by Omar Sirri, Stacey Philbrick Yadav, and Samer Abboud | Jan 23, 2020 | Roundtables - EN, Uncategorized
[On 3 January 2020, the United States assassinated Major General Qassem Soleimani of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Corps Guard (IRGC). The event was an escalation by the Trump Administration in what many critical analysts consider a decades-long war waged by the United States against the Islamic Republic of Iran. This is a two-part roundtable convened by Arash Davari, Naveed Mansoori, and Ziad Abu-Rish on the regional backdrop and (admittedly short-term) fallout from the US assassination of Soleimani. In this part, Omar Sirri, Stacey Yadav Philbrick, and Samer Abboud reflect on the specific nature of Iranian policy in Iraq, Yemen, and Syria, respectively, and reactions therein to Soleimani’s assassination. Part 1 features scholars of Iran reflecting on the place of Soleimani and the IRGC in the political and institutional dynamics of the Iranian state.]
Question 1: What are the broad outlines of Iranian foreign policy in and their effects on the political, military, and economic status quo in your country of research prior to the US assassination of Qassem Soleimani?
Omar Sirri (on Iraq): Parastatal armed groups define Iraq’s political theatre. The public attention afforded these actors often stems from the Iranian support they receive—at least the most powerful ones, like the Badr Organization, Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq, Kita’ib Hizballah, and others. Such groups have for years been implicated in violence against domestic and foreign foes alike, coercive practices that many suggest serve Iranian interests first. These Iraqi groups are key actors in the Iran-US conflict, as was most recently made clear with the US strike on Kita’ib Hizballah at the end of last year that killed at least twenty-five people.
Iran’s economic interests in Iraq, by comparison, receive little attention. Iraq is a huge recipient of Iran’s non-oil exports. Mini-marts and supermarkets in Baghdad, Basra, Suleimaniya, and elsewhere are packed with Iranian imports—including dairy products, potato chips, and chocolates. Probably the best-known good that has flooded Iraqi streets in the last decade is the Saba, an inexpensive vehicle from Iranian automaker Saipa. It is particularly popular among young and aspiring taxi drivers facing few-to-no job prospects. The car is also infamous, gaining a “rotten reputation” for its inadequate air conditioning during sweltering summer months, and for the inexperienced (and “bad”) drivers who operate them.
Such market penetration has helped to reshape social and economic life in Iraq—including the environment—in ways we have not fully appreciated or grappled with. Arguably, and ironically, the “free market” regime that Paul Bremer and the Bush Administration established in Iraq in 2003 most benefited Iranian exporters. A rudimentary understanding of macroeconomics suggests that such trade policies—which include incentivising cheap imports—make developing a productive and sustainable national economy practically impossible (let alone one crippled by decades of war and sanctions). These “free-market” policies are what helped decimate industry and agricultural production in Iraq after 2003.
This is why Iran’s support for parastatal armed actors also known as militias are not the only reason Iraq’s revolutionaries are calling for “Iran out.” It is not hard to find Iraqis who refuse to purchase Iranian goods out of principle—much like active supporters of Palestinian rights who never buy Sabra hummus. But today, such atomized resistance has found a collective outlet in the revolution, such as through grassroots “buy Iraqi” efforts being promoted by protesters in Tahrir Square and elsewhere.
Popular resistance to Iranian intervention in Iraq did not start with this revolution. For example, civil society activists have for years been organising against devastating Iranian (and Turkish) environmental policies, namely river water diversion and damming. While climate change is having catastrophic impacts on Iraq’s environment, Iranian policies are hastening these outcomes. Against minimal Iraqi government efforts to resist these hardly-neighbourly interventions, activists have sought to build a regional and international solidarity campaign to save the land of the two rivers from those whose interests are helping bring about its destruction.
Stacey Philbrick Yadav (on Yemen): Yemen’s political, military, and economic status quo is defined by a punishing civil war. The collective effects of five years of intense military conflict, diplomatic paralysis, and international indifference have left the country politically and socially fragmented with an economy in ruins as millions of civilians struggle to meet their most basic needs. Iran neither created this war, nor will Iranian policy end it (alone). Yet Iran’s alliance with the Houthi movement (Ansar Allah, as they prefer to be called today) and the former’s adversarial relationship to several of Yemen’s Gulf neighbors jointly shape the conflict dynamics that have caused so much suffering over the past five years of war. As noted in the second question, this idea—that the Houthis find an ally in Iran—differs from the proxy framing in that it recognizes that the Houthi insurgency predates substantial Iranian involvement. It has existed as an armed movement since 2004, and developed out of a broader populist movement during the 1990s. President Ali Abdullah Saleh (r. 1990–2012) alleged an outsized role for Iran throughout the 2000s in order to generate security assistance and create political cover for some of his domestic policies. (This worked, even though US officials knew Saleh’s claims were exaggerated.)
Iran’s support for the Houthi movement accelerated substantially when the movement was excluded from the externally-brokered power-sharing agreement that followed Saleh’s 2012 resignation. By the end of the 2012-14 “transitional process”—according to a framework designed by the GCC to limit the power of both the Houthi movement and Southern secessionists (al-Hirak al-Janubi)—other militias aligned with the movement already held a good deal of territory in North Yemen.
During the war itself, Iranian involvement in Yemen has been most pronounced in areas under Houthi control and has extended from military support toward governance functions. Some of the reported policies of the Houthis are not direct extensions of Iranian policies. For example, Iran’s representative institutions have not been replicated, nor are Yemeni women experiencing the kind of (circumscribed but sanctioned) mobility to which Iranian women are entitled. Houthi rule in the north appears to combine elements of martial law, practices modified from Iranian models, and some conservative social practices familiar to North Yemenis of different religious backgrounds.
Iranian policy thus appears to be less about making an Islamic Republic of Yemen in Sana’a than about adopting the low-cost strategy of supporting a winning ally as it attempts to govern. It may seem odd to describe the Houthi movement as “winners,” given that their militias have been stalled along largely stable battle lines for several years. But to the extent that they have survived a deeply asymmetric war for five years, hardened by almost a decade of insurgent war against the Yemeni state, the Houthi movement should be seen as a formidable ally. Moreover, since both military and diplomatic dynamics suggest that the Houthis do not aspire to govern the whole of Yemen but rather seek considerable regional autonomy and a part in power-sharing, any negotiated settlement that includes the Houthis would leave Iran with some path to continued political influence on the Arabian Peninsula—all with minimal direct military engagement.
Indeed, Iranian military engagement is outmatched by that of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, both of which have played a much more substantial military role in the conflict, though it is far less common to see their relationships to Yemeni actors described in the same language of proxies. Certainly, the Gulf Cooperation Council’s desire to limit the power of the Houthi movement during Yemen’s transitional period (2012–14) had something to do with its member states’ concerns about Iranian influence on the Arabian Peninsula. Yet it was also inflected by the anti-Shi‘ism of Gulf regimes and by the domestic political preferences of some of the Gulf states’ own Yemeni allies. The Islah Party, in particular, was a significant beneficiary of the transitional process, even its relationship to the Muslim Brotherhood made this politically challenging to some Gulf allies. To treat any foreign policy—whether Iranian, Saudi, Emirati, or US—as existing outside of the pull of domestic constituencies is indefensibly statist.
Samer Abboud (on Syria): Iranian policy toward Syria has been principally focused on the battlefield and ensuring the survival of the Syrian regime. Any alternative to the current regime, especially one molded in the vision of US, Saudi, or Turkish interests, would have been strategically catastrophic for Iran. Iran has pursued a policy of regime survival through two modes. The first is military support and coordination with a whole range of military actors operating on the Syrian battlefield. There is obviously a deep connection with Hizballah and the Syrian and Russian militaries. Beyond this, Iran has supported and financed a number of militia groups composed of Syrians and non-Syrians who operated in specific Syrian locales. The Syrian regime-organized National Defense Forces (NDF) was also partially funded by Iran and some of its leaders were believed to have gone to Iran for military training. The second is a combination of indeterminable financial support, trade and barter deals, and the funneling of Iranian private sector investment into Syria. In other words, the effort to preserve the regime has been total. Since early 2017, Iran, Russia, and Turkey have been involved in a series of “talks,” commonly referred to as the Astana Process, that have the veneer of peace negotiations but are really about the management of the Syrian battlefield and in ensuring tripartite consensus over key issues of regional contention in Syria. For example, both the major Russian-led offensive in Idlib governorate that began in April 2019 and the Turkish intervention into northeastern Syria in October 2019, were military moves discussed and approved within this tripartite mechanism. This process is mostly issue- or time-specific; the parties meet to discuss specific “problems” and agree on a strategy moving forward, thus minimizing tripartite conflict and laying the basis for a Syrian future under tripartite suzerainty as the mechanism has no foreseeable termination. No major decisions about the Syrian battlefield are occurring outside of the Astana process. As such, Iranian, Russia, or Turkish capacity to act unilaterally is limited. Parallel to this, there are efforts toward some form of political transition. The best example of this is the United Nations-led Syrian Constitutional Committee (SCC), founded in 2019. But this is a mostly cosmetic process that is lower on the Iranian policy radar.
