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On 31 July, Syrian state media reported that nine rebels technicals were destroyed in the Aleppo countryside and 17 rebels were killed in Aleppo city. Three other rebels were arrested when the army captured a truck loaded with explosive devices.<ref>{{cite web|author=Syrian Arab News Agency: SANA, Damascus Syria - syria news |url=http://208.43.232.81/eng/337/2012/07/31/434132.htm |title=Syrian Arab news agency - SANA - Syria : Syria news :: |publisher=208.43.232.81 |date=31 July 2012 |accessdate=2012-07-31}}</ref> One day earlier, four other rebel technicals had been destroyed.<ref>{{cite web|author=Syrian Arab News Agency: SANA, Damascus Syria - syria news |url=http://208.43.232.81/eng/337/2012/07/31/433946.htm |title=Syrian Arab news agency - SANA - Syria : Syria news :: |publisher=208.43.232.81 |date=31 July 2012 |accessdate=2012-07-31}}</ref> On 31 July, Syrian state media reported that nine rebels technicals were destroyed in the Aleppo countryside and 17 rebels were killed in Aleppo city. Three other rebels were arrested when the army captured a truck loaded with explosive devices.<ref>{{cite web|author=Syrian Arab News Agency: SANA, Damascus Syria - syria news |url=http://208.43.232.81/eng/337/2012/07/31/434132.htm |title=Syrian Arab news agency - SANA - Syria : Syria news :: |publisher=208.43.232.81 |date=31 July 2012 |accessdate=2012-07-31}}</ref> One day earlier, four other rebel technicals had been destroyed.<ref>{{cite web|author=Syrian Arab News Agency: SANA, Damascus Syria - syria news |url=http://208.43.232.81/eng/337/2012/07/31/433946.htm |title=Syrian Arab news agency - SANA - Syria : Syria news :: |publisher=208.43.232.81 |date=31 July 2012 |accessdate=2012-07-31}}</ref>


Meanwhile, the rebels were still on the offensive when they launched an assault before dawn on a major Air Force Intelligence Unit in Aleppo's Zahraa district. Rebels armed with rocket propelled grenades attacked Aleppo's main military court as well as a police station and a branch of the ruling Baath Party in the city's southern Salhin district. Fighting continued in the Sallahaddin district. The opposition group, Syrian Observatory, reported that 40 policemen had been killed when rebels attacked two police stations.<ref name="newoffensive"></ref> Later during the day, the Free Syrian Army continued operating in the Salaheddine district, which the government admitted it did no longer fully control. "The regime has tried for three days to regain Saleheddine, but its attempts have failed and it has suffered heavy losses in human life, weapons and tanks, and it has been forced to withdraw," said Colonel Abdel-Jabbar al-Oqaidi, head of the Joint Military Council, one of several rebel groups in Aleppo. He announced the the FSA's primary objective was to secure the city centre "within days" by advancing district by district towards it, clearing out government forces, after he confirmed that opposition troops controlled the southern and eastern parts of the city.<ref name="armypounds"></ref> In contrast to this, British Foreign Office minister Alistair Burt said that there was evidence government forces had recaptured some territory in the city, but the opposition forces were still strong.<ref></ref> Meanwhile, the rebels were still on the offensive when they launched an assault before dawn on a major Air Force Intelligence Unit in Aleppo's Zahraa district. Rebels armed with rocket propelled grenades attacked Aleppo's main military court as well as a police station and a branch of the ruling Baath Party in the city's southern Salhin district. Fighting continued in the Sallahaddin district. The opposition group, Syrian Observatory, reported that 40 policemen had been killed when rebels attacked two police stations.<ref name="newoffensive"></ref> Later during the day, the Free Syrian Army continued operating in the Salaheddine district, which the government admitted it did no longer fully control. "The regime has tried for three days to regain Saleheddine, but its attempts have failed and it has suffered heavy losses in human life, weapons and tanks, and it has been forced to withdraw," said Colonel Abdel-Jabbar al-Oqaidi, head of the Joint Military Council, one of several rebel groups in Aleppo. He announced the the FSA's primary objective was to secure the city centre "within days" by advancing district by district towards it, clearing out government forces, after he confirmed that opposition troops controlled the southern and eastern parts of the city.<ref name="armypounds"></ref>


== Foreign reactions == == Foreign reactions ==

Revision as of 15:35, 31 July 2012

Battle of Aleppo (2012)
Part of the Syrian Civil War
Date19 July 2012 – ongoing
LocationAleppo, Syria
Result

Ongoing

  • By 28 July, rebels reportedly control 33%-50% of the city
  • By 31 July, FSA claims to be in control of the southern and eastern parts of the city
  • Kurdish YPG takes control of two additional districts.
Belligerents

