11.02.2020 Author: Jim Dean
Erdogan
Threatens War on the Syrian Arab Army (SAA)
Region: Middle East
Country: Syria
Jihadi
forces backed by Turkish infantry and artillery have launched a general
counter-attack on the west flank of Saraqib, both north and south of the M-4
highway. Erdogan has now cast his fate openly with the terrorists to prevent
the liberation of Idlib.
I
am wrapping up this current Idlib-Aleppo battlefront report on Sunday, February
9th. You will find two earlier sections below, picking up the Idlib battle
after the major city Maraat al-Numaan was taken on the M-5 highway.
The
last three days have seen major SAA coalition gains, despite two days of bad
weather where air strikes were not flown but the ground forces continued their
methodical advance in clearing the Saraqib flanks of jihadi forces.
Syria’s
25th Special Forces Division continued pushing north up the M-5 to eventually
meet the SAA elite 4th Division, Republican Guard, and Lebanon’s Hezbollah,
pushing south to reconnect Damascus and Aleppo with their main logistics road
critically needed for launching the final battle to clear Idlib.
Special
Forces troops pushing up from Saraqib city have captured the key hilltop al-Ais
position (365 meters high) that can observe M5 traffic both north and south and
deep into its west flank. News photos showed the troops gaining the peak in
darkness, freeing more Syrian territory from the grip of the US coalition
terror proxies created to overthrow and carve up Syria.
At
the end of the article, I have a 38 minute combat video link of the Saraqib
fight, from the Abkhazia News crew where you will get a first hand look at some
of the tactics used, including the full use of drones behind the battle lines
to locate jihadi groups trying to hide with their equipment only to be followed
and destroyed in their lairs, saving a lot of lives for the SAA.
Syrian
coalition advancing with low casualties
The
fighting morale of the jihadis in Idlib City will have to be affected by all
those who never come home from the M-5 highway battle. Sunday, today, the
planes were back in the air, striking targets of opportunity with the news that
we saw no counter attacks against last week’s gains.
Aleppo
forces have been pushing south on the M-5 and appear in position to be able to
connect with their compatriots pushing north. Turkey’s observation posts,
designed to protect its proxy terrorists, have backfired with all of them in
the current liberated areas surrounded and unofficial prisoners of the SAA.
Mr.
Erdogan continues to ship more special forces and armor into the area,
apparently to increase his bargaining hand at the negotiations he claims he
wants to have. Fortunately, there have been no Turkish or Russian combat deaths
reported in the last two days.
Erdogan
has a weak hand, as the world has seen that he exploited his partnership in the
Astana agreement by doing nothing to separate the various al-Qaeda groups from
the Syrian militant ones. His plan to Balkanize northeast Syria into a Turkish de
facto colony is not working out as he had wanted.
He
incredibly has demanded that the Syrian Army leave Idlib, its own territory, by
the end of February. That was considered a bad joke. Although he has mention he
has a plan B and C, so do the Syrians and Russians. Putin has no intention of
fighting in Syria indefinitely.
Iran
has been deathly quiet in the Putin-Erdogan showdown, despite Iran having
militias on the Aleppo western front in combat. This will be a delicate
political situation to prevent its escalation.
Erodgan
has already broken his agreement, so he is now “Turkey’s Trump,” in terms of
what is the point of making a new deal with the guy that broke the last one?
Everyone understands that Erdogan does not want all those unhappy jihadis
coming back to into Turkey. Will he threaten to unleash them on Europe, or
shift them to another front, maybe the Kurdish north to make more trouble?
The
SAA allies take Saraqib with few casualties
We
woke up this morning, February 6th to see that the Syrian army had completely
taken Saraqib and its three Turkish observation posts. When I went to bed, they
had cut the M-5 highway to the north, but this morning the battlemaps showed
that Tiger Force unit continued on to take Afis and Sarmin to the west,
blocking the escape road to Idlib.
The
video reports were all in Arabic but showed truckloads of jubilant Syrian
soldiers who had cleared Saraqib’s center and were redeploying to new
positions. There have been no estimates of casualties on this fast moving
battle.
Erdogan’s
response was an amazing statement that if the Syrian army did not desist in
retaking its own territory, Turkey would have to intercede to push them out. He
might go down in history to have made such an outlandish demand.