There is no serious reason to believe that these dynamics of Iranian intervention in Syria will change at all after the assassination of Qassem Soleimani. He was neither the sole architect or visionary of Iran’s role. The status quo is not seriously threatened by Soleimani’s assassination.
Question 2: Much of the discussion about Iranian-allied groups in regional states is framed within the model of proxies. What is your assessment of the utility of this model in understanding the relationship between specific power brokers and/or other groups and the Iranian regime?
Omar Sirri (on Iraq): The term “proxy” gives the sense that a local actor is solely doing the bidding of an external actor. At least this is how it is used in popular representations and mainstream media. But Iraqi political actors (armed groups among them) that are allied with and/or and backed by Iran cannot be exclusively characterized as such. This is because Iraq’s domestic political actors— Iranian-supported or otherwise—have embedded their own private interests into the everyday sources of power in the country. They derive a great deal of their private political dominance not merely from external actors, but from the ways in which they control ostensibly public resources and institutions. These micro sources of power are brought about and then reinforced through largely domestic capital accumulation and coercion—from financial profit and the exercise of violence. I try to capture the ways in which this occurs in Iraq in this POMEPS piece (the entire collection of essays on Iraq is fantastic), and in this ongoing LSE project.
Another reason why the “proxy” label is unfulfilling relates to political Islam. The power of al-Marja‘iyya in Najaf cannot be over-emphasized. Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani’s insistence that his followers mobilize to help rout Da‘ish from Iraq did more to form al-Hashd al-Sha‘bi than Iran’s intervention. These religious actors espouse and promote particular versions of Iraqi nationalism that, while Shi‘a-centric, ultimately reject Iranian dominance. The political actors who receive support from Iran have to contend with these political-religious conditions that suggest popular legitimacy, power, and relevance come from Iraqi religious actors more than from Iranian ones.
This is to say nothing of Muqtada al-Sadr. There are few figures in Iraq who can “move the street” like he can—or at least a significant segment of it. In addition, a great deal of his popular support is derived from lower classes in and out of Baghdad. Some of those same people make up a portion of the revolutionaries in Tahrir Square demanding an end to Iranian (and US) interference in Iraq’s affairs. These intersections are kind of incredible. But they also mean that at the moment “proxy” is doing more to occlude critical details rather than illuminate them.
Stacey Philbrick Yadav (on Yemen): At a public lecture about a decade ago, I was asked why I decided to study “small and insignificant places like Yemen and Lebanon instead of important ones like Iran or Saudi Arabia.” Whenever people ask me about proxy dynamics in Yemen, I think back on that question because I find the discussion of proxies to be underwritten by a similar logic. To describe Yemeni actors as Iran’s proxies seems built on the idea that some countries (i.e., those that have proxies) “matter” more and others become significant only by association. So I have always tried to resist that moral economy, since it does not correspond to my view of what makes something—let alone someone—significant. But that is an affective response.
Conceptually, even though the idea of proxy war recognizes the central significance of sub-state actors (i.e., proxies), it simultaneously reinforces the (misplaced) centrality of states as the core units of analysis in international relations. A conflict is only described as a proxy war when another state or states is involved. In the case of Yemen, the Houthi movement matters to policy analysts (and to a surprising number of political scientists) insofar as it functions as an instrument of the Iranian state. I see several reasons to object to this. First, proxy framing underestimates the actors and forms of agency that shape relationships between allies. It directs us away from the domestic politics of both Yemen and Iran and the way each shapes alliance choices and practices. Second, scholars and policy analysts rarely use the same language to describe relationships between other states and the substate Yemeni factions with which they are aligned. For example, it’s rare to hear the Southern Transitional Council described as an Emirati proxy, even though it depends heavily on the material and political support of the United Arab Emirates. The Islah party and militias aligned with it are more often described as allies of Saudi Arabia, not Saudi proxies. We would be asking better questions if we approached all such relationships between external and Yemeni actors as alliances and sought to better understand what each party does and does not expect from its allies, how these alliances relate to domestic politics on both sides, and how competing interests are managed. The relationship between Iran and the Houthi movement does not strike me as so exceptional as to warrant different language and different analytical treatment.
Finally, this special focus on Iran’s relationship to the Houthi movement has contributed to a very lopsided approach to understanding the conflict in binary terms—a framing concretized by the UN Security Council resolution that authorized the Saudi-led coalition’s campaign in 2015. Whereas there is ample evidence that the war is being fought along several different axes simultaneously. I do not find it farfetched to say that reduction of the war in Yemen to a proxy conflict between Saudi Arabia and Iran has substantively delayed a negotiated settlement to the war and prolonged the suffering of Yemeni civilians.
Samer Abboud (on Syria): The proxy argument assumes a hegemony and hierarchy between Iran and allied groups in the region that I simply do not think exists. To accept the proxy argument, we need to remove all motivations and capacities of the groups we are referring to, assuming that they simply do what Iranian leadership tell them. However, this removes any agency on the part of the so-called proxies and does not allow us to take seriously questions of negotiation, compromise, and disagreement between parties, which I think exists. A more appropriate analytic may be that of “alignment.” It allows us to understand both the coherency and tensions within the interrelationships that constitute the network of states and armed actors broadly supportive of the Syrian regime. These interrelationships are what we are trying to understand and explain. I see no good reason why we need to elevate the proxy argument whenever we see an overlap of interests and strategies.
Thinking in terms of alignment rather than proxies allows for some nuance in how we see different actors in Syria. Consider, for example, the fourth and fifth military divisions of the Syrian Army. They have been reincarnated with different names and leaderships in recent years. It is nevertheless well known that the fifth division coordinates operations with Iranian officials and receives support and training from them, while the fourth was virtually under the command of the Russian military presence in Syria. How can we account for such fissures within the Syrian army? Are these divisions merely proxies of either state? Or are they competing centers of power that are malleable to battlefield and political conditions? The proxy argument has ready-made answers to questions of power, competition, strategy, and coordination that shift our attention away from how the interrelationships between actors are constituted.
Question 3: What has been the reaction to and/or effect of Soleimani’s death in different sectors of your research country? Has this reaction reaffirmed and/or challenges certain assumptions (and if so how)?
Omar Sirri (on Iraq): Overwhelming fear. Many were right to assume after Soleimani’s assassination that Iraq would become the battlefield on which US and Iranian forces would fight and kill (if it is not already). This meant Iraqis would continue to suffer the most. Had the conflict escalated, some of the worst predictions about the ramifications of his assassination were probably the right ones—just as they were about the US- and UK-led invasion in 2003. Also understandable were the reactions of activists and civil society actors who refused to shed a tear for Soleimani’s demise. He symbolized Iranian intrusions in Iraqi political affairs precisely because he coordinated and supervised them. This is where the earlier proxy argument stems from: Iran’s support for parastatal armed actors in Iraq is real. Most citizens blame these groups for some of Iraq’s worst civil violence, in Baghdad and elsewhere. Iran’s support helped fuel that violence, hence the popular loathing directed at it.
Lost in the media mayhem around Soleimani’s killing was that of Abu Mehdi al-Muhandis. As the deputy head of al-Hashd al-Sha‘bi, his assassination is stunning in its own right. Al-Hashd al-Sha‘bi became an official state institution in 2016 and al-Muhandis is a key power broker and centralising force among the discrete, competing groups that make up the organization. It is still unclear what his killing will mean for al-Hashd al-Sha‘bi, its component groups, and their respective political-economic interests for which they all scrape.
As the geopolitical tensions ratchet down, I wonder how useful it is to suggest that these events are the “death knell” for Iraq’s revolutionary moment. The structural economic conditions that brought about this revolution persist. The political-economic elite certainly benefit from persistent “instability” and precarity; Iraq’s last decade and a half prove this. But the last three months in Iraq also suggest something entirely new and powerful has occurred and been nurtured by Iraqis of various classes and generations. The longevity of this popular mobilization indicates that a radically different political agency is here to stay—one in which its participants have withstood some of the most rank and vicious political violence carried out by Iraq’s ruling class. This is not a prediction but a reflection: The stubborn failure of Iraq’s politicians to address people’s grievances likely means those airing them are not going anywhere.
Stacey Philbrick Yadav (on Yemen): In the context of a protracted civil war, reactions to Soleimani’s death have been characteristically divided. On the one hand, some prominent Yemenis (and Yemeni Americans) explicitly celebrated his killing—which initially surprised me. Many of the same people have been deeply critical of US drone strikes conducted in Yemen. On the other hand, thousands of people turned out for official mourning proceedings in Sana’a. Some observers said this was required by Houthi authorities; it is hard to actually assess these claims from afar, but I can say that some Yemeni friends who have associations with the United States chose to leave the capital for a while to avoid the perceived risk of retaliation.
