with the accusation on Tuesday and whether it was prudent to do so.

The source close to White House policymaking speculated that Israel may have gone public with its findings to send a message to Assad that its military had Syria’s chemical weapons stockpile in its sights, and would not hesitate to take action if deemed necessary to secure it.

(Writing by Phil Stewart; Additional reporting by Warren Strobel and Peter Cooney)

U.N. says has list of Syrian war crimes suspects

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(Reuters) – in “leadership positions” who may be responsible for have been identified, along with units accused of perpetrating them, United Nations investigators said on Monday.

Both government forces and armed rebels are committing war crimes, including killings and torture, spreading terror among civilians in a nearly two-year-old conflict, they said.

The investigators’ latest report, covering the six months to mid-January, was based on 445 interviews conducted abroad with victims and witnesses, as they have not been allowed into Syria.

The independent team, led by Brazilian Paulo Pinheiro, called on the U.N. Security Council to “act urgently to ensure accountability” for grave violations, possibly by referring the to the for prosecution.

“The ICC is the appropriate institution for the fight against impunity in Syria. As an established, broadly supported structure, it could immediately initiate investigations against authors of in Syria,” the 131-page report said.

It added: “Individuals may also bear criminal responsibility for perpetuating the crimes identified in the present report. Where possible, individuals in leadership positions who may be responsible were identified alongside those who physically carried out the acts.”

Karen Konig AbuZayd, one of the four commissioners on the team of some two dozen experts, told Reuters: “We have information suggesting people who have given instructions and are responsible for government policy. People who are in the leadership of the military, for example.”

“It is the first time we have mentioned the ICC directly. The Security Council needs to come together and decide whether or not to refer the case to the ICC. I am not optimistic.”

But its third list of suspects, building on lists drawn up in the past year, remains secret. It will be entrusted to U.N. for Human Rights, Navi , upon expiry of its current mandate at the end of March, the report said.

Pillay, a former judge at the ICC, said on Saturday that Syrian President Bashar al- should be probed for war crimes and called for immediate action by the international community, including possible military intervention.

“The evidence collected sits in the safe in the office of the High Commissioner against the day it might be referred to a court and evidence would be examined by a prosecutor,” said a European diplomat.

The death toll in Syria is likely approaching 70,000 people, Pillay told the Security Council last week in a fresh appeal for it to refer Syria to the ICC, the Hague-based war crimes court.

Government forces have carried out shelling and aerial bombardment across Syria including Aleppo, , Deraa, and Idlib, the independent U.N. investigators said, citing corroborating evidence gathered from satellite images.

“In some incidents, such as in the assault on Harak, indiscriminate shelling was followed by ground operations during which government forces perpetrated mass killing,” it said, referring to a town in the southern province of Deraa where residents told them that 500 civilians were killed in August.

“SPREADING TERROR”

“Government forces and affiliated militias have committed extra-judicial executions, breaching international human rights law. This conduct also constitutes the war crime of murder. Where murder was committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack against a civilian population, with knowledge of that attack, it is a crime against humanity,” the U.N. report said.

They have targeted queues at bakeries and funeral processions, in violence aimed at “spreading terror among the civilian population”, it said.

“Syrian armed forces have implemented a strategy that uses shelling and sniper fire to kill, maim, wound and terrorize the civilian inhabitants of areas that have fallen under anti-government armed group control,” the report said.

Government forces had used cluster bombs, it said, but it found no credible evidence of either side using chemical arms.

Rebel forces fighting to topple Assad in the protracted and increasingly have committed war crimes include murder, torture, hostage-taking and using children under age 15 in hostilities, the U.N. report said.

“They continue to endanger the civilian population by positioning military objectives inside civilian areas,” it said. Rebel snipers had caused “considerable civilian casualties”.

“The violations and abuses committed by anti-government armed groups did not, however, reach the intensity and scale of those committed by government forces and affiliated militia.”

Foreign fighters, many of them from Libya, Tunisia, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Iraq and Egypt, have radicalized the rebels and helped detonate deadly improvised explosive devices, it said.

The two other commissioners are former chief ICC prosecutor Carla del Ponte and Vitit Muntarbhorn of Thailand.

“It is an investigative mechanism and its evidence can be given to relevant judicial authorities when the time comes. In the interim, it is the one piece of U.N.-approved machinery shining a light on abuses,” the European diplomat said.

