Regime, Rebels Bolster Forces for Qusayr Battle

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

The Syrian army backed by Hizbullah fighters bolstered its positions in the embattled opposition stronghold of Qusayr on Saturday, as rebels prepared for a renewed assault, raising fears for trapped civilians.

The opposition Syrian National Coalition issued a statement saluting rebel fighters in the town, including new battalions that have arrived in recent days.

"There are ongoing clashes in northern Qusayr, and the opposition fighters are fighting with everything they've got," Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights watchdog, told Agence France Presse.

"Regime forces are reinforcing the sites that they have north of the city, including Dabaa airport and Jawadiya," he added.

The group said at least 15 tanks were massed at government-held points north of Qusayr, which is considered a key strategic prize by both the regime and the rebels.

It sits on the route between the capital Damascus and the coast, and lies near the Lebanese border, providing a key rebel conduit for weapons and fighters.

The Syrian opposition said Friday that rebel reinforcements had reached the area.

The fight for the town, which began nearly two weeks ago, has raised fears about the safety of thousands of civilians still trapped inside.

Abdel Rahman, whose watchdog relies of a network of activists, doctors and lawyers on the ground, said around 1,000 wounded people were trapped inside the town.

"The medical situation is very bad," he said.

The Syrian National Coalition, the key opposition umbrella group, praised the rebel forces in the town.

"The heroes of the Free Syrian Army prove every day that they are worthy of the responsibility that the people have entrusted them with," the group said.

"The people will continue their struggle to liberate their land, whatever it takes, and will force Hizbullah to withdraw its forces from all of Syria," it added.

The party, a staunch ally of the Syrian regime, has dispatched fighters to help put down the uprising that began more than two years ago with peaceful protests against President Bashar Assad.

Some members of Lebanon's Sunni community have also crossed into neighboring Syria to fight alongside the Sunni-led rebels forces, encouraged by local clerics.

Despite an official policy of neutrality on the Syrian conflict, Lebanon has found itself increasingly embroiled in its neighbor’s civil war.

The continued fighting has raised concerns about the prospects for a peace conference expected to convene in Geneva this month to seek a political solution to the conflict.

The Coalition reiterated on Saturday that "the immediate halt of military operations by regime forces, Hizbullah and Iran are the primary conditions for participation in the conference."

At least 114 people were killed throughout violence in Syria on Friday, including 45 rebels, 40 civilians and 29 government troops, the Observatory said.

Comments 15
Thumb benzona 01 June 2013, 17:29

My thoughts are with the free Syrian army, the civilians. They're about to get murdered by the hezb Ebola terrorists and their Chabiha friends and allies.

May God be with you.

Tayyib, je vais en ville now. Badkon chi?

Missing -karim_m2 01 June 2013, 18:59

lol!

Default-user-icon Abu Qahafa (Guest) 01 June 2013, 20:01

Your thoughts should have prevented people like you to join the Qatari-Israeli-Turkish enemies. All the monies that your side received will not save you from the bitter end that you disserve

Missing toivas 01 June 2013, 21:10

Stupid comment

Default-user-icon delta forces (Guest) 02 June 2013, 01:29

god bless 7izb alla

Thumb condor 01 June 2013, 17:45

I was reading on some international news sites that western intelligence had spotted more than 100 HA multiple rocket launchers in addition to heavy artillery pounding Qusayr. Add to this the syrian army's aerial and land bombardment and one can imagine the hell that is now called Qusayr.

Missing ArabDemocrat.com 01 June 2013, 18:06

التحيه لشعب سوريا الأبي والعار لحزب إيران في لبنان

Thumb lebanon_first 01 June 2013, 20:09

Ya Assad AKA roar, the "filth" won't be "eradicated". each Sunni your chabbiha or the hezbollah milicia kills creates 10 new extremists. And this from a pool of 1 billion people who wanted nothing but some basic rights. Do ur math.

Thumb geha 01 June 2013, 18:11

one is forced to admit the bravery of the FSA facing hordes of the elite of the Syrian army, he elite of hizbushaitan and iran too, with all the weapons they have at hand, be it airplanes, helicopters, tanks, chemical weapons, rocket launchers,...
these are brave men.

Thumb Marc 01 June 2013, 19:29

Both sides are going to keep fighting until they are all exhausted...

Syrian Regima + HA + FSA + Nusra = I D I O T S

Thumb lebanon_first 01 June 2013, 20:13

Karim why do u hate all Qaeda? Qaeda attacked the USA. Not Lebanon. Hezbollah attacked Lebanon, invaded Beirut, put red lines to the army, invited Israelis to bomb us, and sclerosed lebanese institutions. Now The milicia is sending invitation cards to Qaeda to Lebanon.

Default-user-icon Toivas (Guest) 01 June 2013, 21:06

Time is never on the dictators' side in an uprising. They might take Qusayr today but how will they hold it and how many "martyrs" can Hezbollah suffer? At the end of the day, in a year or two, Hezbollah and Assad will be so weak that Israel would have achieved its objectives without loosing a single soldier

Missing realist 01 June 2013, 22:56

I thought qusair fell two weeks ago?, Hezbollah following the same miscalculations of Israel in south Lebanon. Welcome to the Syrian quagmire.

Missing sanctify 02 June 2013, 00:55

Hizbollah are in a very difficult situation nowadays. They ( and we) know that if the Assad regime in Syria is defeated, they will be isolated and grow weaker with time. So sending in troops to Syria comes out of their fear of existence but that's quite risky as well, specially if battles like Qusayr take longer than expected. In this case there's a real danger of losing support withing their party so sending their fighters there was not an easy decision. The FSA knows this well and at the end, they may lose Qusayr but they are trying hard to make the battle last longer and inflict as much damage to HA as possible. Quite a complicated scenario.

Default-user-icon Cyrusthegreat (Guest) 02 June 2013, 17:31

We should send in the Takavaran to finish the job.