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Conflicts

Syrian army on verge of major Aleppo victory

December 7, 2016

Troops loyal to President Bashar al-Assad are about to score one of their biggest victories in the country's war. Western leaders called for an "immediate" ceasefire as rebels fled from their last stronghold in Aleppo.

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Syrien Aleppo
Image: Getty Images/AFP/AMC/Z. Al-Rifai

Leaders from several Western states pushed for an immediate ceasefire in the embattled city of Aleppo on Wednesday as Syrian government troops advanced against the rebels.

"The most urgent goal remains an immediate ceasefire so that the United Nations can bring humanitarian aid to people in East Aleppo," said the leaders of Germany, the United States, the United Kingdom, France and Italy in a statement released in Berlin.

The leaders also accused Russia of obstruction at the UN Security Council and urged the UN to investigate reports that war crimes are being committed in Syria

Rebels proposed an "immediate" five-day truce earlier on Wednesday as they ceded territory they had clung on to since 2012. The opposition forces called for a UN-backed evacuation of 500 civilians, many of whom need urgent medical care. According to German news agency DPA, however, President Assad's government refused to give in, saying "if they do not leave we will continue our attack."

Late on Tuesday, the Syrian army and its allies made gains in the embattled city of Aleppo. President Bashar al-Assad's forces pushed into rebel-held areas of the Old City, essentially driving opposition forces out of their last urban stronghold.

Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said that the opposition groups have lost control of over 80 percent of their enclave in eastern Aleppo. The result, the watchdog said, was that rebels were being forced to fight "a war of attrition," swearing to never surrender as victory became less and less likely.

Later on Wednesday, SOHR announced that government forces had indeed retaken all of the Old City, but the news has not yet been confirmed by military sources. 

Russia, US trade accusations

Assad's renewed offensive has come under heavy international criticism for the humanitarian crisis it has exacerbated. Tens of thousands of city residents have become trapped between warring factions, with no way to receive much-needed food or medicine.

Yet the Western powers tasked with coming up with a plan for peace in Syria have been mired in disagreements that have stalled the peace process.

"We have been trying to find a way to get to the negotiating table ... but Assad has never shown any willingness," US Secretary of State John Kerry said at a meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Brussels on Tuesday. The US has also accused Moscow and Beijing of stalling the end of the conflict by refusing to back a UN Security Council measure on Monday that would have called for a seven-day ceasefire.

Russland und China blockieren UN-Resolution zu Feuerpause in Aleppo
Russia vetoed the France-drafted proposal for a humantarian truce at a Security Council meeting on MondayImage: picture-alliance/Photoshot

His Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov, however, said Assad had expressed willingness to make a deal to end the war, and that the resolution was an attempt by the US to buy time for the moderate rebels it supports.

"It looks like an attempt to buy time for the rebels to have a breather, take a pause and replenish their reserves," Lavrov said. He added that despite planned peace talks in Geneva this week, "a serious discussion with our American partners isn't working out."

The foreign minister has warned that the rebels will be "eradicated" if they refuse to withdraw all of their forces from eastern Aleppo. Moscow joined Damascus in rejecting the rebels' plea for a truce, despite the fact that shelling in Aleppo claimed the life of Colonel Ruslan Galitsky on Wednesday. It was Russia's third casualty in a week, after two nurses were killed at a makeshift hospital in the city.

Merkel: Western ambivalance 'a disgrace'

Speaking to a conference of her Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party on Tuesday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel called the situation in Aleppo "a disgrace," particularly the failure to create safe corridors for residents to receive humanitarian aid or to flee. She also slammed Russia for the many civilian victims of its airstrike campaign in support of Assad.

As government forces looked poised to make one of the most significant gains of the nearly 6-year war, tens of thousands of east Aleppo residents attempted to escape to other parts of the city.

rs, es/kms, se (AFP, Reuters, dpa)