The most depressing reaction—though not unexpected—has been the policing of independent voices online. Yemenis who have tried to challenge the “celebrators” by pointing to the damage that unchecked US air strikes and drone attacks have caused in Yemen have been shouted down as Houthi “sympathizers.” In other words, it remains very difficult for Yemenis (and non-Yemenis, frankly) to speak about the war, about Iran, about almost anything having to do with the conflict without it being interpreted in a Manichean, deeply polarized way. The independent center—never an easy place for Yemeni activists or analysts—is shrinking still.
Samer Abboud (on Syria): I think it is reasonable to assume that Soleimani’s assassination will not have a significant impact on Iranian policy in Syria more generally, or the battlefield in particular. Soleimani was indeed an important figure in Syria but he was not active merely as an individual—but as a representative of a state. Nor did he command any specific allegiances in Syria that may disrupt the network of regime-aligned groups. Nevertheless, he was a very public and polarizing figure in Syria as his presence on the battlefield was regularly documented and shared online. Soleimani thus came to personify Iran’s intervention into Syria. As such, like everything related to Syria, the range of responses to Soleimani’s assassination were polarizing and ran the gamut from celebration to mourning.
The more consequential impact of Soleimani’s assassination will be in the long-term as we see how, if at all, Hizballah’s declared strategy of ridding the region of US occupation plays out. In Syria, Russian military officials have been successful in striking a confounding balance between different forces and interests on the ground. For example, they permit regular Israeli air strikes and the presence of US military bases while maintaining alignment with Iran, other armed groups, and the Syrian regime. Should there be a shift in the strategies of Hizballah and other armed groups toward direct engagement with the US military presence in Syria, then this delicate balance will not hold and we could see the emergence of a very different conflict.
[This roundtable was originally published by Jadaliyya on 21 January, 2020. Click here to read Part 1 of this roundtable, featuring scholars of Iran reflecting on the place of Soleimani and the IRGC in the political and institutional dynamics of the Iranian state.]
by Syria in a Week Editors | Jan 22, 2020 | Syria in a Week - EN
The following is a selection by our editors of significant weekly developments in Syria. Depending on events, each issue will include anywhere from four to eight briefs. This series is produced in both Arabic and English in partnership between Salon Syria and Jadaliyya. Suggestions and blurbs may be sent to info@salonsyria.com.
Russian Style Truce
18 January 2020
Five civilians were killed, including four from one family, in a Russian airstrike that targeted a village in northwest Syria within the context of a military escalation in the area that has been going on for days, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).
An AFP reporter on Sunday saw the bodies of the family wrapped in winter covers and placed on the floor in a hospital in the western countryside of Aleppo, waiting for family members to recognize them so they can be buried. Paramedics in the White Helmets (the civil defense in areas controlled by militant factions) transported the bodies the previous night.
Idlib has witnessed an escalation of bombardment since Wednesday despite the ceasefire declared by Russia – which supports Damascus whereas Turkey supports the factions.
Four Russian Soldiers
17 January 2020
Four Russian soldiers were killed on Friday in an offensive by Syrian opposition factions against a military position from which Russia manages operations in the eastern countryside of Idlib, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said on Friday.
The SOHR said that this comes on the third consecutive day of a new escalation of military operations by the Syrian government and the Russian “guarantor.” It said that more than one thousand and seven hundred and ninety-six aerial and ground strikes have been carried out in the last seventy-two hours mainly against the eastern, southern, and southeastern countryside of Idlib and the western and southern countryside of Aleppo.
Failure of the Truce
16 January 2020
United Nations human rights chief Michelle Bachelet called on Friday for an immediate cessation of hostilities in Syria’s opposition-held Idlib province, saying the latest ceasefire attempt had yet again failed to protect civilians.
Turkey, which for years has backed Syrian opposition, agreed a truce with Russia that was supposed to have taken hold in the bastion of three million people in the northwest earlier this month.
Around three hundred and fifty thousand Syrians, mostly women and children, have fled Idlib since early December, and sought shelter in border areas near Turkey, the United Nations said on Thursday.
Three Turkish Soldiers
16 January 2020
Three Turkish soldiers were killed on Thursday by a car bomb in an area in north Syria controlled by Turkish forces, said the ministry of defense in Ankara.
“Three brothers-in-arms were martyred in a car-bomb attack during a road check,” the ministry said in a brief statement.
Turkish forces are deployed in several areas in north and northeast Syria, where Ankara has launched three military operations between 2016 and 2019 that targeted the Islamic State and the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) – which Turkey characterizes as “terrorists”.
Terrible Violation
16 January 2020
UN investigators on Sunday called for thousands of children of Islamic State militants to be repatriated from Syria to their families’ countries.
The UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria said in a report that the children were in a “particularly precarious” situation since they often lacked official papers.
“This, in turn, jeopardizes their rights to a nationality, hinders family reunification processes, and puts them at a higher risk of exploitation and abuse,” the report said.
The UN says around twenty-eight thousand children of foreign fighters are living in Syrian camps – twenty thousand of them from Iraq.
Thousands more are believed to be held in prisons, where teenage children are being detained alongside adults.
After the collapse of the self-proclaimed caliphate of the Islamic State last year, foreign fighters from nearly fifty countries were detained in Syria and Iraq.
Many of their relatives are held in the overcrowded al-Hol camp in northeastern Syria, home to around sixty-eight thousand people and where more than five hundred people – mostly children – died in 2019.
It is estimated that around seven hundred to seven hundred and fifty children with European links are being held in camps in northeast Syria, with three hundred of them said to be French.
Some countries have started to repatriate the children – with or without their parents – on humanitarian grounds.
But the UN investigators criticized the practice of revoking citizenship of suspected Islamic State fighters used by countries including Britain, Denmark and France.
The Cave and the Doctor
15 January 2020
A young doctor, who managed an underground hospital in eastern Ghouta during the Syrian civil war was awarded a European award for extraordinary humanitarian acts.
Amani Ballour, a pediatrician was named this year’s recipient of the Council of Europe’s Raoul Wallenberg prize, awarded in honor of a Swedish diplomat who saved tens of thousands of Jews from Nazi persecution in Hungary during World War II.
Ballour was described in the council announcement on Wednesday as a young doctor who finished university in 2012 one year after the start of the Syrian conflict and began as a volunteer helping the wounded in a makeshift clinic.
The clinic was located in the eastern Ghouta region on the outskirts of Damascus, which was under the control of rebels and besieged and bombarded by government forces.
Within a few years Ballour was heading a hospital known as the Cave with some one hundred staff, operating in underground shelters.
Ballour is the subject of a National Geographic documentary, also called “The Cave.”
According to National Geographic, Ballour left the hospital and eastern Ghouta in March 2018 as government forces launched a final assault on the enclave.
Ballour will be presented with the award on Friday. The day also marks the seventy-fifth anniversary of Wallenberg’s arrest in Budapest by Soviet forces after the city was liberated. He was never again seen alive in public.
Sweidaa Surprise
15 January 2020
Dozens of residents in Sweidaa governorate, south of Syria, held their first ever protest against the deteriorating economic situation in the country.
The Syrian official news agency SANA said on Wednesday a few people gathered in a square in the center of Sweidaa and started chanting “we want to live… we want to live.”
The Syrian pound suffered a new loss today as the exchange rate for of 1 US dollar exceeded 1,070 Syrian pounds in the capital Damascus and Aleppo and 1,080 in Idlib.
Syrian markets in general have witnessed major recession in all regions under the control of the Syrian government, the opposition, and the Syrian Democratic Forces.
Most Syrians have lost their savings especially as the Syrian pound reached its lowest rate, which became twenty times less in value since the beginning of the crisis entering its tenth year. The exchange rate for 1 US dollar was 50 Syrian pounds in early 2011.
A Strike in Depth
14 January 2020
Strikes that targeted the military T4 airport – which Damascus accused Israel of carrying out – killed at least three militants affiliated to Iran, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) on Wednesday.
A Syrian military source accused Israeli planes of carrying out an “aerial aggression” against the airport located in Homs governorate, according to a statement reported by the official news agency SANA. Syrian air defenses “confronted… the enemy missiles and brought down a number of them,” the source said.
The T4 military airport is in the eastern countryside of Homs in middle Syria, which is considered an area of Iranian influence. Syrian government forces as well as Iranian forces are stationed in the airport, whereas the Russian presence there is limited to a number of consultants.
Israel did not claim responsibility for the bombardment, as the spokeswoman for the Israeli army refused to comment on a question by the AFP.
These strikes coincided with a strike by unidentified planes against positions for government forces and allied groups in east of the country, according to the SOHR.
Rescue of one hundred Syrian
14 January 2020
Cyprus police said on Tuesday that they saved one hundred and one Syrian immigrants spotted in the Mediterranean, southeast of the Island which suffers from an influx of immigrants.
A marine patrol found a thirty-three-meter-long boat carrying immigrants eighteen nautical miles off of Protaras, a famous beach resort in southeast Cyprus.
The police added that the Syrian immigrants, eighty-eight men, six women, and seven children, were transferred to a reception center near the capital Nicosia.
