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Syrian Government Strikes Back
Published on Monday, 30 Jul 07:00 am
At MEES press time on 27 July fierce fighting was continuing in Damascus and Aleppo and the authorities appeared to have halted and partially reversed the gains made by the surprise opposition offensive which began on 15 July and acquired significant momentum with the 18 July assassination of a number of senior regime figures including President Bashar al-Asad's brother-in-law. At the moment the loyalist armed and security forces enjoy a preponderance of firepower which is partly negated by the exigencies of urban warfare, and neither side looks as if it is about to land a knockout blow (although State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said on 26 July that there is concern “that we will see a massacre in Aleppo, and that's what the regime appears to be lining up for”). In an otherwise confused situation there were only two certainties: that the Security Council will remain paralyzed; and that the Syrian opposition will fail to present a united and coherent front.
At the Security Council, it is becoming clear that the longer the Syrian crisis drags on, the more bitter the recriminations are becoming. After the deputy US ambassador to the UN, Jeffrey Delaurentis, announced on 25 July that “since this Council failed to shoulder its responsibilities,” the US would turn to alternatives such as the “Friends of Syria” group of nations, Russian ambassador Vitaly Churkin declared that "such a policy has been followed by Washington and a number of other capitals since the beginning of the crisis in Syria and this has significantly exacerbated it," adding that the US would "bear the responsibility for the likely catastrophic consequences of such steps." Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov was even blunter, describing the Americans' failure to condemn the 18 July assassinations as "a direct justification of terrorism" and adding that "to put it mildly, we don’t understand the refusal of our partners to condemn the terrorist attack in Damascus."
As for Syria's fragmented opposition, the latest candidate to unite the various factions inside and outside the country is one of the most senior defectors from the Asad regime, Gen Manaf Tlas, the son of former defense minister Mustafa Tlas. In an interview in the Saudi daily Asharq al-Awsat on 26 July, Gen Tlas declared that "I left Syria…to try to help the best I can to unite the honorable people inside and outside Syria to set out a road map to get Syria out of this crisis…a group from inside and outside Syria should cooperate to accomplish this phase." However, he emphasized that he "did not leave Syria to lead the transitional period" and warned against any Iraqi-style wholesale purge of the institutions of state, saying that "there are many people in the regime whose hands are not covered in blood…we should preserve the national institutions in Syria and preserve the state and tackle only those who committed wrongs in handling the crisis."

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