Syria Death Toll Tops 100,000, Rebels Lose Border Town

BEIRUT (Reuters) —
Members of the Free Syrian Army walk down the stairs holding their weapons in Aleppo’s Salaheddine district Wednesday. (REUTERS/Hamid Khatib)
Members of the Free Syrian Army walk down the stairs holding their weapons in Aleppo’s Salaheddine district Wednesday. (REUTERS/Hamid Khatib)

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s forces have retaken a town on the Lebanese border as they press an offensive against rebels in a conflict that has now cost more than 100,000 lives, activists said on Wednesday.

The army took full control of Tel Kalakh, driving out insurgents and ending an unofficial truce under which it had allowed a small rebel presence to remain for several months.

The fall of Tel Kalakh, two miles from the border with Lebanon, marks another gain for Assad after the capture of the rebel stronghold of Qusair this month, and consolidates his control around the central city of Homs, which links Damascus to his Alawite heartland overlooking the Mediterranean coast.

Like Qusair, Tel Kalakh was used by rebels in the early stages of the conflict as a transit point for weapons and fighters smuggled into Syria to join the fight against Assad.

Pro-Assad websites showed video footage of soldiers patrolling the town in armored cars and on foot.

“Terrorist groups infiltrated and terrorized the local people,” an army officer said in the video. “In response to the request of the local people, the army entered Tel Kalakh to cleanse the area and restore security.”

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights,
a pro-opposition monitoring group, said rebels left the town on Tuesday, retreating towards the nearby Crusader fort of Crac des Chevaliers. Three rebels were killed as the army moved in.

Six months ago, Assad’s opponents were challenging the president’s grip on parts of Damascus, but are now under fierce military pressure there, while their supply lines from neighboring Jordan and Lebanon have steadily been choked off.

Death Toll Tops 100,000

In response to Assad’s gains, achieved with the support of Lebanon’s pro-Iranian Hizbullah fighters who spearheaded the assault on Qusair, Western and Arab nations pledged at the weekend to send urgent military aid to the rebels.

Hizbullah’s involvement has highlighted the increasingly sectarian dynamic in the Syrian conflict. Hizbullah and Tehran back Assad, whose Alawite minority is an offshoot of Shi’ite Islam, while Sunni Muslim states such as Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar have stepped up support for the mainly Sunni rebels.

Radical Sunni fighters from abroad, some of them linked to al Qaeda, are also coming in to fight alongside the rebels.

Jordan’s King Abdullah said the war could ignite conflict across the Middle East unless global powers helped to convene peace talks soon.

“It has become clear to all that the Syrian crisis may extend from being a civil war to a regional and sectarian conflict…the extent of which is unknown,” the monarch told Asharq al-Awsat newspaper in an interview.

Prospects for proposed “Geneva 2” peace talks look bleak. Talks on Tuesday between the United States and Russia, which support opposing sides in Syria, produced no agreement on who should attend the conference or when it should be held.

The Observatory, which monitors violence through a network of security and medical sources in Syria, said the death toll from two years of conflict had risen above 100,000 — making it by far the deadliest of the uprisings to have swept the region.

It said the figure included 18,000 rebel fighters and about 40,000 soldiers and pro-Assad militiamen. But the true number of combatants killed was likely to be double that due to both sides’ secrecy in reporting casualties, it said.

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