Syrian Rebels report: Iranian snipers in Syria aiding Assad

Syrian rebel leader: Over 3,000 Iranian snipers have arrived in Damascus to join Assad’s regime, & claims army can no longer trust local troops.

By Roi Kais

 

Over the past few weeks more than 3,000 Iranian snipers have arrived in Damascus to aid the forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad, Al-Arabiya reported, citing a leader of one of the rebel groups operating in the civil war-torn country.

The head of the Joint Military Council, one of the groups fighting to maintain control of the city of Aleppo, told the Dubai-based television network that the Syrian army no longer trusts its local troops, who are now considered potential defectors.

טנקים סורי שננטש בעיר חלב (צילום: AFP)

Syrian tank abandoned in Aleppo – Archive photo: AFP

Meanwhile, a former Syrian soldier who defected from Assad’s ranks to join the rebels claimed that the embattled Syrian president is staying in an underground hideout located in a mountainous area behind his Damascus palace.

According to Khaled al-Hamoud, the building belongs to the president’s brother, Maher Assad, and his wife.

“The Syrian leader’s entire family is there,” he told Asharq Alawsat. “We have the exact coordinates of the site, as well as other strategic sites, including chemical weapon caches.”

 

Tactical retreat

Clashes in Aleppo continued on Saturday, activists reported. According to Al-Arabiya, the Free Syrian Army (FSA), another rebel group, claimed it was in control of around 60% of Syria’s largest city.

The FSA also said it was able to seize control of buildings housing radio and television stations, but later had to retreat after the regime’s army helicopters shelled them.

Captain Hussam Abu Mohammed, who participated in the battles around the buildings, said that the army’s retreat was “tactical.”

Rebels in Aleppo – Photo: AP

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights confirmed rebel forces withdrew from the district of Izaa, where the state television building is situated.

“Rebel forces planted explosives there, and regime forces shelled the area,” the Britain-based Observatory reported. “The rebels then withdrew from the area.”

Witnesses also said heavy explosions have been heard since dawn in Damascus. Helicopters were seen circling the sky.

Syrian rebels appeared to be renewing an offensive in the capital only two weeks after the government crushed a rebel run on the city. The fresh battles Saturday show that Assad’s victories could be fleeting as armed opposition groups regroup and resurge.

Syria’s uprising began in March 2011 with mostly peaceful protests against the regime, but the conflict has transformed into a civil war. Activists estimate 19,000 people have been killed.

 

AP contributed to the report.

View original Ynet publication at: http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4264219,00.html