The boat started its journey in Mersin, Turkey, noting that this sea route has become common for smugglers, the police said.
Syrians constituted more than three percent of asylum seekers in Cyprus in the second quarter of 2019. Cyprus has repeatedly alerted the European Union because of the influx of refugees.
In August, Cyprus called on other countries in the European Union to receive five thousand of the immigrants who arrived at the island, to alleviate “the disproportionate pressures and serious challenges” facing this county of less than one million people.
Figures by the European Statistics Office indicate that Cyprus is the European country with the highest rate of refugee reception compared to its population.
Syrian – Turkish Meeting
13 January 2020
The Syrian side in a trilateral meeting (Syria, Russia, and Turkey) in Moscow on Monday called on the Turkish side to completely comply with the sovereignty of the Syrian Arab Republic and immediately and completely withdraw from all Syrian territory.
The Syrian side, represented by the head of the National Security Bureau Major General Ali Mamlouk, called on the Turkish side, represented by the head of the Intelligence Service Hakan Fidan, to comply with its commitments under the Sochi agreement on Idlib in 17 September 2018, especially in regards to clearing the area of terrorist and heavy weaponry and opening the Aleppo-Lattakia and the Aleppo-Hama roads, according to the official Syrian news agency SANA.
by Syria in a Week Editors | Jan 20, 2020 | Syria in a Week - EN, Uncategorized
هدنة على الطريقة الروسية
18 كانون الثاني/ يناير
قتل خمسة مدنيين، أربعة منهم من عائلة واحدة، بغارة روسية استهدفت قرية في شمال غرب سوريا، وفق ما أفاد المرصد السوري لحقوق الإنسان السبت، في إطار تصعيد عسكري مستمر على المنطقة منذ أيام.
وأفاد المرصد عن “شن طائرة روسية ضربة على قرية بالة الواقعة في ريف حلب الغربي المجاور لإدلب بعد منتصف الليل، أسفرت عن مقتل خمسة مدنيين بينهم ثلاثة أطفال”.
وقال مدير المرصد رامي عبد الرحمن لوكالة فرانس برس إن “رجلاً مع زوجته وطفلتيهما كانوا في عداد القتلى”.
وشاهد مراسل فرانس برس صباحاً في أحد مستشفيات ريف حلب الغربي جثث أفراد العائلة ملفوفة بأغطية شتوية وموضوعة على الأرض، بانتظار قدوم أي من أقاربهم للتعرف عليهم ودفنهم، بعدما نقل مسعفو الخوذ البيضاء (الدفاع المدني في مناطق سيطرة الفصائل المقاتلة) جثثهم ليلاً.
وفي القرية، أحدثت الضربة فجوة في الأرض قرب منزل من طبقتين، تبعثرت محتوياته من أغطية ومفروشات ولعب أطفال، بينما تناثر زجاج النوافذ داخل غرفه.
وتتعرض منطقة إدلب لتصعيد في القصف منذ الأربعاء، رغم إعلان روسيا الداعمة لدمشق وتركيا الداعمة للفصائل عن وقف لإطلاق النار لم يصمد.
ونفت روسيا الخميس أن تكون طائراتها نفّذت أي مهمات قتالية منذ بدء وقف إطلاق النار، الذي قالت إنه دخل حيز التنفيذ منذ التاسع من الشهر الحالي، بينما أعلنت تركيا أنه بدأ الأحد.
وتُكرر دمشق نيتها استعادة كامل منطقة إدلب ومحيطها، رغم اتفاقات هدنة عدة تم التوصل إليها على مر السنوات الماضية في المحافظة الواقعة بمعظمها تحت سيطرة هيئة تحرير الشام وتنشط فيها فصائل معارضة أخرى أقل نفوذاً.
4 جنود روس
17 كانون الثاني/ يناير
أفاد المرصد السوري لحقوق الانسان الجمعة بمقتل أربعة جنود روس جراء هجوم لفصائل المعارضة السورية على أحد المواقع العسكرية التي تدير منها روسيا العمليات بريف إدلب الشرقي.
وقال المرصد في بيان صحفي، إن ذلك يأتي في الوقت الذي أكمل فيه التصعيد الجديد في العمليات العسكرية للنظام السوري و”الضامن” الروسي يومه الثالث على التوالي، مشيرا إلى تنفيذ أكثر من 1796 ضربة جوية وبرية طالت المنطقة خلال الـ 72 ساعة الفائتة تركزت بشكل رئيسي على أرياف إدلب الشرقية والجنوبية والجنوبية الشرقية بالإضافة لريفي حلب الغربي والجنوبي.
فشل الهدنة
16 كانون الثاني/يناير
دعت مفوضة الأمم المتحدة لحقوق الإنسان ميشيل باشليه اليوم الجمعة لوقف فوري للقتال في محافظة إدلب السورية الخاضعة لسيطرة مقاتلي المعارضة، قائلة إن وقف إطلاق النار الأخير في سوريا فشل مرة أخرى في حماية المدنيين.
واتفقت تركيا، التي تدعم مقاتلي المعارضة السورية، على وقف لإطلاق النار مع روسيا كان من المفترض تطبيقه هذا الشهر في المنطقة الواقعة في شمال غرب سوريا وتؤوي ثلاثة ملايين شخص.
وقال جيريمي لورانس المتحدث باسم مفوضية الأمم المتحدة السامية لحقوق الإنسان في إفادة صحفية “ما زال الناس يُقتلون، الكثير من الناس على الجانبين”. وأضاف أنه منذ اشتداد حدة الأعمال القتالية فيما يطلق عليها “منطقة خفض التصعيد” في إدلب يوم 29 أبريل (نيسان) وثق مراقبو الأمم المتحدة أحداثا قُتل خلالها 1506 من المدنيين منهم 293 امرأة و433 طفلا.
وقالت الأمم المتحدة أمس الخميس إن نحو 350 ألف سوري معظمهم نساء وأطفال فروا منذ أوائل ديسمبر كانون الأول لمناطق قريبة من الحدود مع تركيا.
3 جنود أتراك
16 كانون الثاني/يناير
قتل ثلاثة جنود أتراك الخميس بانفجار سيارة مفخخة في منطقة بشمال سوريا تسيطر عليها القوات التركية، وفق ما أفادت وزارة الدفاع في أنقرة.
وقالت الوزارة في بيان مقتضب “استشهد ثلاثة من رفاقنا في هجوم بواسطة سيارة مفخخة خلال عملية تدقيق”.
وفي وقت سابق، قال المرصد السوري لحقوق الإنسان إن الانفجار وقع في بلدة سلوك قرب تل أبيض وخلف عشرة قتلى بينهم ثلاثة جنود أتراك.
وتنتشر القوات التركية في مناطق عدة في شمال وشمال شرق سوريا حيث قامت أنقرة بثلاث عمليات عسكرية بين 2016 و2019 استهدفت تنظيم الدولة الإسلامية ووحدات حماية الشعب الكردية التي تصنفها أنقرة “إرهابية”.
انتهاك مروع
16 كانون الثاني/يناير
دعا محققون تابعون للأمم المتحدة الخميس لإعادة آلاف الأطفال من أبناء المقاتلين في صفوف تنظيم الدولة الإسلامية من سوريا إلى بلدان ذويهم.
وذكرت لجنة التحقيق الدولية المستقلة المعنية بملف سوريا في تقرير أن الأطفال “على وجه الخصوص” في “وضع خطر” إذ أنهم كثيراً ما يفتقدون لوثائق رسمية.
وأفاد التقرير أن “ذلك بدوره يشكّل خطراً على حقوقهم في الحصول على جنسية ويعرقل عمليات إعادة لم شمل العائلات ويعرّضهم بشكل أكبر لخطر الاستغلال والانتهاكات”.
وتشير تقديرات منظمة الأمم المتحدة للطفولة (يونيسيف) إلى أن هناك نحو 28 ألفاً من أطفال المقاتلين الأجانب يقيمون في مخيّمات في سوريا — 20 ألفاً منهم من العراق.
ويعتقد أن الآلاف محتجزون في سجون حيث يتم اعتقال المراهقين والبالغين معًا.
واعتُقل منذ العام الماضي مقاتلون أجانب من نحو 50 بلداً في سوريا والعراق في أعقاب انهيار “الخلافة” التي أعلنها تنظيم الدولة الإسلامية في البلدين.
ويتم احتجاز الكثير من عائلاتهم في مخيّم الهول المكتظ في شمال شرق سوريا الذي يضم نحو 68 ألف شخص وحيث توفي أكثر من 500 شخص، معظمهم أطفال، سنة 2019.
يُقدر أن هناك ما بين 700 و750 طفلاً لهم روابط مع أوروبا قيد الاحتجاز حالياً في مخيّمات بشمال شرق سوريا، يُقال إن 300 منهم فرنسيون.
وبدأت بعض الدول باستعادة الأطفال، مع أو بدون ذويهم، لأسباب إنسانية.