Free Syrian Army

Kurdistan Region Popular Protection Units

Syria Syrian government

Commanders and leaders

Abdel Jabbar al-Oqaidi

Abu Abdu Bakri (Salaheddine district)
Unknown
Units involved

18 battalions

  • Brigade of Unification
  • Sham Falcons
Unknown
Strength
2,000–4,000 fighters
12,000 foreign fighters
(Syrian state media claims)
10,000 soldiers
(1,500 Shabiha; including the countryside)
100 tanks
400 armored personnel carriers
Casualties and losses
80 killed, 13 technicals destroyed 80 killed,
125 captured,
12–15 AFVs destroyed and 4–7 captured
142 civilians killed
Syrian civil war
Timeline
Civil uprising in Syria (March–August 2011)
Start of insurgency (Sept. 2011 – April 2012)
UN ceasefire; Rebel advances (May 2012 – Dec. 2013)
Rise of ISIS in 2014
U.S.-led intervention, Rebel and ISIL advances (Sept. 2014 – Sept. 2015)
Russian intervention (Sept. 2015 – March 2016)
Aleppo escalation and Euphrates Shield (March 2016 – February 2017)
Collapse of ISIS in Syria (2017)
Rebels in retreat and Operation Olive Branch
(Nov. 2017 – Sep. 2018)
Idlib demilitarization
(Sep. 2018 – April 2019)
First Idlib offensive, Operation Peace Spring, & Second Idlib offensive (April 2019 – March 2020)
Idlib ceasefire (March 2020 – Nov. 2024)
Opposition offensives and Assad overthrown (Nov. – Dec. 2024)
Transitional government and SNA–SDF conflict (Dec. 2024 – present)
Syrian War spillover and international incidents









Foreign involvement in the Syrian civil war
Foreign intervention on behalf of Syrian Arab Republic

Foreign intervention in behalf of Syrian rebels

U.S.-led intervention against ISIL

The Battle of Aleppo, also called "the mother of all battles", is an ongoing military confrontation in Aleppo, Syria between the Syrian Government and the Free Syrian Army. The battle began on 19 July 2012 as a part of the Syrian civil war. Clashes began with an offensive by the Free Syrian Army against the city, which is the largest in Syria and holds great strategic and economic importance.

Background

Large demonstrations against the government took place in Aleppo on 20 July, and were fired upon by Syrian army soldiers. North of Aleppo city, the Free Syrian Army had already established control of several cities and towns, including Tal Rifaat, Azaz and Al-Bab. The FSA had previously reached within nine miles of Aleppo. The battle began when dozens of FSA rebels penetrated deep inside the city. Residents had painted walls with the pre-Ba'athist flag, the symbol of the revolution.

Battle

Rebel attack

Violent clashes began on 19 July in several Aleppo districts. On 20 July, according to a report from Bloomberg News, the military shelled the city, a Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) spokesperson said in an e-mail that 190 civilians and at least 43 Syrian soldiers were killed and a Local Coordination Committee (LCCs) spokesperson added that "dozens of missiles fell in the city, and many houses were destroyed and flattened." Five explosions were heard in Aleppo early the next morning.

On 21 July, fighting was still raging in the southwestern Salaheddine district, with the army trying to storm it with troops and armored vehicles. Meanwhile clashes started in the poorer, tribal northeastern district of al-Sakhour. Hundreds of families were forced to flee as the commercial city had been slowly turned into a war zone. Violent clashes also took place in the northeastern Haydariya area in Aleppo. The head of intelligence in Aleppo, Major General Mohamed Muflih, reportedly defected to the opposition and went to Turkey.

On 22 July, the fourth day of major fighting in Aleppo, the Syrian army started to push into the Salaheddine district, which had been in rebel hands for two days, with armoured vehicles. Battles took place near the main intelligence headquarters of Aleppo. It was reported that rebels controlled three neighbourhoods in Aleppo. The al-Zabadia police station and the immigration and passport building in Aleppo saw clashes as well as the areas of Saif al-Dawla, al-Jameeliya and al-Meridian. It was further reported that the FSA had set up checkpoints in the city. A brigadier general defected inside Aleppo. According to The Guardian UK, General Adelnasser Ferzat made a video address in fluent Russian to Russia, urging Moscow to stop backing Assad and back "freedom" and the rebels' side.

