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WAR REPORT
Syria's Assad likely to defy rebel bombers
by Staff Writers
Beirut, Lebanon (UPI) Jul 18, 2012

Syria 'rapidly spinning out of control:' US defense chief
Washington (AFP) July 18, 2012 - Syria is "rapidly spinning out of control," US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said Wednesday, hours after a suicide bombing in Damascus killed three top Syrian security officials.

"It's obvious that what is happening in Syria represents a real escalation in the fighting," Panetta told reporters in Washington alongside British counterpart Philip Hammond, who agreed with the Pentagon chief's assessment.

Panetta reiterated US demands for President Bashar al-Assad to step down immediately and allow a peaceful transition, accusing him of having ignored repeated appeals from the international community to stem the violence.

He was speaking hours after a suicide attack in Damascus killed at least three top security officials, the first time in the 16-month anti-regime uprising that a bombing has targeted members of Assad's inner circle.

Warning that the situation was "rapidly spinning out of control," Panetta said the international community must "bring maximum pressure on Assad to do what's right, to step down and to allow for that peaceful transition."

Hammond said he "absolutely" agreed with Panetta's assessment, adding that the violence was getting "closer and closer to the heart of the regime."

"What we're seeing is an opposition which is emboldened, clearly an opposition which has access increasingly to weaponry, probably some fragmentation around the edges of the regime as well," Hammond said.

Several Gulf countries are believed to be supplying weapons to the Syrian rebels, often through the Turkish border.

Panetta also stressed that the Assad regime was responsible for ensuring that Syria's chemical weapons were safe and said the United States was working with its allies to ensure that sensitive sites were properly secured.

Both the Assad regime and the opposition "need to understand that the international community is determined to see an orderly and peaceful transfer of power in Syria, not least because of the significance of the presence of these chemical weapon stocks in the country which we do not want to see exposed to a situation that is out of control," Hammond said.

Syrian officials said the bomber struck as ministers and security officials were meeting at the heavily guarded National Security headquarters in Damascus.

Defense minister General Daoud Rajha, Assad's brother-in-law Assef Shawkat and the head of the Syrian regime's crisis cell, General Hassan Turkmani, were confirmed dead. Interior Minister Mohammed al-Shaar and General Hisham Ikhtiyar, head of National Security, were wounded, according to state media.

Syria's rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA) claimed responsibility for the deadly attack.

The brazen assault "just emphasizes the importance of the implementation of the Annan plan," Hammond said, referring to a peace deal by UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan, who is calling on the Security Council to order "consequences" for any failure to carry out his six-point plan.

British diplomats said Annan has asked the UN Security Council to delay a vote originally scheduled for Wednesday on a Western-backed draft resolution calling for sanctions against Syria.

The attack on regime insiders came as battles raged across Damascus and after the FSA -- comprising defected soldiers and civilians who have taken up arms against Assad's forces -- warned the government to "expect surprises."

More than 17,000 people have been killed in the uprising, according to regime opponents.



The bomb assassination of several key members of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's inner circle, including his brother-in-law, has shaken the beleaguered Damascus regime as it fights for survival amid a stubborn 17-month-old rebellion.

But it's unlikely that Assad will step down to end his family's 42-year dictatorship, which is rooted in the minority Alawite Muslim sect and has subjugated the mainstream Sunnis who comprise 75 percent of the population.

The dead include Defense Minister Gen. Daoud Rajiha; Maj. Gen. Assef Shawkat, the deputy defense minister and former chief of Military Intelligence who was married to Assad's sister Bushra; and Lt. Gen. Hassan Turkmani, deputy vice president and former defense minister considered a key Assad strategist.

State officials confirmed the deaths and said Intelligence chief Hisham Bekhtyar and Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim al-Shaar were wounded.

The assassination of such high-ranking figures may well prove to be a turning point in the revolution but the initial indications are that Assad and his lieutenants will tough it out.

Wednesday's bombing of the national security headquarters, one of the most heavily guarded buildings in Damascus, a few blocks from Assad's palace, could further undermine the power elite surrounding him.

In recent days, it's been badly hit by a series of high-profile defections.

The most significant is Brig. Gen. Manaf Tlass, a Sunni whose family has long been a pillar of the Alawite regime, defected last week, possibly with the connivance of French intelligence personnel. He's now in Paris.

Tlass, who commanded a brigade of the ultra-loyal Republican Guard, is a potential new leader of the rebel forces, although his family's complicity with the regime over the years could prevent that.

However, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius says Tlass, whose father was the long-serving defense minister under Assad's late father Hafez, has been in touch with the Syrian opposition.

The family of Maj. Gen. Rustom Ghazali, head of Military Intelligence's Branch 227 which has spearheaded the regime's brutal crackdown on the mainly Sunni opposition, was reported to have defected to Jordan several days ago.

Ghazali, or someone claiming to be him, denied that in a telephone interview with the pro-Assad Addounia TV channel.

But a senior source in the Free Syria Army, the rebels' main military force, insisted the Ghazali, 59, had himself defected after the regime tried to kill him.