لكن محققي الأمم المتحدة انتقدوا ممارسة سحب جنسيات المقاتلين المشتبه بانتمائهم لتنظيم الدولة الإسلامية التي تتّبعها دول بينها بريطانيا والدنمارك وفرنسا.
كهف وطبيبة
15 كانون الثاني/يناير
تم منح طبيبة شابة، كانت تدير مستشفى تحت الأرض في منطقة “الغوطة الشرقية” خلال الحرب الأهلية السورية جائزة أوروبية بسبب أعمالها الإنسانية الاستثنائية.
وتم اختيار طبيبة الأطفال، أماني بالور للحصول على جائزة “راؤول ولينبرج” لمجلس أوروبا هذا العام، التي يتم منحها تكريما لدبلوماسي سويدي أنقذ حياة عشرات الآلاف من اليهود من الاضطهاد النازي في المجر خلال الحرب العالمية الثانية.
وورد اسم بالور في إعلان المجلس الأربعاء بوصفها طبيبة شابة، استكملت دراستها الجامعية في عام 2012، أي بعد عام من اندلاع الصراع السوري- وبدأت كمتطوعة تساعد الجرحى في عيادة مؤقتة.
ويقع المستشفى في منطقة “الغوطة الشرقية” على مشارف دمشق، التي تخضع لسيطرة المعارضين، والتي حاصرتها وقصفتها القوات الحكومية.
ولبضع سنوات، ترأست بالور مستشفى تعرف باسم “الكهف” يضم حوالي مئة موظف، يعمل في ملاجئ تحت الأرض.
وبالور موضوع فيلم وثائقي لشبكة “ناشونال جيوجرافيك” يُعرف أيضا باسم “الكهف”.
وطبقا لشبكة “ناشونال جيوجرافيك” غادرت بالور المستشفى والغوطة الشرقية في آذار/مارس 2018 عندما شنت القوات الحكومية هجوماً أخيراً على الجيب.
وسوف تتسلم بالور الجائزة بعد غد الجمعة. وهذا اليوم يمثل الذكرى الـ75 لاعتقال ولينبرج في بودابست على أيدي القوات السوفيتية بعد تحرير المدينة. ولم يتم مشاهدته علناً حياً على الإطلاق .
مفاجأة السويداء
15 كانون الثاني/يناير
تجمع العشرات من أهالي محافظة السويداء جنوب سورية في أول حركة احتجاجية على تردي الأوضاع الاقتصادية في سورية.
وذكرت وكالة الأنباء السورية الرسمية “سانا” الأربعاء “أن بضعة أشخاص تجمعوا في ساحة بوسط مدينة السويداء وبدأوا بالهتاف “بدنا نعيش.. بدنا نعيش..” اعتراضاً على الواقع المعيشي في البلاد.
وسجلت الليرة السورية انخفاضاً جديداً اليوم حيث سجل سعر صرف الدولار الأمريكي 1070 ليرة في العاصمة دمشق وحلب و1080 في إدلب.
وتشهد الأسواق السورية عموماً في كل المناطق الخاضعة لسيطرة الحكومة السورية أو المعارضة أو قوات سورية الديمقراطية حالة ركود كبيرة نظراً لغلاء الأسعار.
وفقد عموم السوريين مدخراتهم بسبب الحرب التي اقتربت من دخول عامها العاشر وسط تدني قيمة الليرة السورية التي وصلت إلى 22 ضعفاً عما كانت عليه قبل اندلاع الأزمة.
وكان سعر صرف الدولار الأمريكي يساوي 50 ليرة سورية بداية عام 2011.
غارة بالعمق
14 كانون الثاني/يناير
تسبّبت الغارات التي استهدفت مطار “تي فور” العسكري في وسط سوريا، واتهمت دمشق اسرائيل بشنها، بمقتل ثلاثة مقاتلين موالين لإيران على الأقل، وفق ما أحصى المرصد السوري لحقوق الإنسان الأربعاء.
واتهم مصدر عسكري سوري، وفق تصريحات نقلتها وكالة الأنباء الرسمية “سانا”، الطيران الإسرائيلي بشن “عدوان جوّي” على المطار الواقع في محافظة حمص. وقال إن الدفاعات الجوية السورية “تصدّت.. للصواريخ المعادية وأسقطت عدداً منها”.
ويقع مطار “تي فور” العسكري في ريف حمص الشرقي، وتعدّ منطقة نفوذ إيراني. وتتواجد في المطار قوات تابعة للنظام السوري وأخرى لإيران بينما يقتصر التواجد الروسي فيه على عدد محدود من المستشارين.
ولم تعلن إسرائيل مسؤوليتها عن القصف، فيما رفضت متحدّثة باسم الجيش الإسرائيلي الإدلاء بأي تعليق رداً على سؤال لفرانس برس.
وتزامن تنفيذ هذه الغارات، بحسب المرصد، مع قصف طائرات مجهولة مواقع لقوات النظام والمجموعات الموالية بها في شرق البلاد.
إنقاذ 100 سوري
14 كانون الثاني/يناير
أعلنت الشرطة القبرصية الثلاثاء أنها أنقذت 101 مهاجر سوري، شوهدوا في البحر المتوسط جنوب شرق الجزيرة التي تعاني من تدفق اللاجئين على أراضيها.
واضافت أن دورية بحرية عثرت على قارب طوله 33 متراً يقل المهاجرين على بعد أكثر من 18 ميلاً بحرياً من بروتاراس، المنتجع البحري الشهير في جنوب شرق قبرص.
وقالت الشرطة إن هؤلاء السوريين، هم 88 رجلاً وست نساء وسبعة أطفال، نقلوا إلى مركز استقبال قرب العاصمة نيقوسيا.
وأكدت أن القارب انطلق من مرسين في تركيا، مشيرة إلى أن هذا الطريق البحري بات شائعا بالنسبة للمهربين.
شكل السوريون في الربع الثاني من عام 2019 أكثر من 3 % من طالبي اللجوء في قبرص التي نبهت الاتحاد الأوروبي مراراً بسبب تدفق المهاجرين.
في آب/أغسطس، طلبت قبرص من الدول الأخرى في الاتحاد الأوروبي استقبال خمسة آلاف من المهاجرين الذين وصلوا إلى الجزيرة، من أجل تخفيف “الضغوط غير المتناسبة والتحديات الخطيرة” التي تواجه هذا البلد الذي يقل عدد سكانه عن مليون شخص.
تشير أرقام مكتب الإحصاء الأوروبي إلى أن قبرص هي الدولة الأوروبية التي لديها أعلى معدل لاستقبال اللاجئين، مقارنة بعدد سكانها.
اجتماع سوري – تركي
13 كانون الثاني/يناير
طالب الجانب السوري في اجتماع ثلاثي (سوري روسي تركي) في موسكو اليوم الاثنين الجانب التركي بالالتزام الكامل بسيادة الجمهورية العربية السورية والانسحاب الفوري والكامل من الأراضي السورية كافة.
ودعا الجانب السوري ممثلاً باللواء علي مملوك رئيس مكتب الأمن الوطني الجانب التركي الذي مثله هكان فيدان رئيس جهاز المخابرات إلى ضرورة وفاء تركيا بالتزاماتها بموجب اتفاق سوتشي بشأن إدلب المؤرخ 2018-9-17 وخاصة ما يتعلق بإخلاء المنطقة من الإرهابيين والأسلحة الثقيلة وفتح طريق حلب-اللاذقية وحلب-حماة،بحسب الوكالة العربية السورية للأنباء (سانا).
by Syria in a Week Editors | Jan 15, 2020 | Syria in a Week - EN
The following is a selection by our editors of significant weekly developments in Syria. Depending on events, each issue will include anywhere from four to eight briefs. This series is produced in both Arabic and English in partnership between Salon Syria and Jadaliyya. Suggestions and blurbs may be sent to info@salonsyria.com.
Tehran After Soleimani
12 January 2020
Media reports said that a high level Syrian government delegation headed by Prime Minister Imad Khamis would visit Tehran on Sunday, one week after the assassination of the commander of the Quds Force Qassem Soleimani.
The delegation includes Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates Walid al-Moualem and the Minister of Defense Lieutenant General Ali Abdullah Ayyoub, the Syrian newspaper al-Watan said.
The bilateral talks will definitely touch on the latest developments, the most prominent of which is the assassination of the commander of the Quds Force Qassem Soleimani and the Iranian response, the newspaper quoted diplomatic sources in Damascus as saying.
Truce and Reinforcements
11 January 2020
Eighteen civilians, including six children, were killed on Saturday in bombardment by Syrian military jets in Idlib governorate in north Syria, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR). This comes on the eve of a Russian-Turkish truce that puts an end to the new military escalation of government forces. This Idlib truce coincided with reinforcement of government forces in the countryside of Aleppo.
As of Thursday 11:00 GMT, “the cease fire went into effect in the de-escalation zone in Idlib under an agreement with the Turkish side,” the Russian Center for Reconciliation in Syria said in a statement.
