Qusayr's clock tower -- "still standing, but only just" (BBC News photo) |
A BBC team led by chief
international correspondent Lyse Doucet that visited Qusayr yesterday found
that it was in ruins.
The rebels, she remarks, "say they're coming back but they'll come back to a city that's gone."
Doucet and the team she
led were taken to Qusayr by the Syrian government. They were the first Western
journalists to reach the city, and said they did not see a single building that
had escaped damage.
The town where some 30,000
people once lived is now all but deserted by civilians.
Qusayr lies only 10
kilometers from the Lebanese border and is close to important supply routes for
both the government and rebels.
It had been the focus
of a three-week battle between rebels and government troops backed by fighters
from Iran’s Lebanese Shiite militia Hezbollah.
Doucet says both Syrian
troops and Hezbollah fighters were everywhere - travelling in trucks and armored
vehicles, firing guns in celebration and moving on foot through the streets.
Among her tweets:
- Clock tower still stands. Its face blown off, the tower damaged. The Syrian flag on top with image of Assad
- In Qusayr didn’t see a single building that escaped 3 weeks of battle
- Saw very few civilians in Qusayr – a few farmers on tractors, one family loading a pickup
- Clock tower – still standing, but only just
- Troops walk past, red & green ribbons tied to uniforms – fighters from Lebanon. One man shouts “Nasrallah!”
She also wrote this “At the
Scene” comment for BBC News:
This
battle for Qusayr is over. But now the fight begins to help the people who
survived.
Thousands
fled the violence; many were trapped inside. Aid agencies speak of alarming
reports that large numbers of wounded need urgent care.
There's
not enough food or water in Qusayr or for those displaced outside in schools,
shelters and on the streets. In the last two days, the UN managed to send in a
powerful generator to help restart the main pumping station for this entire
region.
But
now aid agencies are urging the government to give them greater access to the
city. The fight for Qusayr was a strategic victory, but a humanitarian
disaster.
Editorially, I have chosen snippets from five Arab media comments on “the day after Qusayr.”
Offering
sweets and waving Hezbollah flags in Beirut’s southern suburbs to celebrate the
devastation of Qusayr and the displacement of the Syrian town’s people is no
less ugly than the sight of women and children fleeing the siege and killings
inferno.
After
failing for 20 days to overrun the town of 40,000, most of them women and
children, Hezbollah and the Syrian air force proceeded to raze Qusayr with mortars,
Scuds and 80 airstrikes.
What
Hezbollah invaders celebrated yesterday was their glorious capacity to “cleanse
Qusayr.”
Hezbollah
and Iran won Qusayr but lost the whole Arab world. The Arab street feels more
determined today than ever before to rid Syria of its regime and its allied
Iranian, Iraqi and Hezbollah forces.
Distributing
sweets in the Beirut suburbs and banging drums of victory in Tehran deadened
the feeble voices that may have supported the negotiation of a political
solution at Geneva-2.
Does
the fall of Qusayr mean Assad prevailing and the Syrian revolution ending? No,
certainly not.
The
insurgents in Syria are not U.S. forces in Iraq or Afghanistan who are set to
leave one day. They are an overwhelming majority of Syrians.
Where
would more than 15 million Syrians go? How would Hezbollah kill them off, when
it suffered scores of casualties and spent three weeks battling to capture a
small township like Qusayr?
Syria’s
war is a genuine popular war that can only be compared to the wars of the
Algerians against the French and the Palestinians against the Israelis.
Do
Hezbollah and Iran plan to occupy Syria, and if so for how long?
To
see the Syrian regime, Hezbollah and Iran celebrate “victory” against “Takfiris” in Qusayr is
tragicomic at best.
Hezbollah
falsely claims to be a resistance (to Israel) party. The Iraqi Shiite militias
in turn pretend to come from under the cloak of Iraq, a state faking to be
democratic.
Sponsored
by Iran’s sate institutions, they all flocked to Syria to shore up its bloody,
criminal and sectarian regime.
This
is the opposite of what al-Qaeda and Jabhat al-Nusra are doing. The two groups
intervened short of international backing and political party umbrellas.
The
future looks bleak and warrants ample alertness and preparedness. Fighting
under the banner of Imam
Hussein puts paid to all false slogans in our region. It heralds a new
chapter in which Assad’s survival is not a menace to the Syrians’ security only,
but to social peace all through the region as well.
Assad
and his allies are a bigger threat than al-Qaeda, Jabhat al-Nusra and all the
criminal regimes our modern history has known.
All
regional and international stands seem detached from the tragic Syrian reality.
This means the crisis will be long-drawn-out. Its savage episodes will continue
until Syria and Syrians are bled to death.
America
is detached from reality – not because John Kerry claims Washington was “late” coming
to a political process, but because America deliberately chose to sit out the
crisis until Syria was destroyed and additional extremists were killed.
Throughout
27 months of bloodshed, Barack Obama sat on the sidelines ruminating his calls
for Assad to stand down simply to justify his ban on arming the rebels.
Iran
is detached from reality when she imagines her chances, and those of her
Lebanese and Iraqi proxies, in Syria will be better than America’s in Vietnam,
Afghanistan and Iraq.
The
Arab League is detached from reality when it suffices with giving Syria’s seat
to the opposition without threatening to sever ties with Russia for standing
sentinel to protect the massacre of the century.
Whatever
the case may be, and notwithstanding the importance of Qusayr in the open-ended
Syria war, the regime’s drive to recapture areas under Syrian opposition
control remains thorny and long.
It
is most unlikely the regime would win a decisive military victory.
From BBC News |
What
the regime has done is push back the opposition and force it to scale down its
expectations.
Today,
the regime and its allies are on the offensive while the political and armed
oppositions are on their back foot.
And
that’s how it will be from hereon -- short of an upset in the quality,
quantity, logistical support and training the opposition receives from its
Arab, regional and international allies in the next phase.
Post-Qusayr,
the regime and its Hezbollah allies are likely to try “mopping up” the
Syria-Lebanon border areas. They would tighten their hold on them to cut off
the opposition’s supply, reinforcement and smuggling routes to the Syrian
interior. That’s easier done now.
Rebel-held
Homs neighborhoods are next for regime and Hezbollah forces.
I
trust a decisive Homs victory is much more likely after Qusayr.
Battles
of s strategic nature will then take place in Aleppo province’s urban and rural
areas. Clearing up the vital backup support arteries along Syria’s frontier
with its northern neighbor, Turkey, would follow.
The
regime is aware of the difficulty of tracking down the armed opposition in
every village and township across Syria.
It
would feel a conquistador once it succeeds in regaining control of the big cities,
where the opposition maintains footholds such as in Aleppo and Homs, and of the
international highways linking the major provinces with the coastline and
Damascus.
The
regime is out to achieve this as quickly as possible before Moscow and Washington
stop splitting hairs over Geneva-2. But the regime is bent on doing just that
whether Geneva-2 sees the light or not.