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WAR REPORT
Syria rebels claim jet downing as army advances in Aleppo
by Staff Writers
Damascus (AFP) Aug 13, 2012


US says reviewing all options on Syria
Aboard Air Force One (AFP) Aug 13, 2012 - The United States said Monday it has not ruled out any option to bring about the departure of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, following renewed speculation about a possible no-fly zone.

White House spokesman Jay Carney was asked about comments by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Turkey that sparked a new round of questions about a stepped-up Western role in the violence-wracked country.

"The president and his team have ruled out no option as we try to bring about, with all of our partners and with the Syrian people, the diplomatic transition that is so desperately needed in Syria," he said.

But Carney did not explicitly refer to a no-fly zone and insisted the current US approach -- of aiding rebels with non-military supplies as well as imposing sanctions on the regime -- was putting pressure on Assad.

"We review all options as you would expect and will continue to do so," he said, in comments which did not seem to mark a new departure for US policy.

On Sunday, Clinton was asked after talks with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu whether operational planning being conducted by Washington and its allies included a possible no-fly zone to protect Syrian civilians.

"The issues you posed in your question are exactly the ones the minister and I agreed need greater in-depth analysis," she said.

"It is one thing to talk about all kinds of potential actions, but you cannot make reasoned decisions without doing intense analysis and operational planning," she added.

Washington insists Assad must leave office as part of any solution to the 17-month-old civil conflict in Syria, which has left more than 21,000 dead.

But there appears to be little appetite in Western capitals for another military intervention in the Middle East, even the imposition of an aerial exclusion zone like that imposed in Libya by NATO last year.

US military officers have warned that the imposition of a no-fly zone could quickly escalate into a broader intervention, as it did in Libya.

The Pentagon on Monday said the Syrian regime was employing more air power in its war with the rebels.

"We've seen a very troubling and despicable uptick in attacks from the air, perpetrated by the Syrian regime," Pentagon spokesman George Little told reporters.

"This is yet another example of their depraved behavior."

Asked if the Pentagon was moving towards enforcing a possible no-fly zone, he said: "We plan for contingencies."

He added: "The focus right now of course is ending the bloodshed in Syria."

Syrian rebels claimed they downed a fighter jet Monday in what would be a major coup for the opposition but the regime seized the upper hand in Aleppo as it advanced into a new rebel-held district.

Foreign ministers of the Islamic Cooperation Organisation called on heads of state gathering in Mecca for a summit on Tuesday and Wednesday to expel Syria from the 57 nation-bloc as shocking videos emerged showing alleged rebel atrocities in the Aleppo area.

State media said a military plane on a training mission crashed in the east of the country after suffering a malfunction and that the pilot had ejected.

But the Free Syrian Army, which has been calling for the international community to arm it with anti-aircraft weapons as it battles escalating regime attacks from the sky, claimed it shot down the Russian-made MiG in the eastern province of Deir Ezzor.

"With God's help, a MiG 23 plane was downed in Muhasen on Monday morning, by the hands of the Ahfad Mohammed (Grandchildren of Mohammed) Brigade," said Captain Abul Laith, whose group is part of the FSA.

Another group calling itself the "Revolutionary Youth of the Land of the Euphrates" distributed a video showing a man identified as pilot Mufid Mohammed Suleiman, surrounded by three armed men.

"My mission was to bomb the town of Muhasen," said the purported pilot.

FSA spokesman Kassem Saadeddine identified the pilot as Colonel Mufid Mohammed Sleiman and said he was a member of the Alawite minority community of President Bashar al-Assad and his inner circle.

"He is a member of a squadron I used to fly with... before I defected," Saadeddine told AFP via Skype. "I served with him for 15 years, and he is a staunch enemy of the revolution."

If confirmed, the attack would be the first time the rebels have succeeded in downing a Syrian plane since Assad's regime launched an increasingly brutal crackdown on protests 17 months ago.

International concern is mounting over how to end a conflict that has triggered a major humanitarian crisis and sent around 140,000 Syrians fleeing to neighbouring countries, with scores of people being killed every day.

At least 103 lost their lives on Monday, 58 of them civilians, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The opposition has accused the regime of increasingly resorting to firing from fighter planes, particularly on the second city of Aleppo which has witnessed some of the fiercest fighting in recent weeks.

Opposition umbrella group the Syrian National Council issued a new appeal for the establishment of no-fly zones similar to those set up over Libya during last year's conflict.

SNC head Abdel Basset Sayda told AFP the rebels wanted "two no-fly zones, one in the north near the Turkish border, and another in the south near the border with Jordan."

Washington said that Assad's government was employing more air power in its war with the rebels.

"We've seen a very troubling and despicable uptick in attacks from the air, perpetrated by the Syrian regime," Pentagon spokesman George Little told reporters.

Asked if the Pentagon was moving towards enforcing a possible no-fly zone, he said: "We plan for contingencies."

The decision by Islamic bloc foreign ministers to recommend Syria's expulsion was reached "based on consensus with an absolute majority" in favour, the bloc's secretary general Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu said after a preparatory meeting in the Saudi Red Sea city of Jeddah.

It will be put to heads of state at their summit in Mecca on Tuesday and Wednesday for "final approval," he added.

Sources close to the meeting said that only Algeria and Iran -- Syria's closest ally -- were against the recommendation.

"We certainly do not agree agree with the suspension of any OIC member," Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said after the meeting.

"We have to look for other ways, means and mechanisms for resolving conflicts and crises," he said.

-- Grisly footage --

--------------------

Meanwhile, grisly footage of apparent atrocities in the Aleppo area emerged, appearing to show rebels callously throwing bodies off a post office building, while another video showed a man, blindfolded and bound, as his throat was savagely cut.

A crowd gathered around several bodies crumpled on the ground outside a building said to be in Al-Bab, near Aleppo, before another three victims were hurled one-by-one from the rooftop.

In another video, a blindfolded man with his hands tied behind his back is forced down on to a pavement in Aleppo, calling out: "I would rather die by a bullet."

As the group chanted "Allahu Akbar" an assailant forced what appeared to be a small knife repeatedly across his throat as his blood spurted onto the pavement.

Both sides in the increasingly vicious conflict have been accused of human rights violations as reports of cold-blooded killings mount, although the authenticity of the latest videos could not be verified.

Syria's army gained some ground as it advanced into a new rebel-held area of Aleppo, the northern metropolis seen as pivotal to the outcome of the conflict.

"With tanks, Syria's regime forces have stormed the west of the district of Saif al-Dawla," said the Observatory. "They are now clashing with the rebels, and parts of Salaheddin are being shelled."

Rebels in July took over several districts but regime forces last week reclaimed most of the Salaheddin district that neighbours Saif al-Dawla.

More than 21,000 people have been killed since March last year, with fighting escalating after the failure of outgoing international envoy Kofi Annan's peace plan and the regime hit by an increasing number of defections by high-ranking officials.

The latest to flee Monday was Syria's top representative at the UN Human Rights Council.

burs/kir

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