Syrian rebel leader visits Assad family homeland

Syrian rebel leader visits Assad family homeland
Updated 13 August 2013
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Syrian rebel leader visits Assad family homeland

Syrian rebel leader visits Assad family homeland

BEIRUT: The military commander of Syria's main Western-backed opposition group visited rebels in the coastal province that is President Bashar Assad's ancestral homeland following recent opposition advances in the area, a spokeswoman said Monday.
Over the past week, rebel fighters in Latakia province have swept through a string of villages that are populated by members of Assad's Alawite sect. The advances have not shifted the strategic balance in the area, but they did embarrass the regime in a region that has been under tight government control since the Syrian revolt began more than two years ago.
Assad's forces have launched a counteroffensive to try to dislodge the rebels, and activists say fighting is raging over several villages in the mountainous region.
In a video posted on the opposition Syrian National Coalition' s Facebook page, rebel military chief Gen. Salim Idris walks with a small group of fighters through hilly terrain. Dressed in civilian clothes with a shoulder holster and a pistol, Idris tells them that he visited the front to see the "important achievements and great victories that were made by our brother rebels in the coast."
"We are here to confirm that the command is fully coordinating with the coastal command," he said.
Coalition spokeswoman Sarah Karkour said the visit to Latakia took place Sunday. She did not specify whether he went to the newly captured territory.
Idris is the leader of the Coalition's Supreme Military Council, a loose umbrella group of more secular-minded opposition brigades that serves as the main conduit for Western aid to rebels fighting to oust the Assad regime. He has little more than nominal control, however, over the hundreds of rebel factions that make up the constellation of opposition forces on the ground.