BFF-37 Syria’s Idlib buffer zone hangs in balance

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Syria’s Idlib buffer zone hangs in balance

BEIRUT, Oct 14, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – A horseshoe-shaped demilitarised zone
around Syria’s opposition stronghold of Idlib is aimed at averting a massive
government assault on the area, but its implementation has been riddled with
challenges.

The buffer, agreed by regime ally Russia and rebel backer Turkey last
month, was meant to be free of heavy weapons by October 10 and of jihadists
by October 15.

Here is how the events unfolded:

– ‘Bloodbath’ –

After a string of Russian-backed victories this year, Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad set his sights on Idlib, the largest piece of territory still
held by Syria’s beleaguered rebels.

For weeks, regime forces massed on the edges of the province, stepping up
bombardment since early September and dropping leaflets calling on residents
to surrender.

That prompted a chorus of international warnings against an offensive.

US President Donald Trump cautioned that “the world is watching”, as
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he feared a “bloodbath”.

On September 10, the United Nations warned that an assault could create
the century’s “worst humanitarian catastrophe”.

A day later, its Secretary General Antonio Guterres said that Idlib “must
not be transformed into a bloodbath”.

– Russia-Turkey accord –

On September 17, Erdogan and Russian President Vladimir Putin met in
Russia’s Black Sea resort of Sochi and agreed to create a 15-20 kilometre
(nine to 12 mile) buffer zone around the Idlib region.

According to the deal, the zone would separate rebel and regime zones and
would be monitored by the two sponsor countries.

The buffer would include parts of Idlib province and the neighbouring
regions of Aleppo, Hama and Latakia.

All factions in the planned demilitarised area were to hand over their
heavy weapons by October 10, and radical groups withdraw by October 15,
according to the agreement.

– Turkish convoys –

In mid-September, Turkey sent military convoys to its “observation posts”
in Idlib province.

Since then, Ankara has consolidated its military positions with near-weekly
convoys as the deadline for establishing the buffer zone approaches.

– Rebel, jihadist reactions –

On September 23, the National Liberation Front (NLF), a powerful Turkish-
backed rebel alliance in Idlib, cautiously welcomed the deal.

But it later said it was opposed to the deployment of Russian forces in
the buffer, and said Ankara promised them that patrols by Moscow would be
dropped.

On September 29, Jaysh al-Izza, a formerly US-backed Syrian rebel group
active in northern Hama province, rejected the deal and said the buffer
should be carved out equally from rebel and regime zones.

But the most powerful force in Idlib, an alliance known as Hayat Tahrir
al-Sham (HTS) that is led by former Al-Qaeda members, has not commented.

Hurras al-Deen, an even more hardline faction, has rejected it.

HTS, Hurras al-Deen, and other jihadists control more than two-thirds of
the planned buffer zone, making their compliance key to the deal’s success.

– Arms pullout –

Despite their different positions, rebels and jihadists were reported to
have completed the first task of removing heavy arms on time.

On October 8, the NLF said it had finished withdrawing heavy weapons from
the planned buffer zone.

The following day, on the eve of the deadline, the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights monitor said HTS and “other less influential jihadist groups”
also removed heavy arms from large parts of the demilitarised area.

On October 10, Turkey announced that the pullout was “complete”.

– Precarious deal –

On October 7, Assad told officials from his Baath party that the accord was
only “temporary”, and that Idlib would fall back under government control
soon.

Days later, on October 12, Syria’s army sent text messages to residents in
the planned buffer area, telling them: “Get away from the fighters. Their
fate is sealed and near.”

The same day, four leading aid agencies warned of massive humanitarian
consequences “if either the deal collapses or fighting escalates in areas not
covered by it”.

On October 13, opposition fighters launched two mortar attacks on regime
positions from within the buffer zone, killing two Syrian soldiers in Hama,
according to the Observatory.

And on October 14, the eve of the second deadline, the war monitor and an
AFP correspondent said no jihadists had been seen withdrawing from the buffer
zone.

BSS/AFP/RY/1918 hrs