Syria forces step up assault near Lebanon border

Assault is apparent preparation for a new offensive to flush out rebels

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Beirut: President Bashar Al Al Assad’s forces and allied Lebanese militia Hezbollah stepped up attacks on Syria’s strategic border town of Yabroud on Wednesday, activists said, in apparent preparation for a new offensive to flush out rebels.

The assault is the latest step in Al Assad and Hezbollah’s campaign to secure the Lebanese-Syrian border region and fortify the president’s hold on central Syria, from the capital Damascus to his stronghold on the coast.

More than 10 air strikes had already hit the mountain border town on Wednesday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, after a night of heavy clashes between Al Assad’s forces and the opposition.

“The attacks were sharply intensified but it is unclear if the offensive on Yabroud has started or if this is paving the way for a main attack,” said Observatory head Rami Abdul Rahman.

Arab news channel Al Meyadeen described the attacks as the start of a wider military offensive. Several activist groups said Hezbollah was involved in the fighting.

The attack on Yabroud is part of what locals have called the “Battle for Qalamoun”, the name of a mountainous region along the frontier with Lebanon used by both the rebels and Al Assad’s allies to smuggle in people and supplies.

Such border clashes risk fuelling sectarian tensions in Lebanon, where Sunni-Shiite divisions deepened by the conflict in Syria have already triggered instability.

Rebels fighting to end four decades of Al Assad family rule are led largely by Syria’s Sunni Muslim majority and have strong support from Sunnis in neighbouring Lebanon.

Al Assad’s forces have support from minorities, particularly his Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. Al Assad’s campaign in central Syria gained a huge boost from the support of Shiite Hezbollah’s experienced militants, who fought a war against Israel in 2006.

The violence in Syria has set off a wave of tit-for-tat car bombings in Lebanon by both sides, as well as sporadic street clashes.

Lebanese media reported a new influx of Syrian refugees in some of Lebanon’s border towns a day earlier.

Some told the Lebanese newspaper the Daily Star that Syrian army forces warned residents over mosque loudspeakers to flee the area if they wanted to save their lives.

Previous successful military assaults have given Al Assad the advantage along the Lebanese border. It was once a critical foothold for the rebels, whose main strongholds are now in Syria’s northern and eastern regions as well as along parts of the southern border.

Syria’s nearly three-year conflict began as peaceful protests against four decades of Al Assad family rule but devolved into an armed conflict after a security force crackdown.

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