Despite the truce that was announced in August, Syrian forces, with support from Russian forces, have intensified their bombardment in recent weeks, leaving a large number of casualties in Idlib – the last stronghold for Islamic and militant factions, some of whom receive support from Ankara – leading to an exodus of refugees toward Turkey.
In December alone, some two hundred and eighty-four thousand people were displaced due to the bombardment and battles, especially in the southern part of Idlib governorate, according to the United Nations.
Relief Welcome
11 January 2020
Residents of the Syrian governorate of Idlib, home to three million people half of whom are displaced, have cautiously welcomed the UN Security Council’s decision to extend the mechanism to deliver cross-border humanitarian relief; while relief organizations cautioned from the risk of reducing the works of this mechanism.
The Security Council has been annually renewing the mandate of delivering aid through four border crossing to areas not under the control of Syrian government forces since 2014. On 20 December, however, the extension of the mandate was faced by the refusal of Russia and China. After deliberations and a series of concessions between concerned countries, the Security Council on Friday voted in favor of extending the mandate but for six months only provided that the delivery of aid be limited to two border posts with Turkey.
Four million Syrians would benefit from the cross-border aid, including 2.7 million in northwest Syria and 1.3 million in the north, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
The Security Council resolution abolishes the delivery of aid through two border crossings, especially al-Yaaroubiah border crossing with Iraq, which was frequently used to deliver aid to areas under the control of Kurdish fighters in the northeast and where several displacement camps are located.
Airstrike Against Iran’s Allies
10 January 2020
At least eight militants in the Iraqi Popular Mobilization were killed in airstrikes carried out by unidentified planes on Thursday night against positions affiliated with a faction allied to Iran in eastern Syria near the Iraqi border, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) on Friday. “Unidentified planes targeted depots and vehicles for the Popular Mobilization in Boukamal” in Deir Azzor governorate, “causing several explosions,” the SOHR said.
The spokesman for the US-led international coalition denied that his forces launched any strikes in the area, according to the AFP. Since Wednesday, at least three villages in the countryside of Boukamal have been targeted by strikes carried out by unidentified drones which left no human casualties, according to the SOHR.
Armed groups allied to Iran are deployed in the countryside of Boukamal. They possess great influence inside the Popular Mobilization and other factions affiliated to it.
Death of Four Turkish Soldiers
8 January 2020
Four Turkish soldiers were killed on Wednesday in a car explosion in northeast Syria, the Turkish defense ministry said. The soldiers were on patrol when the attack occurred in an area under the control of Turkish forces, following the latest operation against Kurdish fighters last year.
The ministry did not give further details regarding the location of the explosion or the party responsible for it.
Turkish soldiers, who have been providing support to opposition Syrian fighters, launched an attack against the US-backed Syrian Kurdish People Protection Units (YPG) in October of 2019.
Ankara says that the YPG are “terrorists” and an offspring of the Kurdish Labor Party (PKK), which has been launching an armed insurgency against Turkey since 1984. Turkey and its western allies have the PKK on their black list.
Turkey has previously launched two military operations in northern Syria, against the Islamic State in 2016 and against the YPG in 2018.
The Tsar in the “Russian Syria”
7 January 2020
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad met on Thursday with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Damascus, according to the Syrian Presidency’s account on social media, in an unexpected visit and the first of its kind to the Syrian capital since the onset of the conflict nine years ago.
The presidency’s account said that Putin arrived to “Damascus in a visit in which he met with President al-Assad in the headquarter of Russian forces” in the capital.
It published a photo of al-Assad shaking hands with Putin with Russian officers sitting nearby.
The two presidents “watched a military presentation by the commander of Russian forces working in Syria,” it added.
President al-Assad sent Christmas greetings for Russian officers and soldiers and expressed “his appreciation and that of the Syrian people for the sacrifices they have made along with their peers in the Syrian Arab army.” Putin also sent Christmas greetings to Russian forces working in Syria, according to the same source.
Putin previously visited Syria in December of 2017. However, his visit back then was limited to Hmeimim base on the Syrian coast in the west, which Russia uses as its headquarter.
by Syria in a Week Editors | Jan 13, 2020 | Syria in a Week - EN, Uncategorized
طهران بعد سليماني
١٢ كانون الثاني/يناير
أفادت تقارير إخبارية بأن وفداً حكومياً سورياً رفيع المستوى برئاسة رئيس مجلس الوزراء عماد خميس سيقوم بزيارة إلى طهران الأحد بعد أسبوع على اغتيال قائد “فيلق القدس” قاسم سليماني.
وذكرت صحيفة “الوطن” السورية أن الوفد سيضم في عضويته نائب رئيس مجلس الوزراء وزير الخارجية والمغتربين السوري وليد المعلم، ووزير الدفاع العماد علي عبد الله أيوب.
ونقلت عن مصادر دبلوماسية في دمشق أن المباحثات بين الجانبين ستتطرق حتماً إلى آخر التطورات، ومن أبرزها اغتيال الولايات المتحدة لقائد فيلق القدس الإيراني قاسم سليماني، والرد الإيراني على هذه العملية.
من جانبها، ذكرت قناة “الميادين” الفضائية أن الوفد سيؤكد خلال الزيارة على وقوف سورية إلى جانب إيران في مواجهة التحديات المشتركة، كما سيقدم الوفد واجب العزاء وإعلان التضامن مع إيران في هذه المرحلة.
هدنة وتعزيزات
١١ كانون الثاني/يناير
قتل 18 مدنياً بينهم ستة أطفال السبت في قصف شنته طائرات حربية سورية في محافظة إدلب في شمال غرب البلاد، وفق ما أفاد المرصد السوري لحقوق الإنسان، عشية بدء اتفاق هدنة روسي – تركي يضع حداً لتصعيد عسكري جديد لقوات النظام.
تزامنت هدنة إدلب مع تعزيزات في ريف حلب لقوات الحكومة.
وأعلن المركز الروسي للمصالحة في سوريا في بيان إنه اعتباراً من الساعة 11,00 ت غ الخميس “دخل وقف إطلاق النار حيز التنفيذ في منطقة خفض التصعيد في إدلب، وفقًا لاتفاق مع الجانب التركي”.
وعلى الرغم من الهدنة التي تم الإعلان عنها في آب/أغسطس، كثفت القوات السورية بدعم من القوات الروسية في الأسابيع الأخيرة أعمال القصف التي أوقعت أعداداً كبيرة من الضحايا في إدلب، آخر معقل للفصائل الإسلامية والمقاتلة التي يلقى بعضها الدعم من أنقرة، ما تسبب في تدفق النازحين إلى تركيا.
وفي كانون الأول/ديسمبر وحده، نزح نحو 284 ألف شخص بسبب القصف والمعارك، لا سيما في جنوب محافظة إدلب، بحسب الأمم المتحدة.
ويأتي إعلان وقف إطلاق النار غداة اجتماع في اسطنبول بين الرئيس الروسي فلاديمير بوتين ونظيره التركي رجب طيب أردوغان اللذين لم يتطرقا سوى بإيجاز للوضع في سوريا في بيانهما المشترك. لكن أنقرة دعت روسيا الثلاثاء إلى “وقف هجمات النظام” السوري على إدلب وطالبت باحترام الهدنة التي تم التوصل إليها في آب/أغسطس الماضي.
ترحيب بالإغاثة
١١ كانون الثاني/يناير
رحب سكان في محافظة إدلب السورية، التي تأوي ثلاثة ملايين نسمة نحو نصفهم من النازحين، بحذر بقرار مجلس الأمن الدولي تمديد آلية إيصال المساعدات الإنسانية عبر الحدود، فيما نبهت منظمات إغاثة من مخاطر تقليص العمل بها.
ومنذ العام 2014، يجدد مجلس الأمن الدولي سنوياً تفويض إدخال المساعدات عبر أربعة معابر حدودية إلى مناطق خارجة عن سيطرة قوات النظام السوري. إلا أنه في 20 كانون الأول/ديسمبر، واجه تمديد التفويض رفض كل من روسيا والصين.
وبعد مفاوضات ثم سلسلة من التنازلات بين الدول المعنية، صوت مجلس الأمن الجمعة لصالح تمديد التفويض لكن لمدة ستة أشهر فقط على أن يقتصر إيصال المساعدات على نقطتين حدوديتين مع تركيا حصراً.
ويربط معبر باب الهوى تركيا بمحافظة إدلب (شمال غرب)، الواقعة بمعظمها تحت سيطرة هيئة تحرير الشام (جبهة النصرة سابقاً) وتشهد بين الحين والآخر تصعيداً عسكرياً لقوات النظام، فيما يربط معبر باب السلامة تركيا بمناطق سيطرة الفصائل الموالية لأنقرة في شمال سوريا.
وتعد إدلب ومحيطها أبرز منطقة خارجة عن سيطرة قوات النظام، التي تصعّد بين الحين والآخر عملياتها العسكرية فيها، ما يدفع بموجات نزوح تزيد من حجم وعدد المخيمات المنتشرة فيها وخصوصاً بالقرب من الحدود -التركية.
