The UN warns of a catastrophe for the civilians in the Syrian region of Idlib if the government seeks to retake the rebel stronghold by force. But talks with the presidents of Iran, Turkey, and Russia have failed to produce an alternative to a military assault against the province.
Extremists control Idlib
The International Crisis Group (ICG) reports [pdf, p5] that Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), “remains the single strongest armed faction in Idlib”. But other “jihadist factions also operate in the area” in addition to “mixed non-jihadist Islamist and nationalist factions” known as the National Liberation Front (NLF).
According to Stanford University’s Mapping Militant Organization programme:
[HTS] seeks to overthrow the Assad Regime and establish an Islamic state in the Levant that is governed by Shariah law…
[and] follows a brand of Salafi-Jihadism…
An unprecedented humanitarian emergency
3 million people live in the Idlib “de-escalation zone”, including parts of Aleppo, Lattakia, and Hama provinces.
UN humanitarian chief John Ging told the security council that any increase in fighting in the area, such as an attempt to take Idlib by force:
has the potential to create a humanitarian emergency at a scale not yet seen through this crisis.
And that a “worst-case scenario” will:
overwhelm all capacity to respond regardless of plans or funding made available.
The UN special envoy to Syria also warned that a “perfect storm” exists, saying:
The dangers are profound that any battle for Idlib would be […] horrific and bloody.
Idlib, a safe haven for refugees and for rebels
Idlib was declared a “de-escalation zone” during the Astana talks backed by Russia, Iran, and Turkey.
1.4 million of Idlib’s population are “internally displaced” peoples (IDPs) who depend on humanitarian aid, according to the UN.
IDPs fled to Idlib or were funnelled there by the state from other parts of Syria. This includes militants and their families who were transferred to Idlib as part of truce agreements, after being dislodged from eastern Ghouta and eastern Aleppo.
Airstrikes have already begun
Dozens of civilians have reportedly been killed by airstrikes this month and last according to the UN, and the (UK government funded) Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The Observatory also reports dozens of civilians killed by rebel groups based in Idlib, in separate incidents, over the past week alone.
Turkey’s Islamists
Turkey has long supported the HTS and the Free Syrian Army (FSA). In January this year, FSA rebels allied with the invading Turkish army to ethnically cleanse Afrin of its Syrian Kurdish population, and remove the Kurdish-led democratic government established there.
But Turkey has just designated HTS as a terrorist organisation, joining the US and EU.
According to the ICG:
Ankara has argued for a strategy of containment, giving it more time and space to separate Idlib’s so-called moderate opposition from transnational jihadists and to bring the region closer to a negotiated political solution.
Turkey’s shift in support for HTS may be part of an attempt to focus its attention on occupied Afrin.
Turkey also clearly fears a massive influx of additional refugees if the Idlib operation goes ahead.
A peaceful alternative?
The ICG report says that[pdf, p 2]:
There is no obvious solution for Idlib, given the large number of jihadist militants entrenched there and the unacceptably high cost of any attempt to remove them.
But the HTS, and the competing NLF, have arrested dozens of activists in August simply for expressing a desire for reconciliation with the government.
The state also seems less inclined to negotiate, now that it has an apparent opportunity to deal a ‘death blow’ against the rebels.
Stuck in the middle are nearly three million civilians.
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