Assad's Autumn  Offensive - By Jonathan Spyer - https://www.breakingisraelnews.com/52377/assads-sutumn-offensive-opinion/#k1IWb3auJz47GfIB.97
Something  major is brewing in northwest Syria.
The  Assad regime has been back on the attack in recent days. The fighting is focused  on the area of Aleppo, Syria's second-largest city. Russian air strikes and  regime artillery are backing up the troops of President Bashar Assad's army as  they push back the rebels in northeastern Aleppo province.
Meanwhile,  as regime forces pressure the rebels of Jabhat al-Shamiyya (Levant Front) from  the south, seeking to encircle Aleppo city, Islamic State fighters are attacking  them from the north.
The  fighting in Aleppo province comes alongside a renewed regime push forward in  northern Hama province.
In  Aleppo, the initial goal of the regime forces is the long-standing one of  encircling Aleppo city. The regime then intends to push on to link up with the  two besieged Shi'a villages of Nubl and Zahra. If this is achieved, the ability  of the rebels to supply their beleaguered forces in Aleppo city from across the  border in Turkey via the route south from Azaz will be terminated.
The  regime advances represent a reversal of the trend in the war since the beginning  of 2015.
The  current fighting, however, appears to be merely a prelude to an upcoming, much  larger offensive.
Energetic  preparations are under way in the regime stronghold in Latakia  province.
The  intention of this offensive will be to end the long and bloody back-andforth in  northwest Syria by finally destroying the rebel holdings in Idlib and Aleppo  provinces. If this goal is achieved, the area of regime control will then border  Islamic State at its western edge.
Russian  air power is set to play a key role in the fighting in northwest Syria.  Largescale bombing has already taken place in Idlib and Hama  provinces.
The  key issue in the coming battles, however, will be the ground  component.
Assad's  main disadvantage throughout the civil war has been the absence of a sufficient  number of men willing to engage on his behalf.
It  was this shortage of men that led to the withdrawal from much of northern Syria  in 2012, which he and his allies are now trying to reverse. The Syrian dictator  proved unable to replenish the losses from among his own people. And, in  contrast to his Sunni Islamist opponents, there was no pool of ideologically  motivated volunteers from the region and beyond it interested in coming to serve  under his banner.
But  the long-standing regime alliance with the Islamic Republic of Iran has played  the key role in preventing this key deficiency from turning to disaster. Iran  has throughout proved willing to mobilize its key regional proxies, bringing in  fighters from Hezbollah and from the Shi'a militias of Iraq to fight on the  ground for the regime. In addition, the Iranians have trained new formations of  Alawi paramilitary forces for Assad, giving him a ground component more reliable  than the largely Sunni conscript army.
It  appears that Iranian support will be crucial in the upcoming offensive as  well.
According  to a report in the Kuwaiti Al-Rai newspaper, 2,000 members of the Iranian  Revolutionary Guard Corps have arrived in Latakia, along with 2,000 Iraqi Shi'a  militiamen, 2,000 Afghan Shi'a fighters and 1,000 men from the elite forces of  Hezbollah.
These  men are set to be deployed in the fighting in Idlib and Aleppo in the period  ahead.
Will  Assad's offensive succeed? This depends on how success is defined. The rebels  are not helpless. The major forces of Jaish al-Fatah (Army of Conquest) have yet  to fully engage. And where engagements have taken place, there have already been  some setbacks for the regime. A number of armored vehicles were lost to the  rebels' BGM-71 Tow antitank missile systems in the fighting in north Hama.  Supplies are still coming in for the rebels from across the Turkish border.  Qatari, Saudi and Turkish support is still there. The regime/Russian/ Iranian  side will face a determined and well-motivated foe.
Russian  and Iranian assistance nevertheless looks likely to succeed in ending the  immediate threat to the integrity of the regime enclave in Latakia. It is also  possible that the gains made earlier this year by the rebels in Idlib and Aleppo  provinces will be reversed. Perhaps the strategic town of Jisr al-Shughur and  Idlib city and even Aleppo city will return to regime hands.
But  the fundamental problem for the regime, which has beset it since the beginning  of the war, will then resurface: how to hold these areas, where the Sunni Arab  population absolutely rejects the regime.
The  Assad regime may have surprised some with its vigor, but after four years of  bloody civil war, the rebellion, too, shows no signs of running out of steam -  or out of fighters.
So  unless the Iranians are willing to maintain a more or less permanent occupation  of northern Syria, using proxies or even their own men, in the face of ongoing  Sunni jihadi resistance, it is difficult to see how Assad can hold, in the long  term, what he may conquer in the period immediately ahead.
Still,  as of now, the IRGC men and the Iraqis are arriving at the Basel Assad  International Airport in Latakia. Quds Force commander Qasem Soleimani is in the  country, coordinating preparations on the ground. Hezbollah reinforcements are  crossing in from Lebanon. Assad's autumn offensive appears to be about to  begin.
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