Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Free Syrian Army grows in influence
Free Syrian Army grows in influence
May 1, 2026 1:30 PM

  The attack by the Free Syrian Army (FSA) on an air force intelligence base in the suburbs of the capital Damascus on November 16 has raised the profile of the band of army deserters, who are seeking to end President Bashar al-Assad’s long rule.

  Depending on whom you believe, the group is believed to number between 1,000 and 25,000.

  What is certain though, is that the deserters want to bring the Syrian government to its knees - by targeting its biggest strength, its 500,000-strong army.

  Speaking to Al Jazeera, Colonel Ammar al-Wawi, the commander of the FSA’s Ababeel battalion, said: "Our only goal is to liberate Syria from Bashar Assad's regime.

  "To put it simply, we carry out military operations against anyone who targets the peaceful protesters."

  The formation of the FSA was formally announced in July in a web video released by a group of uniformed defectors from the Syrian military, who called upon members of the army to defect and join them.

  The FSA has a facebook page where it posts statements and news from across the country regarding its latest offensives, recruits and clashes with government forces. The page has more than 11,500 fans.

  Wawi said the latest offensive on the air force base in the Damascus suburbs of Harasta follows a series of attacks that were "as serious and as effective".

  He said that, a day earlier, members of his Aleppo province-based battalion attacked Aleppo's airforce intelligence complex, located on the outskirts of city.

  "We were able to target one of the eight Battlefield Range Ballistic Missiles (BRBM) present there."

  Ulike the attack on the air force base in Damascus, Wawi said the offensive did not gain activists and media’s attention because the base was located in an uninhabited area.

  He listed other areas where his battalion had carried out attacks in the north of the country, including in the towns of Maaret al-Numan, Kafr Nabl, Jabal al Zawyeh and Kfar Roumeh.

  Military council

  Since July, the FSA has evolved to include 22 battalions that are spread across the country, said Wawi.

  He said those who refuse to follow commands from the Syrian military to crack down on protests turn to one of the battalions located in their province.

  On November 16, the FSA announced the creation of a temporary military council which it said aims to "bring down the current regime, protect Syrian civilians from its oppression, protect private and public property, and prevent chaos and acts of revenge when it falls".

  The council is chaired by Colonel Riyadh al-Asaad, who defected from the regular army to initially form the FSA.

  The council's leadership also includes four colonels and three majors.

  Wawi said that the FSA embraces more than 25,000 army deserters, including many high ranking officers.

  Colonel Rashid Hammoud Arafat and Colonel Ghassan Hleihel, from the ranks of the republican guards, are the latest high-profile defectors, he said.

  Speaking to Al Jazeera, Colonel Hammoud said that while he was in the regular army he kept in contact with the FSA and continued to provide them with advice and support.

  "But a few days ago, the FSA told me that I should announce my defection and encourage more soldiers to join their ranks. So I did," he said.

  Like many other army defectors, the colonel announced his defection in a video and posted it on the FSA’s facebook page.

  According to Wawi, so many soldiers and officers are defecting every day that he has lost count. He said they are continuously being organized into the different battalions.

  'False hope'

  Rami Abdel Rahman, the head of the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said that the figures for the membership of the FSA are exaggerated.

  He estimates that less than 1,000 soldiers have deserted the regular army.

  "I am in contact with defectors on the ground and I respect their decision to leave the government forces. But admiration is one thing and accuracy is another," he said.

  "The Free Syrian Army is giving people false hope that they have the required strength to topple the regime.

  "But one must keep in mind that the formal Syrian army is compromised of more than 500,000 soldiers, not to mention the hundreds of pro-government Shabbeeha [thugs].

  "So betting on the ability of the Free Syrian Army to overthrow Assad is a losing bet."

  'Legitimate role'

  While anti-Assad Syrians agree that their uprising, which started in March, must continue until the current government is toppled, they do not necessarily agree on the role of the FSA in it.

  Randa, a 24-year-old anti-government activist who lives in the Damascus suburb of Zabadani, said: "The FSA has unfortunately only been effective in tarnishing the peaceful image our revolution had possessed."

