________________________________
 
Battle for Qusair raises threat of Syria partition 
By Amara MAKHOUL the 20/05/2013 - 21:43

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has lost 
control of northern and southern Syria and is focused on a strategic 
corridor linking the Mediterranean coast to Damascus. Will this 
accelerate the fragmentation of Syria? 
More than two years after the conflict began, Syria today is totally 
transformed. While experts discuss the 
threat of partition, on the ground, Syria is effectively a divided 
country.
"What the country is experiencing today is in fact a real partition - even if 
it’s not official," said Syrian anthropologist Randa Kassis – 
who is also a member of the opposition Syrian National Council – in an 
interview with a French radio station. “The Kurdish area (in the north) 
enjoys partial autonomy. The (western) coastal zone and the heart of 
Damascus is under regime control, and if we go south, in the Druze 
areas, the situation is ambiguous."
Fabrice Balanche, a Syria expert at the Lyon-based thinktank Gremmo 
(Groupe de recherches et d’études sur la Méditerranée et le Moyen 
Orient) notes that northern and southern Syria have effectively been 
divided since July 2012 with the fall of the northern province of Raqqa.
‘Liberated’ north slips from regime control

Over the past few months, northern Syria has not been under President 
Bashar al Assad’s control and is considered "liberated territory" by the
 rebels. Almost all border crossings with Turkey fell to opposition 
control during the spring and summer of 2012. Rebel fighters, who have 
long used Turkey as a rear base, are now able to move weapons, supplies 
and fighters – including jihadists - to the combat zones in Syria, 
including the commercial capital of Aleppo.
Most cities in the north are also managed by local rebel councils, 
which receive financial assistance from Western nations such as France. 
For nearly a year, the Syrian army has only sporadically bombarded rebel 
positions in the north, while the battle for Aleppo continues.
The conflict has also impacted Syria’s Kurdish community based near 
the Syrian-Turkish border, sparking what has been called the “Kurdish 
awakening”. 
"The Kurds have benefited immensely from the current situation in the north of 
the country," said Balanche. "They have always fought to 
establish a Kurdish area and enjoy relative autonomy."
For the moment, the Assad regime seems willing to let the north slip 
from government control. "From the beginning, the (regime’s) strategy 
has been to focus on the big cities," said Balanche, noting that the 
Assad regime has focused on strategic areas, including the capital of 
Damascus and the western coastal stronghold of the Alawite community.
Assad belongs to the Shiite Alawite sect that constitutes about 12 
percent of Syria's 22 million-strong population. A predominantly Sunni 
Muslim country, Syria has been ruled by the Assad family for more than 
four decades - a period that has seen Alawites dominate the political 
and military establishments.
In the south, arms across the Jordanian border
The regime strategy of focusing on Damascus and the Alawite 
coastal heartland helps explain why forces loyal to Assad have lost 
ground in the south. "The regime was overwhelmed in the south in early 
2013, losing control of the Jordanian border," said Balanche. 
The loss of control of the Syrian-Jordanian border has enabled the 
rebels to open a new front in southern Syria - with the help of Saudi 
Arabia. 
"The open border is clearly a Saudi front," said Frédéric Pichon, a 
Middle East historian, noting that the oil-rich Gulf kingdom has taken 
advantage of the opening to enter the Syrian fray as a counterweight to 
Qatar’s influence in northern Syria.
The Gulf kingdoms of Qatar and Saudi Arabia have a historic rivalry 
and a relationship defined by mutual distrust, which has increased since the 
2011 Arab uprisings.
The Saudi funneling of weapons to Syrian anti-government fighters 
over the Jordanian border was documented by a February report in the The New 
York Times, which noted that the shipments contributed to the small tactical 
gains by rebel forces this winter.
As the brutal Syrian uprising enters its third year, several fronts 
have appeared across the country, running along communal lines. Pichon 
however doubts there will be formal splits along these battle lines. 
"There won’t be different states formed, but in fact different 
communities will control different zones - like in Iraq.”
But Syrian anthropologist and opposition figure Kassis believes the 
division of the country "is still very likely." She noted that, "even if Assad 
falls, the Alawite community will never leave the coastal area to the Syrian 
rebels, it’s impossible." 
All eyes on Qusair, the new battlefront

In recent weeks, a new battlefront has opened up, with the conflict 
focused on the corridor linking the coastal Alawite heartland to 
Damascus.
On Sunday, Syrian troops backed by Lebanese Hezbollah militias entered the 
rebel-held southern town of Qusair after an intensive military campaign.
The intensity of the latest fighting underscores the importance of 
Qusair for both sides. An overwhelmingly Sunni town located on the route 
connecting the Mediterranean coast with Syria’s interior cities – 
including Damascus - Qusair has served as a key post through which 
weapons and supplies have been smuggled across the Lebanese border.
According to Balanche, the Syrian army is currently conducting a 
"strategic counterinsurgency in which it wants to focus on the strategic parts 
of the country even if it means temporarily withdrawing from some regions such 
as the north or the south." 
As the Assad regime’s struggle for survival drags on, the focus has 
been shifting in this long, brutal war that has already claimed around 
80,000 lives. Last year for instance, the two sides were locked in a 
battle for control of the Damascus-Aleppo highway, connecting Syria’s 
two major cities.
Using Hezbollah to ‘feed Damascus’ 

There are several reasons for the latest shift of focus to the Damascus-coastal 
corridor. 
"First, we must feed Damascus," said Balanche, noting that the regime still 
holds the heart of the capital, which is a predominantly 
middle-class Sunni area. "But,” he added, “supplies to Damascus, whether food, 
goods or weapons, come from the coast.”
But the corridor linking Damascus to the coastal cities of Tartus or 
Latakia passes through Homs, the western Syrian province that has put up a 
strong resistance against the regime. "Therein lies the difficulty," 
said Balanche. "The Syrian authorities were forced to deploy substantial forces 
on the routes around Homs and Qussair in particular to secure 
the convoys."
Since the early days of the Syrian uprising, Homs has put up a strong 
resistance against the Syrian army. But this time, to be sure of 
winning, the Assad regime has called for reinforcements.
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah has acknowledged receiving “game-changing” 
weapons from Assad’s regime and has hinted that members of his movement are 
fighting alongside the Syrian military in the regions near the Lebanese 
border. "We will not leave the Lebanese Shiites, who live around Qusair, 
helpless," he said in a televised speech on the Hezbollah TV station, 
Al Manar, last month.
The strategy seems to be working with Syrian troops pushing deeper 
into Qusair on Monday. According to a British-based opposition group, at least 
28 Hezbollah fighters were killed in the latest fighting.
"Today, Qusair has become symbolic – like Baba Amr," said Balanche, 
referring to the Baba Amr neighbourhood of Homs, which put up a historic 
resistance before it was seized by the Syrian army in December 2011. 
“The regime needs victories to feed its propaganda."
 
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Source URL: 
http://www.france24.com/en/20130520-syria-country-divided-qusair-alawite-sunni-mediterranean-damascus

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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