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Iran-backed militia vows to join Assad and Hezbollah in Syrian chaos

Instability in northern Syria follows Israel's debilitating blows against Iran's proxies

December 1, 2024 10:08
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Members of Iraq's Shiite Muslim al-Nujaba movement wave the Palestinian flag during a rally in Baghdad on October 8 (Photo by AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP via Getty Images)

By

JC Reporter,

Jewish News Syndicate

2 min read

An Iraqi militia controlled by Iran has promised to fight alongside Syrian President Bashar Assad’s army and Hezbollah against a resurgent rebellion.

This move by the Nujaba Movement was the latest in a shift in the power balance in Syria, Newsweek reported on Saturday. Sunni rebels launched a major offensive there against their Iran-backed enemies, who have been weakened by the protracted war with Israel.

Sunni Islamist terrorists from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS, or the “Organisation for the Liberation of the Levant'), an al-Qaeda splinter faction, and a number of allied rebel militias launched a major offensive in northern Syria on Wednesday, hours after Israel and Hezbollah entered a ceasefire. In the 13-and-a-half-month war against Israel, Hezbollah lost its entire top command, thousands of fighters, hundreds of strongholds and a majority of its ballistic arsenal.

Meanwhile, Russia, an ally of the Assad regime, reportedly has only 10 warplanes in Syria, having sent the rest to the war in Ukraine.

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