The head of the
opposition Syrian Supreme Military Council cut short a visit to France on
Thursday and said he would head to Syria for talks with rebel brigades that
broke with the Western-backed coalition.
General Salim Idris, who
commands the coalition's military wing known as the Free Syrian Army (FSA),
said he would travel to Syria on Friday to meet fighters from the 13 groups
which rejected on Tuesday the authority of the Turkey-based coalition.
The rebel groups,
including at least three considered to be under the FSA umbrella, called on Tuesday
for the rebel forces to be reorganised under an Islamic framework and to be run
only by groups fighting inside Syria.
"We
should deal wisely with their statement. I returned from France so as to follow
up with the field commanders and work toward unifying all the ranks,"
Idriss told Reuters by telephone after arriving in Istanbul.
FSA spokesman Louay
Meqdad said Idriss hoped to solve the grievances of the dissident rebels, who
have long been wary of accepting leadership by figures who have spent much of
Syria's two-and-a-half-year civil war outside the country.
"He
will meet the brigades that rejected the coalition who are losing hope,"
Meqdad said. "The coalition maybe were not connected to the ground but now
they will communicate and try to resolve this."
Rebel brigades battling
President Bashar Al-Assad are fragmented and increasingly fighting internal
conflicts.
Reuters
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.