On 23 July, renewed fighting in Aleppo was reported, with rebel fighters attacking the main TV station of the city. The Free Syrian Army aired a live steam video on Al Jazeera showing their fighters moving freely in the Tareeq al-Bab district of Aleppo city. 33 people were reportedly killed in the city in the previous two days. State media reported that dozens of rebels had been killed by the Syrian Army north of Aleppo, among them Mahmoud al-Ashqar, leader of a rebel group. A rebel commander inside Aleppo told Al-Jazeera via Skype that his fighters had captured five districts in the city, but that these districts were still being heavily shelled by artillery and attack helicopters. During the night, eight people were reported killed at Aleppo central prison. The Syrian National Council said that security forces "opened fire with bullets and tear gas on the detainees at Aleppo central prison in response to a peaceful sit-in organised by prisoners because of the great injustice of which they are victims," and that a fire broke out at the prison. Another report said that 15 prisoners were killed and over 40 were injured, according to Al Arabiya who were citing activists at the Aleppo Revolution Council. Furthermore, the group also said that security forces refused to hand over the dead bodies to relatives and that heavy clashes between the FSA and security forces took place around the prison after the killings.

City centre fighting and Army reinforcements sent

On 24 July, FSA fighters began a new offensive in Aleppo, aimed at taking the city centre. Heavy clashes broke out near the gates of the Old city between rebel fighters and government forces. Also, a resident of the Aleppo suburb of al-Sahkour said that the FSA had set up checkpoints in the district. In addition, Al-Arabiya reported about clashes between rebels and army soldiers in the Aleppo neighborhood of Al-Arqoub. The Sham news network said that 30 security force members were killed or injured and three tanks destroyed in a neighbourhood of Aleppo the previous day. Later during the day, for the first time since the beginning of the civil war in Syria, Syrian war planes bombed Aleppo (with videos showing L-39 attack aircraft over the city). The coordinated attack started with a 10-minute artillery attack on the eastern Tariq al-Bab district, after which, fighter jets hit rebel positions, reportedly leaving dozens of fighters and civilians dead. Government soldiers and rebels were still engaged in heavy fighting near the Old city, while the Free Syrian Army stated it had control of at least six districts of Aleppo, a claim partially supported by a BBC journalist outside Aleppo. Two rebels were reported killed during the day. Opposition activists stated that thousands of government troop reinforcements were moving from Idlib toward Aleppo. One of the reinforcement's convoys was attacked with a roadside bomb while it was on its way to the city, killing eight soldiers.

On 25 July, a BBC reporter inside Aleppo confirmed that parts of the city (most notably the eastern suburbs) were under Free Syrian Army control. Heavy fighting raged at a police station in the city, during which three rebels were killed. The rebels managed to capture and burn the station in the end. Meanwhile, FSA commanders called on rebels to attack the approaching Syrian Army of 2,000 soldiers. Rebels from all over Aleppo governorate were reported to be gathering ammunition and moving towards Aleppo. Two alleged pro-government Shabiha militiamen, who were captured by the rebels, were executed in the Salaheddin district.

On 26 July, the Free Syrian Army claimed to be in control of 40–50% of Aleppo city. Government forces bombarded rebel-held districts with fighter planes, helicopters and artillery. Two rebel fighters were killed during clashes. Rebels were waiting for the military assault, most of them expecting to die in the battle. Among the government troop reinforcements that were massing on the outskirts of Aleppo were also special forces units. The Syrian Army had reportedly amassed 10,000 soldiers around Aleppo and its countryside.

On 27 July, rebels captured a military base in Aleppo's city centre along with 100 soldiers and pro-government militia. It was reported that 15 people were killed by helicopters and bombs in the al-Fardous district. An activist, Omar, said that "We woke up to a huge massacre this morning at 7am. Fifteen people were killed as a result of the regime forces' bombs and helicopters ... I witnessed the massacre myself and helped rescue 25 injured people. I carried bloodied body parts in my own hands. The bombing stopped at 10am." and the FSA later took control of the Sour al-Hajj roundabout in the district, capturing a five-storey building which was holding 75 detainees. State TV reported that five rebel pick-up trucks mounted with machine guns ("technicals"), that were heading from the countryside towards Aleppo, were attacked and destroyed by special forces units, killing and wounding a number of rebel fighters. A rebel commander partially confirmed this by saying opposition forces had skirmished with the military in the areas surrounding the city. Meanwhile, six soldiers were killed during clashes with a Kurdish rebel force, the YPG, who attacked them in retaliation after government troops attacked their convoy on the airport road the previous day, killing three and wounding 11 YPG members.