Referring to del Ponte, who joined in September, the diplomat said: “She brings a harder-edged prosecutorial lens so when they are looking at the evidence she is very well placed to know what sort of evidence would assist a later judicial process.”

(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

Heavy clashes erupt in Syrian capital

 Heavy clashes erupt in Syrian capital
A Syrian man carries his sister who was wounded in a government airstrike hit the neighborhood of Ansari, in Aleppo, Syria, on Feb. 3.(Photo: Abdullah al-Yassin, AP)

Story Highlights

Worst violence in weeks seen in
focused on city’s western districts
More than 60,000 people killed since start of conflict

BEIRUT (AP) — Heavy fighting between rebels and President ’s forces broke out in parts of Damascus on Wednesday in some of the worst violence to hit the in weeks.

Activists said the clashes were focused in the city’s western districts, and residents in the heart of Damascus said the heavy thud of shelling emanating from the neighborhoods under attack was louder than in recent months, when tried to dislodge rebels from the capital’s suburbs.

Damascus has not seen the scale of violence that has destroyed whole neighborhoods in Syria’s other urban centers like Aleppo and Homs. While the government has lost control of parts of those cities, it has kept a tight grip on the capital despite the rebels’ attempts to storm the city center from their enclaves in its outskirts.

Rami Abdul-Rahman, director of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for group, said Wednesday’s shelling of Jobar and Qaboun is part of a wider government offensive on the towns and villages on the capital’s doorstep that have been opposition strongholds since the beginning of the uprising against Assad in March 2011.

A government official said army troops are chasing rebels in the suburbs of Harasta, Sbeineh, and Jober. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media.

Fighting also erupted in the of Homs, where a blast targeting a military complex early Wednesday killed an people, the SANA state news and activists said.

There were conflicting reports about the nature of the explosion in the city of Palmyra. The Observatory said a blew up near a compound that houses a military intelligence branch and a state security agency, killing several regime troops.

SANA said two suicide bombers detonated cars packed with explosives near a garage in a residential area of the city, killing a number of people, wounding dozens and causing significant material damage in the area.

After the blast, rebels clashed with government soldiers guarding the compound, according to the Observatory, which relies on reports from activists on the ground.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, although and suicide attacks targeting state institutions have been a hallmark of Islamic militants fighting alongside Syrian rebels aiming to topple Assad, whose family has ruled Syria for more than 40 years.

Homs has been an opposition stronghold since the Syrian uprising erupted nearly two years ago. The province and its capital of the same name were the scene of massive protests early in the revolt, which has since devolved into a civil war that has turned urban centers like Homs and the northern city of Aleppo into battlefields.

The United Nations say more than 60,000 people have been killed since conflict started in March 2011. At least 700,000 have fled their homes, seeking shelter in neighboring countries like Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey, and more than one million people have been displaced within Syria during 22 months of fighting, according to aid agencies.

Syrian military attacks near Damascus kill 45

 Syrian military attacks near Damascus kill 45
Two lie on a street in the al-Dawlah neighborhood of Aleppo, Syria, Sunday.(Photo: Andoni Lubaki)

Story Highlights

Eight children among dead
Assad has dismissed to relinquish power
Syrian fighter jets carried out fresh on suburb of Daraya

BEIRUT (AP) — Attacks by on ’ rebellious suburbs killed at least 45 people, including eight children, activists said Monday. Sunday’s death toll was part of an intensifying regime offensive to dislodge rebels from strategic areas around the capital.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights that 24 of the dead, including all eight children, were killed by government air and artillery strikes in the eastern Ghouta district on Sunday. The rest of the casualties were in towns and villages outside the capital, the Observatory said, and included 13 rebels killed in .

Activists said the bombardments were some of the heaviest in the Damascus region since the government launched a series of offensives there in November.

On Monday, Syrian fighter jets carried out fresh airstrikes on the strategic suburb of Daraya, from which have tried to storm Damascus, the seat of Assad’s power.

Daraya is close to a number of strategic facilities. The suburb is flanked by the key districts of Mazzeh, home to a military air base, and Kfar Sousseh, where the government headquarters, the General Security intelligence agency head office and the are located. Last week, the government said it has regained control over more than half of the suburb.

The regime’s current push in Damascus comes a week after Assad dismissed international calls to relinquish power and vowed to continue fighting rebels, whom he characterized as out to destroy Syria.

