(Reuters) -
Fighters linked to al Qaeda have seized territory from a moderate Syrian
rebel group in a three-day campaign that has expanded their control
into one of the few areas of northern Syria not held by hardline Islamists. Syrian opposition activists and a military commander said the Nusra Front had taken several villages in Idlib province from the Syria Revolutionaries' Front led by Jamal Maarouf, a prominent figure in the moderate opposition to President Bashar al-Assad. "This
has happened before and we came through it. But this time the
mobilization is very large," said a military official in the Syria
Revolutionaries' Front. Twenty of the group's fighters had been killed on Monday, the official said. "Jamal
remains steadfast," said the official, who declined to be named because
he is not an official spokesman for the group. Speaking via Skype, he
added that the Syria Revolutionaries' Front had taken 25 Nusra fighters
prisoner. The Nusra Front
is al Qaeda's official affiliate in the Syrian civil war and one of the
strongest insurgent groups fighting to topple Assad. But it has been
overshadowed by the Islamic State, which has seized swathes of northern
and eastern Syria and is being targeted by U.S.-led air strikes. The
official said Islamic State fighters were reinforcing the Nusra Front
in the assault. But the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which
tracks the civil war, said it was another hardline group, Jund al-Aqsa,
that was providing the backup. "Nusra is making a lot of progress," said Rami Abdulrahman, who runs the Observatory. The
Syria Revolutionaries' Front is one of the biggest groups in the
Western-backed, moderate opposition to Assad. The United States plans to
expand military support to the moderate opposition as part of its
strategy to defeat Islamic State. Yousef
Abu Hillal, a secular activist in the Idlib area, said the advance
marked the biggest setback to date for Maarouf's group, which is loosely
defined as part of the "Free Syrian Army". The
Free Syrian Army is a term used to refer to dozens of groups fighting
to overthrow Assad. They have little or no central coordination and are
often in competition with each other. "This
is a blow to the Free Syrian Army rebels led by Maarouf and opens the
way for Nusra to expand further in the Idlib countryside " said Abu
Hillal. In western
outskirts of rebel-held Aleppo city, activists and rebel sources
confirmed that clashes also broke out near Khan al Assal and Kafr Na'a
towns between the militant Nusra group and the moderate Western backed
Hazm rebel group. Nusra
fighters attacked a checkpoint run by Hazem close to the
Damascus-Aleppo highway only a few kilometers away from an army base run
by Hazem, which along with other moderate rebels holds sway in the
western countryside of Aleppo, activists said. The
Syrian Observatory said a number of Nusra fighters were killed in the
clashes. Activists say the militants who have no presence in that area
of Aleppo had come from Idlib countryside.
Al Qaeda seizes territory from moderate Syrian group
![](CustomImage/get/700/500/b6ae532499378d0331058543.jpg)
Reuters
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.