@yasss90 yasss90 schrieb:Die ISIS Gehört nicht zu der FSA
Was ist denn von "FSA" noch übrig?
Es ist nicht nur ISIS die Chaos anrichten und gegen "moderate"FSA und zivile Oppositionen vorgingen. Es sind jenste andere Gruppen, islamische Front, al Nusra, etc.
Letzte Nachricht war dass paar Kommandeure der Südfront (FSA) von alNusra gekidnappt worden sind.
"Im Süden Syriens wurde ein als moderat geltender Rebellenkomandant von der radikalen Al-Nusra-Front gefangen genommen. Der Vorsitzende des Militärrats von Daraa, Hauptmann Ahmad Naameh, sei am Samstagabend zusammen mit fünf weiteren Rebellenführern von Kämpfern der Jihadistengruppe festgenommen worden, erklärte die Beobachtungsstelle."
"Ahmed Fahad Al-Na'ameh, Jarba's bodyguard, was kidnapped by the Al-Nusra terrorists in Daraa province on Sunday.
Five other militants, including Khaled Al-Rafaei, ringleader of Hamd Al-Sani militant group in Al-Ghariyeh region and Moussa Al-Ahmed, commander of Al-Farsan Al-Awwal have also been abducted by the Al-Nusra in Daraa.
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The Al-Nusra Front, the Al-Qaeda franchise in Syria, has seized a rebel commander in the Southern province of Daraa, a monitoring group said on Sunday.
"Al-Nusra Front last night arrested the head of the Military Council of Daraa, Captain Ahmad Naameh, along with five other commanders of opposition factions," said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Activists also reported his capture, which took place amid significant rebel advances in the province, where Al-Nusra Front has only a limited presence.
"
http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13930215000403"Col. Ahmad Nemeh, long the head of the U.S.-backed Free Syrian Army in Syria’s southern Dara province, was taken by the Nusra Front, according to opposition advocates. Details of his abduction were not available, but some accounts said other commanders were seized as well.
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Nemeh regularly berated Western powers for what he termed their lackadaisical support for Syrian rebels. He also came under criticism for his close ties with the intelligence service of neighboring Jordan.
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In an apparent rebuff, Nemeh was excluded from a “southern front” formation of rebel units created this year with Western backing. In response, he recently formed his own Southern Syrian Revolutionaries Front. Both groups are seen as a counterweight to the rising influence in the south of hard-line Islamist groups, especially the Nusra Front.
The Al Qaeda affiliate has gained prominence for a series of military victories in southern Dara and Qunayterah provinces. Its prowess on the battlefield and growing presence in the south have worried Western and regional backers of the Syrian rebels.
"
http://www.latimes.com/world/middleeast/la-fg-wn-syria-rebel-commander-kidnap-20140504-story.htmlFSA im Kampf mit Islamische Front.
"On December 9, a group of Syrian rebel factions created yet another alliance, called the Syria Revolutionaries’ Front.
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Some Islamic Front leaders are clearly hostile to the new group and see it as part of a plot to destroy them.
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http://carnegieendowment.org/syriaincrisis/?fa=53910&reloadFlag=1 (Archiv-Version vom 07.04.2014)Über FSA "Südfront":
"The so-called Southern Front was created around two months ago and includes some 30,000 fighters from more than 55 mainstream rebel groups operating from the Jordanian border to the outskirts of Damascus and the Golan Heights, the rebels say.
The new alliance is in part aimed at alleviating Western concerns that providing greater aid to the fractious rebels would bolster Al-Qaeda-inspired groups and see heavy weapons fall into the hands of extremists."
http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index.cfm?method=home.regcon&contentid=20140501203687"In mid-February, opposition websites circulated a statement signed by 49 different rebel factions in southern Syria. Banding together as the “Southern Front,” they declared themselves to be “the moderate voice and the strong arm of the Syrian people.”"
http://carnegieendowment.org/syriaincrisis/?fa=55054Und zuletzt,
Rebellen (FSA) selber erklären, im Fall eines tatsächlichen Sturzes Assad im Verlauf dieses Krieges nicht fähig zu sein,
Die Regierungsfunktionen zu übernehmen.
Syria’s rebels admit they are unable to govern
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My Syrian contacts described a bitter stalemate: President Bashar Assad holds on to power, but he has lost control of major parts of the country. The rebels fight bravely, but they lack the organization and heavy weapons to protect the areas they have liberated. Meanwhile, Al-Qaeda extremists fester in the shadows. The opposition remains so fragmented that some rebels frankly admit they aren’t ready to govern, even if Assad should fall.
“We still need to find a leader,” concedes one rebel commander. “We are headless inside the country.”
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Rebel fighters spoke honestly about three key issues:
First, their military wing remains diffuse and disorganized;
the southern front has more than 55 brigades but lacks a unified command-and-control structure.
Second, Muslim extremists are gaining a foothold in the south, just as they did two years ago in northern Syria.
The Nusra Front, linked with Al-Qaeda, has set up checkpoints on some roads just north of the Jordan border.
Finally, Assad’s forces have regained control of many Damascus suburbs, essentially by starving the residents into submission.
"
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/Opinion/Columnist/2014/May-05/255180-syrias-rebels-admit-they-are-unable-to-govern.ashx#axzz30m2TqyBa (Archiv-Version vom 06.05.2014)