The speech was condemned by the U.S. and its Western and allies, while Assad’s backers in Russia and Iran said his proposal should be considered.

Syria’s opposition rejected the proposal.

Those fighting to topple the regime, including rebels on the ground, have repeatedly said they will accept nothing less than the president’s departure, dismissing any kind of settlement that leaves him in the picture.

Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov criticized Western demands that Assad steps down. While acknowledging that the initiatives to talk to the opposition, “probably don’t go far enough,” Lavrov called on the opposition to come up with their plan to end the bloodshed.

“President Assad put forth initiatives which are aimed at inviting all opposition members to a dialogue,” Lavrov said Sunday during a visit to Ukraine.

“If I were in the opposition’s place, I would put forth my own ideas in response on how to establish a dialogue,” Lavrov said.

U.S. troops arrive in Turkey; rebels battle for airport in Syria

5cd1ef47dd1a64697cf59560e2ccbbd8 U.S. troops arrive in Turkey; rebels battle for airport in Syria

Destruction in the old souk of the northern Syrian city of Aleppo is seen after allegedly recaptured the area.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

The missiles and troops will be under the overall control of NATO
Syrian rebels are determined to take out a
Parents of a kidnapped U.S. journalist in Syria plead for his release
An explosion at a gas station in kills 10 people

() — U.S. troops arrived in Turkey on Friday to man Patriot batteries near the Syrian border, according to Turkish state media.

Syria has previously launched at cities near the Turkish border in a desperate bid to extend its firepower.

In response, the U.S., Germany and the Netherlands deployed defense missiles to the border region to intercept any Syrian .

The missiles and troops will be under the overall control of NATO, but the missiles will be operated by U.S. forces

A group of 27 U.S. troops landed in Gaziantep, Turkey, where they will survey the Patriot deployment, according to Turkish state news agency, Anadolu.

U.S. officials did not release any information about the troops arrival, but had said last month that forces will be deployed to Turkey.

“We’ve made very clear to them that were going to protect countries in this region,” Defense Secretary said last month. “We have to act to do what we have to do to make sure that we defend ourselves and make sure that Turkey can defend itself.”

Taftenaz airbase in northern Syria has been a deadly thorn in the side of rebels for months.
U.N.: 60,000 killed in Syria

For the third day Free fighters tried to wrest control of the helicopter airbase from government forces.

If successful, it would shut down President Bashar al-’s military helicopter pads and diminish his airstrikes in the region.

Both opposition and government sources reported that the extremist Nusra Front, which the U.S. has designated as a terrorist group, is taking part in the assault on the airport.

Al-Assad has exacted retribution on the nearby city of Binnish, where amateur video shows dozens of smoke plumes marking the spots where deadly ordnance has struck.

On Thursday, rebels published videos of themselves firing on the air base with heavy truck-mounted machine guns and a captured tank, destroying one government tank and appearing to shoot down a helicopter.

CNN cannot confirm the authenticity of videos from the Syrian conflict posted online.

Gas station attack in Damascus

An explosion at a gas station in Damascus near a hospital killed 10 people Friday, Syrian TV reported.

An opposition organization expects the toll to rise as many of the injured are in critical condition after fire spread to nearby cars and buildings.

The explosion came from a car bomb, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights posted on its Facebook page.

In New Hampshire, the parents of American journalist James Foley appealed Thursday to his kidnappers to release him and inform them of his whereabouts and condition of his health.

Foley’s father visibly choked up while reading a statement directed at the abductors. “We’d like them to contact us,” he said. “I ask the captors for their compassion and Jame’s quick release.”

Foley was abducted in November in Syria, where he has worked for a year. He had been detained before while working in Libya but was later released by the government.

The rapidly mounting death toll

The overall death toll in devastated Syria has surpassed an estimated 60,000 people, the United Nations said Wednesday.

To put it in perspective: 60,000 people is roughly the population of Terre Haute, Indiana; or Cheyenne, Wyoming. It’s how many people would fit in Dodger Stadium, and it’s more than the 50,000-plus U.S. combat deaths in Vietnam.

The figure is about 15,000 higher than the death toll CNN had cited from a collection of sources.

On Thursday, al-Assad’s forces repeatedly bombed the Damascus suburb of Douma with airstrikes. Residents could be seen combing through rubble, pulling out the bodies of those killed on videos posted on the Internet.