Several Syrian ambassadors have also jumped ship and Turkey's foreign ministry reported Wednesday that two Syrian brigadier generals and several colonels were among a group of officers who crossed into Turkey Tuesday night.

Initial reports said Wednesday's attack was carried out by a suicide bomber.

There were indications later that the rebels had apparently been able to penetrate Assad's security apparatus to plant the bomb, made of TNT and military-grade C4 explosives, in the room where the high-ranking officials were meeting, and detonate it by remote control.

Either way, the rebels' infiltration into one of the most secure buildings in the capital marks a major blow for the regime as it faces an increasingly militarized opposition and holds out the possibility of more such bombings.

In the last few days, the FSA and other rebel units have for the first time fought pitched battles with Assad's regime in the heart of the capital, another blow to the regime's claim it's fighting foreign-backed "terrorists and criminal gangs."

Wednesday's bombing, and five later attacks in Damascus that apparently targeted intelligence offices and other symbols of state control, underlined how the long-disparate rebel forces are becoming more unified and better armed, largely due to weapons funded by Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

Some analysts say the rebels have achieved something approaching a balance of military capability with the regime, although they remain heavily outnumbered and outgunned by Assad's largely Alawite loyalists.

Indeed, Israel's, Military Intelligence reports that Assad is withdrawing troops from the Golan Heights, half of which is occupied by the Jewish state, to bolster his forces in Damascus.

Despite the defections, the army and the security services remain largely intact and show no obvious sign of abandoning him.

Until that changes, the regime, backed by its longtime ally Iran and Russia and China in the U.N. Security Council, will likely be able to hold on.

But more bombings like Wednesday's, stabbing directly at the heart of Assad's embattled regime, could significantly deepen its isolation and encourage other key figures to get out.

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Ban meets China's Hu seeking tougher action on Syria
Beijing (AFP) July 18, 2012 - UN chief Ban Ki-moon on Wednesday urged the Security Council to act to stop the bloodshed in Syria, after holding talks with Chinese leaders in Beijing hours ahead of a vote on fresh sanctions.

Ban said the Security Council -- of which China is a permanent member -- must unite and take action on the "very serious" situation in Syria, after meetings with China's President Hu Jintao and Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi.

"I have explained how serious the situation is now and all the leaders in China have also shared my view that this situation is very serious," Ban told reporters in Beijing after the meetings.

"Therefore, I sincerely hope that the members of the Security Council will be able to discuss with a sense of urgency and take collective action with a sense of unity.

"We cannot go on this way. So many people have lost their lives during such a long time."

Ban was speaking before news filtered through of a suicide bombing in central Damascus that killed defence minister General Daoud Rajha.

The Security Council will on Wednesday vote on a Western resolution renewing the UN mission in the country that calls for sanctions if the regime does not pull back heavy weapons.

But Syria's main ally Russia, one of the other five permanent Security Council members, has vowed to veto the Western-backed proposal, and diplomats say that Beijing has agreed to do the same.

China has twice joined with Moscow over the course of the 16-month conflict in blocking earlier resolutions critical of Damascus.

Ban has already urged China to use its influence to back a peace plan by UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan, who is calling on the Security Council to order "consequences" for any failure to carry out his six-point plan.

The UN leader, who is officially in Beijing for a China-Africa summit, has said that international inaction on Syria would be giving "a licence for further massacres".

After meeting with the UN chief, Hu issued a statement saying China would "earnestly fulfil our international responsibilities and obligations", without directly mentioning Syria.

But China has repeatedly warned against outside intervention in Syria.

"The life of Syria's current political leadership can only be determined by the Syrian people," said the People's Daily, mouthpiece of the ruling Communist Party, in an editorial on Tuesday.

"This is an internal matter and the international community should respect that."

Representatives of the Syrian National Council (SNC) -- an umbrella opposition group -- met ambassadors from the 15-nation Security Council, including Russian envoy Vitaly Churkin, to press them to back sanctions.

But Russia has branded as "blackmail" the bid to link renewal of the UN mission to the threat of sanctions, and has pledged to veto the resolution calling for sanctions.

The current 90-day UN mission in Syria ends on Friday and if no resolution is passed by then, it would have to shut down this weekend, according to diplomats.

Syrian state television said the suicide bomber targeted a meeting of ministers and security officials at the National Security headquarters in Rawda, a high-security district in the heart of the capital Damascus.

The attack came as battles raged across the city. More than 17,000 people have died since the revolt erupted in March last year.

Special envoy Annan and Ban have both called for the Security Council to impose "consequences" if Assad and the Syrian opposition fail to carry out Annan's peace plan.

Russia insists diplomatic pressure is enough. According to diplomats, President Vladimir Putin spoke with Hu at the weekend and the two agreed to oppose sanctions.



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WAR REPORT
Assad moving troops from Golan to Damascus: Israel
Jerusalem (AFP) July 17, 2012
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has moved army forces from the Golan Heights area next to Israel toward Damascus and other internal conflict zones, the Israeli army intelligence chief said on Tuesday. As fighting rages between Assad's forces and rebels trying to oust his government, he has moved troops from the Syrian side of the disengagement line that divides the Golan Heights between Syr ... read more


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