Syrian rebels
said on Wednesday they were under fierce government attack near the
Turkish border despite a cessation of hostilities agreement and a
representative cast doubt on whether U.N.-backed peace talks would go
ahead on March 9 as planned. The
agreement drawn up by the United States and Russia came into effect on
Saturday and has slowed but not entirely stopped a conflict that has
been going on for almost five years. Both the government and rebels have
accused each other of violations. The agreement does not include Islamic State or al Qaeda's Nusra Front, which is widely deployed in opposition areas. The
United Nations said on Tuesday a new attempt at peace talks would begin
on March 9 in Geneva, urging warring sides to ensure the cessation
agreement take hold to allow them to come to the table. But
opposition official George Sabra said the date for a resumption of
talks remained "hypothetical" as long as the truce did not fulfil
humanitarian demands including a release of detainees held by the
government. "What is the value of a
truce if its overseers - meaning America and Russia - do not push all
sides to abide by it?" Sabra told Arabic news channel Arabiya al-Hadath
on Wednesday. The White House said
it had seen a reduction in air strikes against the opposition and
civilians in Syria in recent days but was concerned by some reported
tank and artillery attacks. Washington
was also aware of reports of possible chemical weapons use by the
Syrian government, the State Department said, adding that it could not
confirm them but that they were being investigated. Israel said on
Tuesday Syrian forces had been dropping chlorine barrels on civilians
over the past few days. There was no immediate comment from Damascus, which has denied breaching the terms of the truce. The
opposition is pressing for full humanitarian access to rebel-held areas
and for detainees to be released - terms set out in a U.N. Security
Council resolution passed in December. Opposition officials say an increase in aid access has fallen short of what is required. A
senior U.S. official said Washington was working with Moscow to improve
access to besieged areas and the World Health Organisation said it had
delivered medical supplies to the besieged town of Mouadamiya on
Wednesday, after reporting some medicines had been removed from a
previous aid delivery. CHALLENGING President
Bashar al-Assad said in an interview broadcast on Tuesday that
insurgents had breached the deal from day one, and the Syrian army was
refraining from responding to give a chance for the agreement to last,
warning that there "are limits". Five
months of Russian air strikes have turned the momentum Assad's way in
the war that has killed more than 250,000 people and created refugee
crises in neighboring states and Europe. Antony
Blinken, deputy U.S. Secretary of State, said in Geneva that major and
regional powers were monitoring the cessation of hostilities to
"prevent any escalation" but it was a "challenging process". "The best possible
thing that could happen is for the cessation of hostilities to really
take root, and to be sustained, for the humanitarian assistance to flow
and then for the negotiations to start," he said. While
residents of some parts of Syria are describing an unusually calm
spell, rebels say government forces backed by Russian air strikes have
continued offensives in areas of strategic importance in northwestern
Syria. The Syrian government is
saying very little about military operations in those areas, where the
Nusra Front is widely deployed in close proximity to groups fighting
under the banner of the Free Syrian Army that have accepted the
agreement. A rebel official and the
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said
government forces pressed an offensive against insurgents in Latakia
province at the Turkish border on Wednesday. Fadi
Ahmad, spokesman for the First Coastal Division, an FSA group, said
government forces had brought in reinforcements for the battle and that
fighting was as intense as anything preceding the cessation of
hostilities. "The battles were today very fierce," he said. The
Syrian government, backed on the ground by Iranian forces and Lebanon's
Hezbollah, has prioritized securing the Turkish border through which
rebel groups are supplied with weapons from states seeking Assad's
downfall. The area being fought
over in Latakia overlooks the rebel-held town of Jisr al-Shughour in
neighboring Idlib province, and the Ghab Plain, where rebel advances
last year were seen as a growing threat to Assad. A
rebel commander in northern Syria said: "Battles continue in vital
areas that the regime wants, and where there was no truce in the first
place. There is bombardment and battles." "We
are in the fifth day and there is no change in these areas," he said,
in reference to areas in the provinces of Latakia, Homs and Hama. Fighting also flared anew in Aleppo between insurgents and an alliance including the Kurdish YPG militia, the Observatory said. A
report by the Institute for the Study of War showed Russian strikes in
support of government forces and their allies had hit a number of areas
in Aleppo, Idlib, Homs and Hama provinces since the truce deal took
effect. While battling Syrian
insurgent groups in Aleppo province, the YPG is also fighting Islamic
State with the help of a U.S.-led alliance further east. The group said
on Wednesday that 43 of its fighters were killed in an Islamic State
attack on two towns near the Turkish border at the weekend.
Syrian opposition casts doubt on U.N. peace talk plan

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