Rif Dimashq offensive (November 2012–February 2013)
The Rif Dimashq offensive (November 2012–February 2013) refers to a rebel offensive during the Syrian Civil War in the Rif Dimashq Governorate (which surrounds Damascus) which started in November 2012, and a subsequent attempted Syrian Army counterattack in January 2013. Thomson Reuters described rebels as "ramping up attacks on Damascus" in late November[13] and BBC News described the 29 November government counterattack as "an unprecedented offensive against rebel-held districts in the east of the city".[14]
The offensive[edit]
November clashes[edit]
On 7 November, the rebels launched a large operation in Central Damascus. Rebel forces fired mortar shots into the predominantly Alawite Mezzah 86 district near the Presidential Palace and hit the Prime Minister's offices as well as Mezzah's military airport, killing 3 civilians and injuring 12 others. A spokesperson for the Revolutionary Council in Damascus, Susan Ahmed, described the operation as "a countdown", and also stated "It seems something serious is going on there now and things are going out of control. The regime cannot control Damascus anymore".[33] On the same day, a Syrian judge was assassinated in a residential area of Damascus when explosives planted under his car were remotely detonated.[34]
On 12 November, fierce clashes occurred between rebel and government forces in the East Damascus suburb of Ghuta, resulting in the death of 10 soldiers and 1 rebel.[35]
On 17 November, a military helicopter was shot down in the suburbs of Damascus.[36]
Thomson Reuters described rebels as "ramping up attacks on Damascus" in late November.[13] On 19 November, rebels seized the headquarters of an army battalion near the district of Hajar al-Aswad and the southern gate of Damascus, making it the nearest military base to Central Damascus to fall under rebel control.[37] On 25 November, rebels seized control of the Marj al-Sultan military airbase in Eastern Ghouta after a battle in which two Syrian Army helicopters were shot down.[38]
On 28 November, rebel forces started attacking the Damascus International Airport in a strategic attempt to seize important targets; taking control of the airport would weaken the government's air offensive.[39] On 29 November, rebels stated that they had blocked access to the airport.[13] The Ministry of Information said that access to the airport was safe and clear of rebel activity. Emirates and EgyptAir suspended their flights to Damascus.[13] BBC News described the 29 November government fighting as "an unprecedented offensive against rebel-held districts in the east of the city".[14] The main internet gateways to and from Syria were cut off at around 12:00 to 13:00 UTC+02:00 (local time).[14][40]
Early December clashes[edit]
On 1 December, clashes occurred in Arbin (east of Damascus) and government forces shelled Zabadani, leaving many people wounded, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR). Government forces tried to secure the airport highway by fighting in Mliha, as part of a strategy to "secure a wider perimeter around Damascus" to prevent rebels from entering Damascus.[41] Agence France-Presse suggested that the military's aim was to make negotiations with the rebels easier.[41]
Intense fighting between rebels and government forces and bombardment by government forces continued to 2 December in and around the highway to the airport. EgyptAir announced on 2 December that it would reopen flights to the airport on 3 December.[42] On 2 December, the Syrian army bombarded rebel-held suburbs around Damascus with fighter aircraft and rockets, killing at least ten rebels and wounding dozens in an offensive to stop rebels closing in on Damascus. The Syrian army entered part of Daraya where rebels had launched mortars into the city. The Army had entered one side of the town, but rebels were still in control of the rest of the area and were fighting back.[43]
On 3 December, the Syrian Army continued firing artillery and using fighter jets against the rebel-held areas near Damascus in order to protect the capital.[44]
On 4 December, Syrian state television claimed that 29 students and a teacher were killed by a "terrorist" mortar attack in the suburbs of Damascus.[45]
On 5 December, fighting took place near Aqraba military airport (near Damascus International Airport),[46] with the Free Syrian Army claiming to "secure control" of the military airport itself, according to Al Arabiya and NOW Lebanon.[47] According to NOW Lebanon, rebels also took over the Eastern Ghouta airbase[47] for a second time since the first takeover on 25 November.[38]
On 7 December, the rebels claimed that they were still blockading most access to the Damascus International Airport. Damascus Military Council spokesperson Nabil al-Amir stated that the rebels had "waited two weeks for the airport to be emptied of most civilians and airlines" and that as of 7 December, the airport was "a military zone" and that "civilians who approach it now do so at their own risk."[48] Flights by foreign airlines to the airport remained suspended.[48] A governmental spokesperson stated that the Syrian Army was "driving rebels back from positions in the suburbs and outskirts of Damascus".[48] On 8 December, the airport road was blocked at one point.[49]
By 9 December, the military counteroffensive was seen as successful in relieving the rebel pressure on the capital. Patrick Cockburn writing in The Independent stated that the Syrian Army had strengthened its control of Damascus by shifting forces from the Syrian countryside to Damascus. A diplomat contacted by Cockburn stated, "In private, FSA commanders admitted that their attacks in Damascus had not gone as planned and they suffered losses, but this does not mean that they will not try again."[49] Witnesses reported seeing bodies of dead rebels and soldiers lying beside the airport road. A rebel fighter interviewed by The New York Times said that the attack on the airport was a diversion to allow fighters, who were attempting to seize control of the road from Damascus to the northeast, to escape after suffering heavy casualties, due to poor planning. According to him, the resulting Syrian Army counter-offensive resulted in an "unbelievable" level of violence.[50]
On December 15, a rebel spokesperson for the Ababil Horan and Eastern Ghouta Brigades claimed that the FSA attacked a meeting in Damascus that led to the killing of "a number of the heads of operations" in Damascus and its suburbs, and that they now have knowledge of movements and meetings of other senior heads of operations in Damascus.[51]
Strategic analysis[edit]
Holding Damascus was considered crucial for the government, which kept its highest concentration of troops and its most loyal and best-trained units in and around the city. According to The New York Times, rebels were unlikely to be able to overrun Damascus quickly, but the fighting in Rif Dimashq, especially at the airport, had a profound psychological effect on government supporters, making them feel trapped, and forcing the Syrian Army to shift resources from other areas to defend Damascus.[77]
Damascus residents described an atmosphere of tension and fear. Government checkpoints were also so numerous that it was difficult to travel anywhere without passing through one. Emile Hokayem of the International Institute for Strategic Studies described the fighting as "part of the strategy of encirclement of the city. The rebels are making a very strong point: that they can go after anything that is seen as critical infrastructure." He expected that the government would be able to reopen the airport and the airport road, but that "the cost of doing so [would] increase over time."[77]
Daraya bore the brunt of the Army's offensive due to its proximity to the Presidential complex, which the rebels' rockets missed.[78]
In early January 2013, reports emerged that the military had prior knowledge of the rebel offensive. Based on the information, the Army withdrew on purpose from less strategically significant positions in favor of massing troops to defend Damascus and thus luring rebel forces farther from their supply bases. Due to the Army's retreat and false information leaked to the media on the state of the military, the rebels attacked even before their official start date for the offensive. Once the rebels advanced beyond their supply chains and started attacking the outskirts of the capital, the military used concentrated artillery and air attacks to hit them and inflict the greatest number of casualties. One of the rebel groups reportedly suffering heavily was the Al-Nusra Front.[79][80]