Sectarian War Assad Started Is Getting Uglier

Sectarian War Assad Started Is Getting Uglier

No Apologies for Supporting Israel
If You Think Assad is a Monster, Wait to See His Son Hafez
Obama ignoring terror to please Iran

Syrian extremists, including al-Qaeda-affiliated fighters, have fired hundreds of rockets and mortar shells on two besieged Shiite-majority villages in the northwestern province of Idlib, a monitor said Tuesday.

The sectarian war Assad started is getting uglier every day.

At least seven people were reported killed in the shelling by the Army of Conquest alliance on the regime-held villages of Fua’a and Kafrayya on Monday and Tuesday. It was unclear if the victims were civilians or government troops.

Hundreds more were wounded in the bombardment.

Fighting continued around the two villages on Tuesday, with opposition forces including Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front battling regime forces and fighters from Lebanon’s Shiite Hezbollah movement.

The escalating clashes prompted concern in Damascus, where pro-regime militiamen and their families from the two villages held demonstrations asking to be sent there to defend them. The sectarian war Assad started is exploding.

Most of Idlib province, including its provincial capital, is now held by fighters from the Army of Conquest and other extremist groups after a sweeping offensive earlier this year.

Fua’a and Kafrayya are among the few remaining outposts of regime control in the province, and are now completely besieged. The sectarian war Assad started will only end in more destruction for Syria.

The Army of Conquest began an attack against the villages on July 15, saying it was retaliation for a regime offensive on Zabadani, the last extremist-held bastion along Syria’s border with Lebanon, earlier this month.

It said the attack would “give you a taste in the north of what our people are tasting in Zabadani”.

AFP contributed to this article.

Sectarian War Assad Started Is Getting Uglier

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 0
DISQUS:
Follow by Email
Facebook
Pinterest
LinkedIn