The
implications of Salim Idriss’s dismissal remain unclear on the battle ground
amid mutual accusations of treason between rebel commanders themselves who
divided between a supporter to the ousted Syria’s opposition Supreme Military
Council leader and an opponent.
“Idriss to end his visit to Dubai and
return to Turkey,” Journalist and cyber activist, Zaid Benjamin said in his
Twitter account according to his source. He added that 5 rebel commanders still
consider Idriss as SMC leader.
SMC announced Sunday in video statement that Idriss has been removed from his post, with Brigadier Abdullah al-Bashir appointed in his place.
Idriss’s
has led the main Syrian armed opposition group since Dec. 2012 after defecting
from Assad’s army where he held the position of general.
Zaman Alwasl source revealed that Interim
Defence Minister, who retracted his resignation due to Turkish and American
pressure, was behind Idriss dismissal.
Dr. Asaad Mustafa’s disputes with Idriss
have been escalated over leading and funding the rebel groups on the ground,
especially the moderate ones and whose operate under Free Syrian Army (FSA).
The source assured that Idriss ousting was
the main outcome of Mustafa’s closed meeting with Turkish and American intelligence,
which took place in the Turkish border city, Gaziantep, until the early morning
hours of Saturday.
In
December, Mustafa said “Salim Idriss has failed to make an institution,” according
to the London-based Daily Telegraph. “I don't think everything can continue in
the same way.”
The new SMC leader is head of the Quneitra
Military Council, which has been prominent in a current insurgent offensive in
southern Syria. His deputy, Colonel Heitham Afeisi, is a leading member of the
Syrian Revolutionaries Front, according to EA.
In relevant context, a well-informed source reported to Zaman Alwasl that
Col. Abdel Jabbar Al Aqidi will be “ a man next phase” and the top military
figure for the opposition in coming period, according to European and Saudi desire
in particular.
Al Aqidi has a good reputation within the armed
opposition and Islamic parties, besides his military experience on the ground,
some activists said.
Saudis
to Provide Antiaircraft Missiles
Saudi Arabia has agreed to provide
rebels there with more sophisticated weaponry, including shoulder-fired
missiles that can take down jets, according to Western and Arab diplomats and
opposition figures, The Wall Street Journal reports.
Saudi Arabia has offered to give the
opposition for the first time Chinese man-portable air defence systems, or
Manpads, and antitank guided missiles from Russia, according to an Arab
diplomat and several opposition figures with knowledge of the efforts. Saudi
officials couldn't be reached to comment.
The U.S. has long opposed arming rebels
with antiaircraft missiles for fear they could fall into the hands of
extremists who might use them against the West or commercial airlines. The
Saudis have held off supplying them in the past because of U.S. opposition. A
senior Obama administration official said Friday that the U.S. objection
remains the same. "There hasn't been a change internally on our view,"
the official said.
The U.S. for its part has stepped up
financial support, handing over millions of dollars in new aid to pay fighters'
salaries, said rebel commanders who received some of the money. The U.S.
wouldn't comment on any payments.
The focus of the new rebel military push
is to retake the southern suburbs of Damascus in hopes of forcing the regime to
accept a political resolution to the war by agreeing to a transitional
government without President Bashar al-Assad.
But if the Manpads are supplied in the
quantities needed, rebels said it could tip the balance in the stalemated war
in favour of the opposition. The antiaircraft and Russian Konkurs antitank
weapons would help them chip away at the regime's two big advantages on the
battlefield—air power and heavy armour.
"New stuff is arriving
imminently," said a Western diplomat with knowledge of the weapons
deliveries.
Rebel commanders and leaders of the Syrian
political opposition said they don't know yet how many of the Manpads and
antiaircraft missiles they will get. But they have been told it is a
significant amount. The weapons are already waiting in warehouses in Jordan and
Turkey.
Nasrallah vows
to win
Meanwhile,
the chief of Lebanon’s Shiite movement Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, vowed on
Sunday that the group would win against extremists fighting in neighboring
Syria, according to Agence France-Presse.
“We
will win this battle, God willing,” he insisted, after describing the group’s
role in the conflict in Syria as a fight against “takfiris” - extremist Sunni
Muslims.
Hezbollah,
a staunch ally of the Syrian regime, has dispatched fighters to the conflict to
bolster government troops, finally admitting their presence in April 2013.
The
three-year-old conflict in Syria has fuelled Sunni-Shiite tensions in
neighboring Lebanon and across the wider Arab world. It has drawn in militants
who fight on both sides and receive funding and arms from rival regional
powers.
“If
you want to prevent this region from falling into chaos that will not end for
decades, stop the war on Syria,” Reuters quoted Nasrallah as saying, addressing
all political forces in the Arab world.
Meanwhile the Syrian death toll
rose to 140,000 people, over 7,000 of them children, the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights said on Saturday.
Syria's nearly three-year conflict began as popular
protests against four decades of Assad family rule but changed into armed
insurgency under a security force crackdown.
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