Syrian Army counter-offensive

On the morning of 28 July, the Syrian Army started its offensive to retake rebel-held parts of Aleppo. Troops attacked the Salaheddin district, which held the largest concentration of rebels. The assault commenced with an eight-hour artillery bombardment, which started at four in the morning, after which tanks and ground troops moved in. An estimated 80–100 tanks were seen on the southern outskirts of the city before the attack started. The opposition stated that 12 rebels and 10 soldiers were killed during the fighting, that dozens of soldiers were wounded, and that 8–10 tanks and armored vehicles were destroyed or damaged. They also confirmed that one of the killed rebel fighters was a battalion commander. Meanwhile, rebels from Salaheddin attacked a police station in the city center where 50–100 government troops were holding out for the past three days, in an attempt to link up with opposition forces in the northeastern Sakhur district six kilometers away. By the end of the day, the rebels had repelled the assault with government troops pulling back and the bombardment resuming.

On 29 July, a Turkish journalist reported that Syrian soldiers defected to the opposition in Aleppo with four tanks. Luke Harding from the Guardian reported that a rebel commander was pessimistic about the chances of victory for the rebels. In the evening, state media reported that the Salaheddin district was recaptured by the Army; however, journalists were not able to reach it and confirm the report. Opposition SOHR activists said that fighting was still ongoing in the district. However, Colonel Abdel Jabbar al-Oqaidi, head of the Free Syrian Army military council of Aleppo, denied the report and insisted government troops had "not progressed one meter." "We launched a new assault from Salaheddin during the night, and we destroyed four tanks," the rebel commander told AFP by phone." Rami Abdel Rahman, the head of the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights, said that regime forces were on Monday "just reaching the outskirts of the neighborhood."

On 30 July, SOHR said that clashes erupted early morning near the Air Force intelligence headquarters in Aleppo's Zahraa district. Meanwhile, a general in the FSA said that they had seized a strategic checkpoint 5 km from Aleppo after 10 hours of fighting. This meant that the FSA controlled a direct route between the Turkish border and the city of Aleppo. During the battle it was reported that four or five rebels and six soldiers were killed, with an additional 25 soldiers taken prisoner. An AFP journalist on the ground said that the rebels captured seven tanks and armoured vehicles, and destroyed an eighth vehicle. According to another rebel claim, four tanks were captured and two destroyed in the attack on the checkpoint. The BBC reported that thre rebels commander were killed in Aleppo the same day, when one unit was pinned down by loyalist gunfire. FSA reinforcements manage to breakthrough and relieve their besieged comrades and pull back to saftey.

On 31 July, Syrian state media reported that nine rebels technicals were destroyed in the Aleppo countryside and 17 rebels were killed in Aleppo city. Three other rebels were arrested when the army captured a truck loaded with explosive devices. One day earlier, four other rebel technicals had been destroyed.

Meanwhile, the rebels were still on the offensive when they launched an assault before dawn on a major Air Force Intelligence Unit in Aleppo's Zahraa district. Rebels armed with rocket propelled grenades attacked Aleppo's main military court as well as a police station and a branch of the ruling Baath Party in the city's southern Salhin district. Fighting continued in the Sallahaddin district. The opposition group, Syrian Observatory, reported that 40 policemen had been killed when rebels attacked two police stations. Later during the day, the Free Syrian Army continued operating in the Salaheddine district, which the government admitted it did no longer fully control. "The regime has tried for three days to regain Saleheddine, but its attempts have failed and it has suffered heavy losses in human life, weapons and tanks, and it has been forced to withdraw," said Colonel Abdel-Jabbar al-Oqaidi, head of the Joint Military Council, one of several rebel groups in Aleppo. He announced the the FSA's primary objective was to secure the city centre "within days" by advancing district by district towards it, clearing out government forces, after he confirmed that opposition troops controlled the southern and eastern parts of the city.

Foreign reactions

  •  France - The French foreign ministry said that "With the build-up of heavy weapons around Aleppo, Assad is preparing to carry out a fresh slaughter of his own people", while Italy and the UN peacekeeping chief also accused the government of preparing to massacre civilians.
  •  Russia - The Russian Foreign Minister, Sergey Lavrov, stated "Our Western partners ... together with some of Syria's neighbours are essentially encouraging, supporting and directing an armed struggle against the regime". He also added that it would be unrealistic to expect Syrian forces not to fight when armed fighters were occupying Aleppo. "How can you hope that in such a situation, the government will simply reconcile itself and say 'All right, I was wrong. Come on and topple me, change the regime'?"
  •  Turkey - Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan urged international action, saying it was not possible "to remain a spectator" to the government offensive on Aleppo. Reuters reported that Turkey had set up a base with allies Saudi Arabia and Qatar for the purpose of directing military and communications aid to the Free Syrian Army from the city of Adana. Reuters also quoted a Doha-based source which stated that Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia were providing weapons and training to the rebel fighters.
  •  United States - The USA said it feared a new massacre in Aleppo by the government: "This is the concern: that we will see a massacre in Aleppo and that's what the regime appears to be lining up for."

External links

References

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