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WAR REPORT
For Syria's Assad, Homs is the key target, not Aleppo
by Staff Writers
Beirut, Lebanon (UPI) Jul 22, 2013


Russia discussing giving loan to Damascus: Syria
Moscow (AFP) July 22, 2013 - Russia is discussing extending a loan to Damascus to help its war-battered economy and is still committed to delivering S-300 missiles in defiance of the West, a top Syrian official said Monday.

Visiting Syrian Deputy Prime Minister Qadri Jamil said after meeting Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Moscow that the issue of a Russian credit was discussed at the talks and Damascus hoped for an agreement by the end of the year.

"We discussed it, although it is still early to talk of concrete figures," Jamil said, quoted by Russian news agencies. "We hope that the question will be solved by the end of the year, experts are now discussing it."

President Bashar al-Assad's regime is in urgent need of new sources of cash to make ends meet as it battles rebels in a conflict that has lasted over two years and according to activists has killed over 100,000 people.

The Syrian official added that all arms agreements with Russia, including Moscow's controversial contract to deliver S-300 missile systems to Damascus, were still in place.

"All agreements between Russia and Syria in the area of arms deliveries are in place," the Syrian deputy prime minister said.

"Relations between Syria and Russia are strengthening for the good of peace in the region," he added.

Russia has angered the West and anti-Assad Arab states by refusing to halt military and other cooperation with the Damascus regime throughout the Syria conflict.

Moscow in turn has condemned the West for openly siding with the rebels and strongly rejected the idea that Assad should step down as a precondition for talks.

Lavrov did not comment on the possible credit or arms deliveries but said Russia was pressing on with efforts to hold a peace conference to end the bloodshed in Syria as soon as possible.

He complained it was the opposition, rather than the government, that was holding up the realisation of the plan to hold the conference in Geneva.

"We are continuing to meet with the government and all opposition groups to convince them all to accept the Russian-American initiative to convene the international conference as soon as possible," Lavrov said.

"Unfortunately, most of the opposition including the (main umbrella group) Syrian National Coalition, in contrast to the government, is not showing this readiness," he added.

Russia and the United States announced back in May the plan to bring representatives of Assad's regime and the opposition around the table for talks in Geneva but so far the momentum for holding the talks has faltered.

Forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad are escalating their offensive to push rebel fighters out of the divided strategic city of Homs in the central region, indicating their much-touted drive against the northern city of Aleppo was a feint.

The strategic objective seems to be to drive a wedge between rebel forces in the north and south and consolidate the center of the country and the western border with Lebanon that connects Damascus to the coastal stronghold of Assad's minority Alawite sect.

This, regional military analysts believe, would constitute a defensible swath of territory, with access to resupply from Iran and Russia, that Assad would continue to rule as sovereign, internationally recognized Syrian territory.

What impact such a move would have on the conflict that's been raging for nearly 2 1/2 years is not exactly clear. But Assad could use it to seek to bolster his claim to legitimacy and that his regime continues to rule, blunting diplomatic efforts to persuade him to relinquish power.

That would be a body blow for Assad's badly fragmented opponents, who are even fighting among themselves these days, and it would likely force the United States and Europe to decide whether to start funneling arms to the rebels groups or call it a day.

In light of the Americans' failure to start arms shipments, even after Assad's forces recaptured the strategic rebel-held town of Qusair in western Syria in early June, the prospect they would do so as Assad's forces, heavily reinforced by his Lebanese ally the Iranian-backed Hezbollah, reassert themselves seems remote.

This would be a big boost for Tehran, which is determined to keep Assad's regime in power as its strategic gateway to the Levant and the Mediterranean.

"Washington still lacks strategic vision" when it comes to Syria, observed regional analyst Tony Badran. "In contrast, the Iranians are securing their interests, consolidating a protectorate in western Syria adjoined to their base in Lebanon."

After more than two years of rebel advances, the pendulum has swung the regime's way since its forces, spearheaded by Hezbollah veterans of the long war against Israel, took Qusair.

While Iranian advisers and Hezbollah have built up Assad's forces and given them a more effective offensive capability, the rebels have squandered their gains, not to mention international support, by fighting among themselves.

That's a weakness that could cost them dearly.

Assad's forces are able to exploit these differences along with Washington's failure to deliver promised weapons shipments being held up by U.S. lawmakers who fear the arms could end up with jihadist groups such as the al-Nusra Front, arguably the most effective rebel force.

The fighting in Homs, Syria's third-largest city 90 miles north of Damascus, is reported to be fierce. The Syrian army is reported to have made some advances in the battered city, the cradle of the uprising to topple Assad in March 2011, but rebel resistance is said to be intense.

However, the rebels are reported to be running low on ammunition, and resorting to suicide attacks on the advancing regime forces, which might suggest that another Assad victory is within reach amid a fierce artillery and air bombardment of rebel positions.

Some rebels have reportedly sneaked out of the city because they have no weapons to carry on the fight.

After Assad's troops took Qusair, the word was that the regime's next target was Aleppo in the north, where rebels hold much of the city. In June, regime officials even announced the start of "Operation Northern Storm" aimed at overrunning the city.

But no major offensive took place there. "The Aleppo operation may have been a feint all along," drawing rebel forces away from Homs, Badran cautioned.

"A major operation in northern Syria was never the logical move after Qusair. The real, strategically coherent next step always was in Homs and Damascus and their countryside along the border with Lebanon."

This is just where regime forces and Hezbollah, whose fighters have become Assad's shock troops have been concentrating, seizing small towns and villages, and where they're likely to continue doing so in the months ahead.

Consolidating the western region south to the outskirts of Damascus, where the rebels hold several districts, and the corridor all the way to the Alawite heartland in the northwest appears to be regime's primary objective.

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