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WAR REPORT
Hezbollah faces swelling battle in Syrian mountains
by Staff Writers
Beirut, Lebanon (UPI) Feb 27, 2013


Pakistan denies plans to arm Syrian rebels
Islamabad (AFP) Feb 27, 2014 - Pakistan on Thursday strongly denied it had any plans to send weapons to Syrian rebels, following reports that Saudi Arabia was holding talks with it about arming the opposition.

A Saudi source said Sunday that Riyadh was seeking Pakistani anti-aircraft and anti-tank rockets for forces fighting to topple President Bashar al-Assad.

But Sartaj Aziz, the Pakistani prime minister's adviser on foreign affairs, denied the claim, telling reporters Pakistan has not considered such a proposal.

"The reports about arms supply to Syria are totally baseless," Aziz said.

Rebels have long sought anti-aircraft rockets to defend themselves against Syrian warplanes, which regularly bomb rebel-held areas with barrels loaded with TNT and other ordnance.

The United States has opposed arming the rebels with such weapons, fearing they might end up in the hands of extremists.

But Syrian opposition figures say the failure of peace talks in Geneva seems to have led Washington to soften its opposition.

Pakistani foreign ministry spokeswoman Tasneem Aslam said at a regular briefing that Islamabad did not supply arms to "entities", meaning rebel groups, and respected Syria's sovereignty.

"The policy guidelines for the sale of arms that we have are in line with the adherence to the purposes and principles of the UN charter," she said.

Pakistan recognised the right of all states to protect their security, she said, and wanted an end to the bloodshed in Syria.

She stressed that "regime change from outside by any means is something that Pakistan has persistently and very strongly opposed".

"We also have what is known as end users' certificate which ensures that our weapons are not resold or provided to a third country," she said.

"Our position on Syria has been very clear and has been articulated again and again."

The nearly three-year conflict in Syria has torn the country apart, killing more than 140,000 people including some 50,000 civilians, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Aslam said Pakistan had taken note of the humanitarian situation in Syria and wanted to see the Syrian people getting the supplies they needed.

Russia, a key ally of Syria, on Tuesday warned Saudi Arabia against supplying the rebels with shoulder-launched rocket launchers, saying it would endanger security across the Middle East.

On Wednesday, Syria shipped out a consignment of mustard gas for destruction at sea under a disarmament deal approved by the UN Security Council to dispose of its chemical weapons.

As Syria's civil war lurches toward its fourth year, Hezbollah and Iraqi Shiite irregulars it trained to fight the Americans are engaged in a swelling battle in the Qalamoun mountains on Lebanon's eastern border against Sunni rebels seeking to topple the Damascus regime.

Hezbollah has a special interest in winning this fight because right now it's centered on the Syrian town of Yabroud, the launchpad for a wave of morale-sapping jihadist suicide bombings in the Shiite group's strongholds in Beirut and the Bekaa Valley in northeast Lebanon.

The Iranian-backed Party of God, the most powerful military and political force in Lebanon, has come under intense pressure by its political rivals to end its military support for the beleaguered regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

It has flatly refused to disengage, despite mounting casualties. The Israeli military estimated Hezbollah's combat losses in Syria at 300 killed and more than 1,000 wounded, most of them since May 2013.

Last week Lebanese media reported that 27 Hezbollah fighters were killed in a rebel ambush near the Lebanese border.

Hezbollah refuses to disclose its casualties. But Lebanese security sources say they exceed the estimated 500 men killed the movement suffered in its 34-day war with Israel in the summer of 2006.

As Hezbollah has had to tighten security around its stronghold in south Beirut, a district known as the Dahiyeh, after a string of suicide operations and car bombs by Sunni jihadists who are fighting on the rebel side in Syria, its Shiite supporters have come under unprecedented attack on their doorsteps. Dozens have been killed and hundreds wounded.

The party is also facing growing discontent among its own people about the mounting casualty lists, not from fighting the traditional enemy, Israel, but other Arabs.

"Hezbollah and the Syrian military are rushing to launch a battle in Yabroud to mitigate the dangers of suicide bombers and explosives-rigged cars coming to Lebanon as discontent grows among party supporters," observed political columnist Antoine Ghattas Saab in Beirut's English language newspaper The Daily Star.

Saab noted that Hezbollah is preparing for "heavier involvement in the war next door by using new combat techniques and recruiting new fighters."

That, in turn, is likely to trigger a greater effort by the Sunni jihadists of the Abdullah Aziz Brigades, a Lebanon-based group named after Osama bin Laden's Palestinian mentor during the 1979-89 Afghanistan war against the Soviets, and the al-Nusra Front in Lebanon, the leading al-Qaida-linked group in Syria, to intensify their attacks on the Dahiyeh and other Hezbollah strongholds like the Bekaa Valley in the northeast.

Saab indicated that Hezbollah is currently making plans for new operations in the Qalamoun region, which commands key highways between Damascus and the heartland of Assad's supporters, the minority Alawite sect, in northwestern Syria.

Taking the rugged Qalamoun would also cut off a major artery for the rebels, who have held the region for much of the three-year-old war. It provides a strategic supply route to their forces in Syria from Sunni supporters in Lebanon.

Saab and other Lebanese sources said that Hezbollah commanders met Syrian leaders in Damascus "to prepare for a military campaign to occupy Yabroud, with the participation of Iraq cells."

In a new twist, Hezbollah is also reported to be using Iranian-supplied unmanned aerial vehicles to maintain surveillance on rebels forces in the Qalamoun range, and indeed inside Lebanon itself in a bid to detect car bombs.

Hezbollah's deputy secretary-general, Naim Qassem, claimed last week that most of the jihadist car bombs in recent weeks originate from rebel-held Yabroud and enter Lebanon through the Sunni-held border town of Arsal.

Israel's military believes that Hezbollah has as many as 200 Iranian-made drones.

Both sides have been skirmishing in the Qalamoun highlands that run along the Lebanese border, and Sunni areas in northeast Lebanon have come under rocket fire from Syrian territory.

Syrian warplanes have carried out several airstrikes on Yabroud and artillery shelling has intensified, which usually signals a major ground offensive can be expected.

An intensification of the Qalamoun fighting will further destabilize Lebanon, where sectarian rivalry is already seething.

"A defeat for the rebels in Yabroud could potentially encourage further retaliatory attacks inside Lebanon, both in the Bekaa and Beirut," warned security analyst Charles Lister, Visiting Fellow at the Brookings Doha Center in Qatar.

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