Eastern Aleppo Militants Sending Signals They Are Ready to Surrender
Print This
By Staff report
Sputnik
Tuesday, Dec 6, 2016
|
Aleppo, Syrian rebels surrender. © AP Photo/ Syrian StateTV, via AP
|
Reports from newspapers loyal to armed rebels occupying eastern
Aleppo indicate they are preparing to surrender to government forces,
Israel Shamir, an expert in Middle Eastern affairs, told Radio Sputnik.
On Monday Syria's Al-Watan newspaper reported that armed groups
occupying eastern Aleppo are in talks with the Syrian army about giving
up their weapons and leaving the area, following a series of
demoralizing defeats to government forces.
Israel Shamir, an expert in Middle Eastern affairs, told Radio Sputnik
that reports from news outlets supporting the militants also give
credence to the story.
"Right now in Aleppo there is a kind of situation in which it is
very hard to try and predict anything. But there is a feeling that those
fighting in east Aleppo have begun to understand that they won't
succeed. Over the last two days reports have begun to appear in media
outlets which support the rebels, saying 'this is not the end, we are
losing Aleppo but it's not that bad, we will fight in other places.'
They are kind of consoling messages. This is, in principle, a sign that
they are ready to surrender Aleppo," Shamir said.
The analyst warned that although the liberation of Aleppo would
represent a major breakthrough, militants who have left Aleppo might
reappear in other areas of conflict.
"The militants might go to other conflict areas where they can earn
something. In Syria there are still cities held by militants and Aleppo
isn't the last city under their control. So, in any case, it's still not
the end of the war."
Nevertheless, the liberation of Aleppo is an important part of bringing peace to Syria, Shamir said.
"After all, the process of reconciliation between individual
leaders and individual bands of militants is going on at the same time
as the war in Aleppo. This process is actively ongoing – already about
1,000 such groups have made peace agreements with the government. And if
they can all agree, then that is only for the best. I think that
victory in Aleppo, which is not far away, will have an effect on
people's minds and supporters of this war will understand that it needs
to stop – this war has already gone on too long," he concluded.
On Monday a military source told RIA Novosti that militants are
currently controlling about 18 square kilometers in eastern Aleppo,
which accounts for about 40 percent of the territory they captured
during the 2012 invasion.
Over recent months, Aleppo has become major battleground in Syria,
engaging government forces, jihadists, and numerous opposition groups.
Eastern Aleppo is currently encircled by government troops, and the
fighting has affected thousands of civilians still trapped in the city.
Previous internationally mediated ceasefires have collapsed as militants
continued attacks and opposition failed to expel al-Nusra Front, which
is now known as Jabhat Fatah al Sham, from the city.
Source: Sputnik
|
Print This
|