Most
considered this a big bluff, but there’s reports claiming that Russia would
love to take the Turks on, as it has not forgotten the Russian pilot who was
shot down and murdered by Turkish militants after he was captured.
That
would make for one huge geopolitical mess when Russia and Turkey have a lot of
joint interests at stake. Moscow knows that Idlib must be cleared of jihadis
before any election can be held in the country, which is why Erdogan wants to
keep the jihadis there. He has been a subversive partner to the Astana process,
never honoring his word to separate the terror jihadists from the militant
forces there.
The
jihadi leadership in Idlib deployed some of their forces during the afternoon
to counter attack on the west flank of the M-5 road below Saraqib, obviously trying
to tie down Syrian forces in defensive positions there and threaten the
critical supply road.
Another
counterattack was launched north of Saraqib on both flanks of the M-5 in an
attempt to bottle up the Syrian attack there. Later news came that a Turkish
column with dozens of armored fighting vehicle had arrived in Taftanaz airbase
in central north Idlib.
This
appears to have been chosen by the Turkish military as a staging base, as it is
equidistant from Idlib, Saraqib, and Aleppo so it can shift replacement
equipment where needed, especially to be able to threaten a Syrian advance on
the M-5 road.
I
would bet the Turks want to keep the battle for the highway as drawn out as
possible. That said, we had a morning report that part of the Saraqib assault
forces had been detached to Aleppo. Ideally the best strategy would be retaking
the M-5 from both directions to divide the fire power of the Idlib jihadis.
They
have a huge disadvantage in that they will have to maneuver to attack over open
territory where they will be subject to attack on the move and in their advance
positions. Due to the effective air cover they have had, the Syrian Army has
avoided losing a lot of its experienced combat troops.
The
battle for Saraqib – February 5
Saraqib
city in Idlib province is being attacked by the Syrian Army 25th Special Forces
Division. One of the specialties it was trained in was night attacks, as the
attacking force sustains fewer casualties from an entrenched opponent not known
to have night vision capability.
This
action will be another combined operations affair involving Syrian artillery,
the 25th, both the Syrian and Russian air forces and their drones for both
surveillance and combat operations. If nothing good has come out of the Syrian
war, at least it has honed both countries’ fighting forces into being the most
experienced counter-terrorism forces on the planet.
I
cover the Part 1 of the second Idlib advance below, which I had stopped after
Maraat al-Numaan was taken and the advance got bogged down in bad weather for
two weeks. We did not know if the 25th division might be split in half to give
Aleppo an attacking force to push the jihadis in the west back out of grad
rocket range.
If
so, we expected it would next start taking the M-5 highway going south, while
the rest of the division continued the attack north from Maraat al-Numaan up
the M-5 which connects the western part of Syria from Damascus to Aleppo.
I
could not foresee the Syrian coalition making a final push to clear the
entrenched jihadis out of northern Idlib until they had the entire M-5 highway
controlled, with all jihadis cleared out of its eastern side and a safe buffer
on the west. One cannot launch the final battle without completely secure lines
of supply.
The
advance up M-5 highway from Maraat al-Numaan
The
SAA’s attacking strategy was not to battle their way on the M-5 north through a
gauntlet of IEDs and anti-armor missiles that would inflict losses which Syria
cannot afford, especially among its best troops.
The
attack was a right flank on a broad flank from around al-Numaan, as this
compels the enemy to spread its forces out more sparsely. This gives the
respective air forces more opportunity to target them while they are on the
roads and to locate supply and command centers from traffic patterns and
communications intercepts.
This
advance moved west out of Syrian controlled territory east of the M-5, while
simultaneously clearing all jihadi forces on this flank. When that was
completed, the SAA cut the M-5 at Khan al-Sobol, midway between Maraat
al-Numaan and Saraqib.
With
the road cut, Syrian forces began moving north on the M-5 while clearing its
western flank from enemy forces to have the road usable for logistic supplies
to sustain the Syrian attack. Jihadi and Turkish backed militants made attempts
to contest clearing this western flank, but the air forces played a key role in
eliminating those units.
Further
north, the Tiger forces had pushed up M-5, from Khan al-Sobol to the southern
approaches to Saraqib and had to stop while the right flank was cleared. That
is when Turkey decided to put its forces into a blocking position to stop the
Syrian advance.
