Al-Qaeda tries to carve out a war for itself in Syria

Opposition activists have also told of a similar events inside Idlib, a city
that continues to see fierce fighting between government soldiers and rebel
groups.

“Al Qaeda tried to set up an Emir there and ran bombing operations
against the Syrian military. The members were all Syrian,” said a medic
working with the opposition.

In both cases local activists and rebel fighters reported that the groups had
failed to win hearts and minds. “The local people didn’t like their way
of thinking. They did not like their methods,” said the opposition
doctor. “Now he has a small group of only around 25 people with him and
they have moved to live in the surrounding mountains.

Other eyewitnesses have told how people fashioning themselves as al Qaeda are
making visits to opposition groups on the Syria-Turkey border asking
supporters to make the ‘Bayan’, a commitment to join the organisation and
obey its calls.

In the small farming villages around Idlib province, the presence of al Qaeda
appeared to have become an open secret. Locals nodded knowingly, all
agreeing that the group had a widespread but still weak and generally
ineffective presence.

Some of its members have left to fight ‘jihad’ against the Syrian regime with
home-grown Islamic groups.

A young man, ‘Mohammed’ drove with the Telegraph through the Idlib countryside
in his clapped out white Skoda, the steering wheel replaced by one from a
racing car. His Kalashnikov lay in-between his legs. Dried blood from
comrades who had been wounded or killed in fighting was streaked on the back
seat, and religious versus played loudly through the cassette player.

“I was in al Qaeda and I love al Qaeda. Now I am with Ahrar al Sham group
because they are stronger in Syria,” he said. “I am supporting
al-Qaeda’s ideology because of America and Britain’s actions. America does
what she wants, kills as she wishes, robs as she wishes, and attacks
innocents as she wishes. All she does is fight Muslims.

“We tried to explain this to US and British citizens but they didn’t want
to listen and they stayed with their government. That is why the London
bombings were right.”

For the members of Ahrar al-Sham, many of whom are conservative Salafi
jihadists following a strict form of Islam, this is a religious war: a call
by God to free their land and promote their religion across a country in
which they have long been repressed. They are one of a plethora of groups
that work independently of the Free Syrian Army, whose leadership in Turkey
has a more secular orientation.

“The FSA are our brothers now. We share in operations because we both
have the same goal, to make Bashar al Assad leave. But we have different
visions for the future,” said Mohammed.

“We would like to be under the judgment of God, under Islamic Shariah law,”
said the leader of the group for the area around Khan Sheikhoun, on the
border between Idlib and Hama province.

As this slow war progresses there are plenty of signs of the religious aspect
of the conflict. The Daily Telegraph witnessed the black flag used by al
Qaeda flying high in several villages and on pick up trucks of rebel
fighters. The men insist it was merely a tribute to their God and not a sign
of allegiance to al Qaeda.

Nonetheless hardline groups like Ahrar al-Sham are growing in size and
influence. Since they formed six months ago in Idlib it has become a
formidable fighting force, commanding bases in most of the province’s major
population centres.

Its members showed the Daily Telegraph a government checkpoint – a
wheat-processing factory that had been converted into a base, which they had
attacked the week before. Bullets had effortlessly punched through the
concrete breezeblocks.

Dried blood streaked the walls and lay in congealed pools in the corners where
soldiers had been hiding for their lives.

“We killed thirteen men,” said a fighter proudly.

At a headquarters in Saraqeb bearded men sat squatting on the floor counting
piles of bullets. One man in his early twenties proudly revealed a powerful
home made bomb; nuts and bolts embedded in a powerful and deadly wedge of
TNT.

“Our brothers, mujahideen from Iraq and Afghanistan have taught us how to
make these,” he said.

“Tell Nato we can make them some if they need.”

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