يستفيد من المساعدات العابرة عن الحدود، بحسب مكتب الأمم المتحدة لتنسيق الشؤون الإنسانية، أربعة ملايين سوري، بينهم 2,7 مليون في شمال غرب سوريا و1,3 مليون في شمال شرق البلاد.
واعتبرت منظمة “سيف ذي شيلدرن” أن اليوم ليس الوقت المناسب لتقليص العمل بالمساعدات العابرة للحدود. وأضافت أن القرار الأخير يظهر أن “سياسات الدول الأعضاء أهم من تأمين سقف ينام الأطفال تحته”.
ويلغي قرار مجلس الأمن الأخير إيصال المساعدات عبر معبرين، أبرزهما معبر اليعربية مع العراق، والذي عادة ما كان يُعتمد لإيصال المساعدات إلى المناطق الواقعة تحت سيطرة المقاتلين الأكراد في شمال شرق البلاد، وحيث تنتشر أيضاً مخيمات نازحين عدة.
عميد الأسرى
١٠ كانون الثاني/يناير
أعلنت السلطات الإسرائيليّة ليل الخميس-الجمعة الإفراج المبكر عن سجينين سوريين أحدهما صدقي المقت الذي يمضي عقوبة بالسجن بعد إدانته بالتجسّس لحساب دمشق، في إطار عمليّة تبادل معقّدة سهّلتها روسيا.
وصدقي المقت درزي من مواليد بلدة مجدل شمس في الجولان في 1967. وحكم عليه في 2015 بالسجن أحد عشر عاماً بتهمة التجسّس والخيانة والاتّصال بعميل أجنبي ونقل معلومات إلى سوريا في أوقات الحرب.
وذكرت سلطات السجون الإسرائيليّة في بيان قبيل منتصف ليل الخميس الجمعة “سيتمّ إطلاق سراح السجين الأمني صدقي المقت غداً، العاشر من كانون الثاني/يناير قبل انتهاء مدّة سجنه”.
وكان المقت أسيرا في السجون الاسرائيلية وتم الافراج عنه في آب/أغسطس من عام 2012 بعد 27 عاماً قضاها في السجون الاسرائيلية .
ووصل المقت، الذي وصفه الاعلام السوري الرسمي، بـ”عميد الأسرى السوريين” الجمعة إلى مسقط رأسه في مجدل شمس.
وذكرت وسائل إعلام إسرائيلية أن الإفراج عن المقت وأبو صلاح تأخر لأن الرجلين كانا يريدان العودة إلى بلدة مجدل شمس في الجولان بدلاً من التوجه إلى سوريا.
وقال مكتب رئيس الوزراء الإسرائيلي بنيامين نتانياهو إنّ الإفراج عن الرجلين يندرج في إطار “بادرة حسن نية” بعدما استعادت اسرائيل رفات الجندي زخاري بوميل الذي فُقِد منذ اجتياحها لبنان في صيف 1982.
فقد زخاري بوميل في معركة بين القوات الإسرائيلية والقوات السورية قرب قرية السلطان يعقوب اللبنانية القريبة من الحدود مع سوريا في حزيران/يونيو 1982، بعد اجتياح الجيش الإسرائيلي للبنان لوقف نشاط الفصائل الفلسطينية المسلحة ضد أراضيها.
وقامت روسيا التي تتمتع بعلاقات مميزة مع الدولة السورية بتسهيل إعادة رفات الجندي الاسرائيلي إلى إسرائيل.
غارة على حلفاء إيران
١٠ كانون الثاني/يناير
قتل ثمانية مقاتلين على الأقل من الحشد الشعبي العراقي جراء غارات نفذتها طائرات مجهولة ليل الخميس الجمعة على مواقع تابعة للفصيل الموالي لإيران في شرق سوريا قرب الحدود العراقية، وفق ما أفاد المرصد السوري لحقوق الإنسان الجمعة. وذكر أن “طائرات مجهولة استهدفت مستودعات وآليات للحشد الشعبي في منطقة البوكمال” في محافظة دير الزور، “محدثة انفجارات عدة”.
ونفى متحدث باسم التحالف الدولي بقيادة واشنطن لوكالة فرانس برس أن تكون قواته قد شنّت أي ضربات في المنطقة.
ومنذ الأربعاء، تعرضت ثلاث قرى على الأقل في ريف البوكمال، لضربات شنتها طائرات مسيّرة مجهولة الهوية ولم توقع خسائر بشرية، وفق المرصد.
وتتنشر في ريف البوكمال مجموعات مسلحة موالية لطهران، التي تتمتع بنفوذ كبير داخل مؤسسة الحشد الشعبي والفصائل المنضوية تحت لوائها.
وتعرضت فصائل الحشد لصفعة قوية مع مقتل نائب رئيس هيئتها أبو مهدي المهندس الذي كان يُعد رجل طهران الأول في العراق، إلى جانب الجنرال الإيراني النافذ قاسم سليماني، بضربة أميركية قرب مطار بغداد في الثالث من الشهر الحالي.
وكان سليماني يعدّ مهندس السياسة الإيرانية في دول المنطقة لا سيما العراق وسوريا، وتقاتل المجموعات الموالية لإيران في سوريا إلى جانب قوات النظام.
وأطلقت إيران الأربعاء 22 صاروخاً على قاعدتي عين الأسد في غرب العراق، وأربيل في الشمال رداً على اغتيال واشنطن لسليماني ورفاقه، على وقع تصاعد التوتر في المنطقة.
التعادل القاتل
٩ كانون الثاني/يناير
اقتنص المنتخب السوري تعادلاً مثيراً من نظيره منتخب قطر ٢\٢ اليوم الخميس في الجولة الأولى من مباريات المجموعة الثانية لبطولة كأس أمم آسيا للشباب تحت ٢٣ عاماً في تايلاند والمؤهلة لأولمبياد طوكيو ٢٠٢٠.
وتقدم العنابي القطري بهدف في الدقيقة الأولى عن طريق يوسف عبد الرزاق ثم استفاد الفريق من هدف عكسي سجله السوري يوسف محمد بالخطأ في مرماه في الدقيقة ٢٢. ولكن منتخب سوريا لم يستسلم ورد بهدف عن طريق عبد الرحمن بركات في الدقيقة ٣١ قبل أن يخطف أحمد دالي هدف التعادل القاتل لسوريا في الدقيقة الرابعة من الوقت بدل الضائع للمباراة.
مقتل أربع جنود أتراك
٨ كانون الثاني/يناير
قتل أربعة جنود أتراك الأربعاء في تفجير سيارة شمال شرق سوريا، بحسب ما أعلنت وزارة الدفاع التركية.
وكان الجنود يقومون بدوريات عندما وقع الهجوم في المنطقة التي سيطرت عليها القوات التركية بعد العملية الأخيرة ضد المقاتلين الأكراد العام الماضي.
ولم تكشف الوزارة مزيداً من التفاصيل عن مكان الانفجار أو الجهة المسؤولة عنه.
وشن الجنود الأتراك الذين يدعمون مقاتلين سوريين معارضين، هجوما على وحدات حماية الشعب الكردية السورية التي تدعمها الولايات المتحدة في تشرين الأول/أكتوبر 2019.
وتقول أنقرة إن تلك الوحدات “إرهابية” ومتفرعة من حزب العمال الكردستاني الذي يشن تمردا ضد تركيا منذ 1984.
وتدرج تركيا وحلفاؤها الغربيون حزب العمال الكردستاني على القائمة السوداء.
وشنت تركيا في السابق عمليتين عسكريتين شمال سوريا، ضد تنظيم الدولة الإسلامية في 2016 وضد وحدات حماية الشعب الكردية في 2018.
القيصر في “سوريا الروسية”
٧ كانون الثاني/يناير
التقى الرئيس السوري بشار الأسد الثلاثاء نظيره الروسي فلاديمير بوتين في دمشق، وفق ما أورد حساب الرئاسة السورية على مواقع التواصل الاجتماعي، في زيارة مفاجئة هي الأولى من نوعها إلى العاصمة السورية منذ اندلاع النزاع قبل نحو تسع سنوات.
وأعلنت حسابات الرئاسة أن بوتين وصل “دمشق فى زيارة التقى خلالها الرئيس الأسد في مقر تجميع القوات الروسية” في العاصمة.
ونشرت صورة للأسد وهو يصافح بوتين وجلس قربهما ضباط روس. وأوردت أن الرئيسين “استمعا إلى عرض عسكري من قبل قائد القوات الروسية العاملة في سوريا”.
وهنأ الأسد الضباط والعسكريين الروس بمناسبة عيد الميلاد، معرباً “عن تقديره وتقدير الشعب السوري لما يقدمونه من تضحيات إلى جانب أقرانهم من أبطال الجيش العربي السوري”.
وقدّم بوتين بدوره التهاني لقواته العاملة في سوريا بمناسبة عيد الميلاد، بحسب المصدر نفسه.
