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Battle of Rastan (May 2012)

Coordinates:34°54′55″N36°44′08″E / 34.91525°N 36.735485°E /34.91525; 36.735485
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See also:Battle of Rastan (January–February 2012)

34°54′55″N36°44′08″E / 34.91525°N 36.735485°E /34.91525; 36.735485

Battle of Rastan (May 2012)
Part of theSyrian Civil War

Artillery positioned north of Rastan, Syria. Smoke rising from building, 10 June 2012.
Date14 May 2012
Location
ResultSyrian opposition victory
Belligerents
Syrian oppositionSyrian OppositionSyriaSyrian Government
Commanders and leaders
Ba'athist Syria Unknown
Units involved
Casualties and losses
9 killed, including a commander23 killed[3]
15 captured
3 APCs destroyed
2 APCs captured
Civil uprising in Syria (March–August 2011)
Start of insurgency in Syria (Sept. 2011 – April 2012)
UN ceasefire;Rebel advances (May 2012 – Dec. 2013)
U.S.-led intervention,Rebel andISIL advances (Sept. 2014 – Sept. 2015)
Russian intervention (Sept. 2015 – March 2016)
Aleppo escalation andEuphrates Shield (March 2016 – February 2017)
Collapse of theIslamic State in Syria (Feb. – Nov. 2017)
Rebels in retreat andOperation Olive Branch
(Nov. 2017 – Sep. 2018)
Idlib demilitarization
(Sep. 2018 – April 2019)
Idlib ceasefire (March 2020 – Nov. 2024)
Opposition offensives andAssad overthrown (Nov. – Dec. 2024)

TheBattle of Rastan between theSyrian Armed Forces and theFree Syrian Army took place in the city ofRastan on 14 May 2012, during theU.N. brokered cease-fire of theconflict.

Background

[edit]
See also:Battle of Rastan (2011) andBattle of Rastan (January–February 2012)

The area nearRastan was scene of the first serious armed confrontations between rebels and theSyrian Army through 2011.[3] the Syrian Army regained control of the city several times, but it has kept slipping back into rebel hands.[3] Its strategic location along the road which links the capitalDamascus to the north of the country[4] and the terrain had helped deserters from disparate units mount raids against Syrian army buses and roadblocks defended by Military Intelligence and pro-government militia.[3]

Events

[edit]

According to theSyrian Observatory for Human Rights, on 14 May, 23 Syrian soldiers were killed in the town of Rastan in heavy clashes with rebels, who destroyed three armored personnel carriers. Earlier, opposition sources said a local rebel commander was among scores of people killed in heavy army shelling of Rastan, Reuters reported.[3] One report said nine peopled died in the shelling. An additional two military armored personnel carriers were reportedly captured by the rebels, along with 15 soldiers.[5][6]

Aftermath

[edit]
Main article:Siege of Northern Homs

In June, Syrian troops bombarded Rastan using helicopters and mortars, killing and wounding a large number of rebel fighters, including Ahmad Bahbouh, head of the rebel military office in Rastan.[7][8]United Nations monitors confirmed thatSyrian Air Force helicopters fired on towns near Homs, including Rastan. For the first time, the UN also verified repeated allegations by activists that government forces fired from helicopters in the military crackdown on dissent.Kofi Annan said he was "gravely concerned" at this news and a UN spokeswoman said that "artillery and mortar shelling, machine guns and smaller arms" were being used against the towns of Rastan and Talbiseh.[9]

On 13 July, a colonel with 40 soldiers and four tanks defected to the Free Syrian Army in Rastan. Rebel fighters also took control of the village ofal-Ghantu, southwest ofTalbiseh.[10]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Matthew Weaver (12 June 2012)."The Guardian Syria Live Blog".the Guardian. Retrieved25 October 2014.
  2. ^Mohammed Aly Sergie (13 January 2013)."Kurdish Fighters Hope to Balance Islamist Forces".Syria Deeply.
  3. ^abcde"Archived copy". Archived fromthe original on 2013-11-01. Retrieved2012-05-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^"WEB NEWS - Syria: army intensifies attack on Rastan - France 24".France 24. Archived fromthe original on 25 October 2014. Retrieved25 October 2014.
  5. ^"Syrian soldiers 'killed' in Rastan clashes". Retrieved25 October 2014.
  6. ^"BBC News - Battle for Syrian town of Rastan continues despite ceasefire".BBC News. Retrieved25 October 2014.
  7. ^"More deaths reported across Syria as Haffa looks deserted, burnt after clashes". Archived fromthe original on 2012-06-15. Retrieved2012-06-15.
  8. ^Independent Newspapers Online."Suicide bomber strikes near one of holiest Syrian shrines".Independent Online. Retrieved25 October 2014.
  9. ^"UN observers confirm Syria aerial attacks". 12 June 2012.Al Jazeera. Retrieved on 17 June 2012
  10. ^"Syrian Daily Round-up - 13 July". Retrieved25 October 2014.
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