  However, Wael, a 27-year-old resident of the central city of Homs’ Baba Amr neighborhood, which saw major clashes between the regular army and deserters, said: "We cannot watch the government forces killing our friends and families and continue to say we want a peaceful revolution."

  The main opposition bloc, the Syrian National Council (SNC), has tried to maintain a middle-ground.

  They voiced their sympathy with deserters and acknowledged their "legitimate role of protecting unarmed protesters," but they also said that they did not support the FSA's offensives.

  "We must maintain the peaceful nature of the Syrian revolution and we are in continuous dialogue with the FSA to coordinate our political stance," Bassma Kodmani, the spokeswoman of the SNC, told Al Jazeera.

  However, it remains to be seen how much influence could the SNC exert on the FSA.

  Wawi told Al Jazeera: "Those who count on peaceful means only to overthrow the regime are delusional."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Demonstrators against Syria's President Bashar al-Assad take part in a march after Friday prayers in Kafranbel near Adlb November 18, 2011.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Afghans stranded in Pakistan's no-man's land
  Generations of Afghan refugees raised in Pakistan now face the prospect of returning to a home they have never known.   Ali Muhammad, an Afghan resident of Chaghai, in Pakistan's southwestern Balochistan province, was born in 1981, as his family was fleeing the Afghan-Soviet war for the relative safety of Pakistan....
690 Egyptians detained, claims rights group
  The Egyptian Defense Center of Human Rights has stated that 690 people were detained after the incident when fire was opened on civilians outside the Republican Guard HQ in Cairo last Monday morning and that there were children, women and elders among the detainees who were holding a pro-Morsi sit-in....
Maliki's Iraq: Rape, executions and torture
  Heba al-Shamary (name changed for security reasons) was released recently from an Iraqi prison where she spent the last four years.   "I was tortured and raped repeatedly by the Iraqi security forces," she told Al Jazeera. "I want to tell the world what I and other Iraqi women in prison...
Egyptians' missing Ramadan spirit
  While the notions of peace and cooperation are celebrated in the Muslim world at this time of year, Egyptians are struggling with those concepts during the holy month of Ramadan after the divisive military overthrow of the elected government.   Egypt's Muslim population, which makes up the majority of its 84...
Israel arrests 14-year-old US citizen
  On April 11, in one of the trailer caravans that house the Israeli military courtrooms at Ofer prison, three boys sat in the brown Israeli Prison Service shabas uniform. Their feet shackled, their eyes darting between the judge, their lawyers, and their families.   The youngest was 14-year-old Mohammad Khaleq, a...
Kurds flee for Iraq as Syria war slogs on
  As Syria's brutal war slogs on, some of the country's ethnic Kurds have been fleeing the chaos and destruction and taking refuge across the border in Iraq.   About 50,000 people live in the Domiz camp, located near the city of Duhok about 60 kilometers from the Syria-Iraq border. The camp's...
Asad's thugs massacres of Sunni families and children
  The pictures appear to tell a familiar story. In one a pile of bodies lies on a street corner, shot down, apparently where they were gathered. Among them is a girl in a red blouse, perhaps five years old, spread-eagled among a dozen other family members, some covered in sheets....
Amnesty accuses Israel of judicial bullying
  Two female Palestinian activists have gone on trial in an Israeli military court over their involvement in weekly demonstrations against an Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank.   Rights groups and activists said on Tuesday that the prosecution of Nariman Tamimi and Rana Hamadeh coincided with a rise in Israeli...
The return to Iqrit
  A dream long nurtured by hundreds of thousands of Palestinians made refugees during the establishment of the state of Israel has become a concrete reality at a small makeshift camp atop a windswept hill.   A dozen young men have set up the camp at a site in the Upper Galilee...
Jordan to host 'world's largest refugee camp'
  Al-Zaatari refugee camp near Jordan's northern border with Syria is the second largest refugee camp in the world. On days when violence in Syria worsens, between 2,000-4,000 Syrians flood into Zaatari, and the stories they tell are horrific.   "Things are happening in Syria that our minds couldn't even imagine," 65-year-old...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved