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Bashar Assad

Syria blasts Aleppo from above

Richard Hall, Special for USA TODAY
  • Turkey fired on Syria after shelling hit Turkish town
  • The Syrian air force is dropping bombs from planes and helicopters
  • Amnesty International found that 166 civilians had been killed in airstrikes


Syrians walk between destroyed buildings where three powerful explosions rocked the main square, Saadallah al-Jabri,  in a government-controlled central district of Aleppo  on Oct. 3.

ALEPPO, Syria -- Assad's army has been driven out of many areas in this province, a stronghold of the opposition forces arrayed against Syrian leader Bashar Assad.

But it would be a mistake to call this a liberated zone. Unable to make much headway on the ground, the Syrian air force is hitting back with increasing ferocity with bombs dropped from planes and helicopters. And it is chasing the civilians who are trying to get out of the war.

Abu Muhammad left Aleppo when the Free Syrian Army stormed into the city. He thought he was escaping the air bombardments when he fled his home for the countryside north of Aleppo.

"We run out when we hear the helicopters. There is nowhere safe in Syria, but the situation in the camps in Turkey is also very difficult. We are staying here until the battle stops," he says.

On Wednesday, Turkey finally struck back. The office of Turkey's prime minister says Turkish artillery fired on Syrian targets after deadly shelling from the Syrian side hit a Turkish border, killing five people.

"Our armed forces at the border region responded to this atrocious attack with artillery fire on points in Syria that were detected with radar, in line with the rules of engagement," the Turkish government said in a statement from the prime minister's office.

In Aleppo, three suicide bombers detonated cars packed with explosives in a
government-controlled area, killing at least 34 people, leveling buildings and trapping survivors under the rubble, state TV said.

The Syrian government's increased use of fighter jets to strike civilian areas has led to a dramatic rise in the death toll in recent months and sent a flood of refugees to the Turkey border. They dump bombs that can blow up whole buildings, or strafe people with automatic weapons fire.

Amnesty International found that 166 civilians, including 48 children and 20 women, had been killed and hundreds wounded in "indiscriminate" air strikes in the first half of September in 26 towns and villages in the Idlib, Jabal al-Zawiya and north Hama regions in northern Syria last month.

The rebels have tried to hit back at the airfields to prevent the aircraft from taking off. One such facility, the Menagh military airfield, lies within rebel-held territory, a few miles north of Aleppo.

"It's a fortress," says Abu Ahmed, a coordinator for the FSA, as he points at the high-walled airfield in the distance. "We have tried many times to take it. Any fighter who has a good idea about how to take it gets to try it out – no matter how crazy it sounds.

Mahmoud al-Sayad, a business owner before the conflict started, lives close enough to hear the jets taking off from Menagh. He has already lost one son to the war; his other son is away fighting with the FSA.

"The aim of the air strikes is to break the will of the people," he says. "Every day more bombs come. What can we do? They didn't bomb Israel this much."

The Syrian air force has close to 400 combat aircraft in service and 70 attack helicopters, many supplied by Russia. The lightly-armed rebels have had success going against Assad's ground forces but say they are powerless against the air supremacy enjoyed by the regime.

They say that if the international community enforced a no-fly zone as was done in Libya, they could prevail. The Obama administration has refused the request, saying it would widen the conflict.

Robert Danin, a senior fellow for Middle East and Africa studies at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington, doesn't see the political will for a no-fly zone.

"There seems to be very little support within the international community for military intervention in Syria of any sort," says Danin, a former State Department official. "It is tragic."

The anti-Assad fighters in Syria are angry at what they see as hand-wringing and little action. Promised small arms and communications equipment have not appeared, they say.

"Just give us some Stingers at least," says Abu Ahmed, with a frustrated laugh, referring to shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles. "We will take care of the rest."

Meanwhile, Abu Muhammad, 61, waits to return home while living in an abandoned school with his family, which includes three grandchildren. Seventeen others share the space in one of the dusty villages on the road heading north from Aleppo.

He asks one of his grandsons, 12-year-old Khaled, to lift up his shirt. The boy shows off a scar that runs in a straight line up from his belly button to the bottom of his rib-cage – the result of a piece of shrapnel from an airstrike.

"We have suffered a lot," he says quietly.

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