Turkish
outposts in Syria fail to intimidate SAA
A
ring of new Turkish observation posts had been quickly set up around the city as
a “trip wire” for the Syrian army not to cross. The Syrian army stopped its M5
north advance and began retaking towns and villages east and west of the
highway, starting to go around the Turkish outposts.
The
next day a Turkish column with lots of armor and Turkish troops was attacked by
air and seems to have disappeared since then. Erdogan claimed the Syrian air
force had attacked and that Turkey retaliated with heavy shelling and F-1
bombing runs against the Syrian forces.
After
Erdogan made the claim for which mysteriously there were no photos or video
confirmations, he began back pedaling on his threats to invade Syria if it did
not stop clearing Erdogan’s favorite terrorists out of Idlib.
While
Erdogan talked and threatened, the Syrian 25th Special Ops division flanked
Saraqib on its west flank first, cutting the M-4 highway, and then the
following day cleared the eastern flank to within mortar range and swung north
to cut the M-5 road behind the Turkish observation post, making a bag of three
of them that are surrounded and isolated.
There
is a secondary road open to the west to Idlib, what the infamous Sun Tzu called
the golden bridge that should always be left open for an enemy to break and
flee.
If
the jihadis cleared out in time, some might have made it to Idlib. For those
who engaged in a night fight with the 25th, if they find themselves retreating
west in the morning I suspect the planes will be on them, and there would be no
sense in letting them get back to Idlib to fight from the prepared defenses
there.
The
Maraat al-Numaan campaign up the M-5 highway
After
the long delays since the successful south Idlib advance by the SAA, many Syria
watchers were dismayed to see the attack fizzle when Damascus had the advantage
over defeated and dispirited jihadis facing them in the north.
Traditional
military doctrine would have expected Assad to have had fresh troops lined up
to kick off a stage two advance to keep the momentum rolling northward before the
jihadis dug themselves into newly prepared defensive lines that would be more
costly to take. We were wrong.
While
we waited with the winter weather conditions coming on, the Russian and Syrian
air forces continued their systematic hunting down and precision bombing of
terrorist and militant ammo and supply dumps, along with their command centers.
There
had been talk of an Aleppo offensive, sorely needed as the battle lines there
had left the jihadi formations west of the city within rocket range of the
center of downtown Aleppo. As the SAA coalition bombing campaign rolled on in
Idlib, it was just a matter of time before HTS forces in western Aleppo would
start shelling the city to relieve pressure on Idlib, and they did.
The
formerly named Tiger forces who have made major gains in defeating ISIS in the
eastern and northeastern parts of the country had their command renamed 25th
Special Forces Division. It is specially trained in launching night attacks,
which have been effective in the past.
After
a methodical westward advance into Idlib province along a broad front toward
the M-5 highway to the next major city Maraat al-Numaan that dispersed the
militant defensive forces, the SAA got close to being within shelling distance
of the city.
Then
the jihadi defenses seemed to have collapsed, either through attrition from the
air attacks or the Idlib central command pulling troops northward to defend the
Aleppo front. Some analysts have suggested that evacuation corridors that had
allowed 350,000 Idlib residents get out of harm’s way allowed the Syrian
coalition to be more aggressive with its firepower tactics.
The
mad terrorists in Idlib city still had their civilian human shields as some
protection from the worst bombing and wanted to save their fighting power for
the major battle to come there.
What
will Turkey do as the jihadis go down?
Mr.
Erdogan has calmed down over the northeast Syria Kurdish front, after his
endless claims of a hoard of Kurdish terrorists ready to attack Turkey from
Syria, an hysterical show that no one believed. I never heard or read of a
Kurdish terrorist attack anywhere along the Syrian northern border.
His
attention had shifted to Libya, where he has invested Turkish proxy forces we
think were pulled out of Syria and paid $3000 a month to fight for Tripoli when
they were getting paid $400 inside Syria.
Erdogan
also has big gas dreams in his eyes, with his sudden claim of having a joint
economic zone with Libya extending between their two respective countries and
through which the new Israeli operating gas platform had planned to build a
pipeline. There will be a big political battle over that.
Here
is the Abkhazian Network News Agency (ANNA) 38 minutes of
combat video footage on the liberation of Saraqib city by the SAA
and it allies. This is among the best footage I have seen during the war to
show what has really gone on there. An appropriate age confirmation is required
to watch it.
Jim W. Dean,
managing editor for Veterans Today, producer/host of Heritage TV Atlanta,
specially for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”.
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