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WAR REPORT
Syria plans to use chemical arms: Israel intel chief
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) March 14, 2013


Govt jets pound rebel belts across Syria: NGO
Beirut (AFP) March 14, 2013 - Warplanes bombarded rebel positions across strife-torn Syria on Thursday, a watchdog said, while fierce clashes raged near the ancient citadel in the central city of Homs.

Fighter jets rained bombs on targets in the southern province of Daraa, on Homs and Hama in the centre, Raqa in the north and Idlib in the northwest, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Rebels meanwhile assaulted a checkpoint near the army-held citadel in the heart of Homs city, killing eight soldiers, the Britain-based Observatory said.

A number of neighbourhoods of Homs been devastated by nine months of a suffocating military siege and an escalated week-long campaign to crush the insurgency there.

Also in Homs, fighting raged for the sixth consecutive day over the symbolic district of Baba Amr, which rebels infiltrated at the weekend in a surprise counter-offensive on an area captured a year ago by the army.

The air force has escalated its use of fighter jets as rebels seize more and more territory across Syria.

Thursday's violence comes a day after at least 159 people were killed across the country, among them 63 civilians.

The conflict in Syria has left some 70,000 people dead in the past two years, the UN says, and has forced more than one million people to flee the country.

The conflict broke out after regime forces unleashed a brutal crackdown against a peaceful uprising that erupted on March 15, 2011. The uprising later morphed into a bloody insurgency.

Israel's military intelligence chief on Thursday said the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has contingency plans to use chemical weapons as it battles insurgents.

Speaking at Israel's annual Herzliya Conference on security and policy, Major General Avi Kohavi said Assad was still in control of his stockpile of chemical weapons, which the Jewish state fears could fall into the hands of militants.

"Assad is making advance preparations to use chemical weapons. He did not give the order yet, but is preparing for it," he told delegates, while stressing that the Syrian leader was still in control of Damascus's chemical stockpiles, military hardware and the air force.

Addressing the same conference earlier this week, army chief Benny Gantz warned that "terrorist" groups fighting alongside insurgents seeking to bring down the Assad regime were becoming stronger.

"The situation in Syria has become exceptionally dangerous. The terrorist organisations are becoming stronger on the ground. Now they are fighting against Assad but in the future they could turn against us," Gantz said.

Several radical Islamist groups have joined the two-year uprising against Assad, with Al-Nusra Front being the most prominent.

Kohavi also said Assad's collapse would harm his allies, Iran and Lebanon's powerful Hezbollah militant group.

When Assad falls, Iran "will lose the ability to transfer weaponry through Syria to Hezbollah," he said.

"Iran and Hezbollah are both doing all in their power to assist Assad's regime. They support Assad operationally on the ground, with strategic consultation, intelligence, weapons," the intelligence chief told delegates.

"They are establishing a popular army trained by Hezbollah and financed by Iran, currently consisting of 50,000 men, with plans to increase to 100,000,' he said.

"Iran and Hezbollah are also preparing for the day after Assad's fall, when they will use this army to protect their assets and interest in Syria."

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