وسبق لبوتين أن زار سوريا في كانون الأول/ديسمبر 2017، لكن زيارته اقتصرت حينها على قاعدة حميميم الواقعة على الساحل السوري غرباً، والتي تتخذها روسيا مقراً لقواتها.
وتعد روسيا أحد أبرز حلفاء الحكومة السورية إلى جانب إيران، وقدمت لها منذ بداية النزاع في العام 2011 دعماً دبلوماسياً واقتصادياً، ودافعت عنها في المحافل الدولية خصوصاً في مجلس الأمن الدولي حيث منعت مشاريع قرارات عدة تدين النظام السوري.
واستخدمت روسيا حق النقض (الفيتو) 14 مرة ضد مشاريع قرار حول سوريا، كان آخرها في كانون الأول/ديسمبر ضد مشروع قرار قدمته الكويت وألمانيا وبلجيكا لتمديد المساعدة الإنسانية للأمم المتحدة عبر الحدود لأربعة ملايين سوري لمدة عام، وتريد موسكو خفضها
وساهم التدخل الروسي منذ أيلول/سبتمبر 2015 بقلب ميزان القوى في النزاع لصالح الجيش السوري ومكنه من تحقيق انتصارات عدة في مواجهة الفصائل المعارضة وتنظيم الدولة الإسلامية على حد سواء.
by Syria in a Week Editors | Jan 8, 2020 | Syria in a Week - EN
The following is a selection by our editors of significant weekly developments in Syria. Depending on events, each issue will include anywhere from four to eight briefs. This series is produced in both Arabic and English in partnership between Salon Syria and Jadaliyya. Suggestions and blurbs may be sent to info@salonsyria.com.
Ghosts in Paris
6 January 2020
A special court will be held in Paris on Monday for the trial of twenty-four suspects including twenty-one French nationals who went for jihad in Iraq and Syria in 2014 and 2015, most of whom are presumed dead.
The suspects in this so-called “ghost-trial” had adopted an extremist Islamists ideology either in a clandestine mosque or with an extremist leadership. They were eager to join the Islamic State, especially after it declared the establishment of the “caliphate” in 2014.
The suspects (French nationals and a Moroccan, Algerian, and a Mauritanian) were between the ages of twenty and thirty when they left France shortly before or after the Paris attacks in January of 2015.
Only five will be present in the court on charges of engagement in a vicious gang for terrorist purposes. The rest are still officially under prosecution, however, most of them died in bombing or suicide attacks, according to testimonies by families and information gathered by investigators.
The current suspects did not deny their interest in the Islamic State, but they denied their involvement in a criminal gang.
The trial is scheduled to last until 17 January.
Half a Million Deaths
5 January 2020
Since its onset nine years ago, the Syrian war has left more than three hundred and eighty thousand people dead, including one hundred and fifteen thousand civilians, according to a new tally by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) on Saturday.
The SOHR documented the killing of three hundred and eighty thousand and six hundred and thirty-six people since the onset of the conflict, including more than one hundred and fifteen thousand civilians, adding that the civilian tally includes around twenty-two thousand children and more than thirteen thousand women.
The last SOHR tally on 15 March 2018 reported the killing of more than three hundred and seventy thousand people.
As for the non-civilian casualties, the SOHR documented the killing of more than one hundred and twenty-eight thousand members of government forces and allied militants from Syrian and non-Syrian nationalities, half of them were Syrian soldiers, in addition to one thousand six hundred and eighty-two members of Hezbollah, which has been publicly fighting alongside Damascus since 2013.
In contrast, more than sixty-nine thousand people were killed from opposition and Islamic factions and the Syrian Democratic Forces, which are spearheaded by Kurdish units – and were able to eliminate the Islamic State’s “caliphate” with US support.
More than sixty-seven thousand militants were killed from the Islamic State, Tahrir al-Sham (previously Nusra), and foreign militants in other radical factions.
These tallies include people whose death by bombardment during battles was documented by the SOHR, but it does not include those who died as a result of torture in government detentions, missing people, and kidnapped people by various parties. This group is estimated to be at around eighty-eight thousand people.
In addition to human loss, the conflict has left massive destruction in the infrastructure, estimated by the United Nations to be around four hundred billion dollars. It also caused the displacement of more than half the population inside and outside the country.
“I Will Not Forget” Soleimani
3 January 2020
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Friday said that the Syrian people “will not forget” the stance of the Iranian military leader Qasem Soleimani, who was killed in a US strike in Baghdad, in supporting his country’s army in the nine-year conflict, while the opposition condemned the “pivotal” role he played in Syria.
The head of Quds Force in the Revolutionary Guard Corps Qasem Soleimani and the deputy chief of the Iraqi Popular Mobilization Committee Abu Mahdi al-Mohandis were killed early Friday in a US missile attack that targeted their car near Baghdad international airport, raising fears of an open conflict between Washington and Tehran.
Tehran is considered the most prominent allies of Damascus. It has provided major political, economic, and military support for Damascus since the start of the conflict. It managed, with the help of allied groups, to tip the balance of powers on the ground in favor of Syrian government forces on several fronts.
Soleimani was Iran’s envoy to Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon and responsible for coordinating with armed groups allied to Iran in these countries.
After the onset of the conflict in 2011, Iran initiated a credit line that has reached five and a half billion dollars today, in addition to sending military consultants and fighters to support the Syrian army in its battles against opposition factions.
The two countries signed a military cooperation agreement in the summer of 2018 by which Iran provides support needed to rebuild the Syrian army and defense industries.
In contrast, Syrian opposition figures and groups abroad said that Soleimani’s death is an end of a “war criminal” due to his role in the conflict.
Idlib Closed Off
2 January 2020
The UN Security Council, which held a closed meeting called upon by Paris and London to discuss the situation in Idlib in northeast Syria, failed to reach an agreement on a resolution to extend the delivery of humanitarian aid which expires on 10 January.
Sources said that the United States supported a request by France and the United Kingdom for the meeting to convene starting at 15:00 GMT.
Some diplomats hope that countries in the Security Council will once again deliberate in the meeting on the issue of extending the work of the mechanism to deliver humanitarian assistance across the border to four million people in Syria.
This mechanism, which provides for the delivery of assistance through border posts not under the control of the Syrian government, is set to expire on 10 January.
The mechanism currently utilizes four border posts, including two with Turkey, one with Jordan, and one with Iraq.
On 20 December, Russia objected to the extension of the mechanism in its current format, seeking to reinforce its Syrian government ally’s control over the country. Russia says that the situation on the ground has changed after the government retook control of more territories. It gave a counter-proposal that provides for the cancellation of two of the current four posts and extends the mechanism for six months rather than one year.
A Quarter Million
2 January 2020
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that up to two hundred and fifty thousand people were fleeing toward Turkey from Syria’s northwest Idlib region after weeks of bombardment by Russian and Syrian government forces.
Turkey already hosts some 3.7 million Syrian refugees, the largest refugee population in the world, and Erdogan said it was taking steps with some difficulty to prevent another wave from crossing its border.
With winter worsening an escalating crisis, the United Nations has said some two hundred and eighty-four thousand people had fled their homes as of Monday. Up to three million people live in Idlib, the last rebel-held swathe of territory after Syria’s nearly nine-year civil war.
“Right now, two hundred thousand to two hundred and fifty thousand migrants are moving toward our borders,” Erdogan told a conference in Ankara. “We are trying to prevent them with some measures, but it is not easy. It is difficult, they are humans too.”
Towns and villages have been pounded by Russian jets and Syrian artillery since a renewed government assault last month, despite a deal agreed last September by the leaders of Turkey, Russia, and Iran to ease tensions.
Massacre of Students
1 January 2020
At least eight civilians, including four children, were killed on Wednesday in a missile attack by government forces that hit a school in Idlib governorate in northwest of Syria.
Since mid-December, government forces and their Russian ally have intensified airstrikes against the area that is mostly under the control of Tahrir al-Sham and where less influential militant factions are also deployed. Government forces have advanced on the ground despite a ceasefire reached in August and calls by the UN to de-escalate.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that surface-to-surface missile strikes targeted the town of Sarmeen in the eastern countryside of Idlib and hit a school and other areas in the town.
The Syrian government, which controls more than seventy per cent of Syrian territory, says that the Idlib battle will decide the situation in Syria.
The Lowest Toll
31 December 2019
The nine-year conflict in Syria has registered in 2019 the lowest toll of deaths, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).
The SOHR has documented the death of eleven thousand and two hundred and fifty militants and civilians in 2019, adding that the number of civilian deaths is three thousand and four hundred and seventy-three people, including one thousand and twenty-one children.
Syria witnessed fierce fighting in 2019 on three fronts.
In March, the US-supported Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) ousted the Islamic State from the last territory it held in far east Syria near the border with Iraq.
In the summer, as in recent weeks as well, Syrian government forces escalated their military campaign against Idlib, which is under control of jihadist.
Battles in the summer in the area which hosts three million people and militants left around one thousand civilian deaths.
Turkey and allied militant factions launched a cross-border military operation in eastern Syria to oust Kurdish fighters which Ankara considers to be “terrorists”.