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WAR REPORT
Syria rebels 'surprised' by US refusal of missile cover
by Staff Writers
Doha (AFP) March 27, 2013


Warplanes strike rebel posts in Damascus: NGO
Beirut (AFP) March 27, 2013 - Syrian warplanes launched two strikes on Qaboon in northeastern Damascus on Wednesday, as rebels fighters seized three army posts near the ceasefire line with Israel, a watchdog said.

"Two air strikes were carried out on rebel-held buildings in Qaboon," said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, adding that violence in Damascus has risen after insurgents seized control of Jobar district in the city's east.

"There is now fighting in Tadamun, Assali, Yarmuk, Qadam and Qaboon districts," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP of outlying neighbourhoods of the capital that have previously seen intermittent violence.

Elsewhere, rebels seized three small army positions in Quneitra province in southern Syria near the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, said the watchdog.

In Homs, in central Syria, the army pressed its campaign against rebel enclaves, pounding the district of Khaldiyeh in the heart of the city, the Observatory added.

The United Nations says more than 70,000 people have been killed in Syria's conflict, which erupted in 2011 after an anti-regime revolt turned into an insurgency when the army unleashed a brutal crackdown against dissent.

On Wednesday alone, at least 73 people were killed in violence across Syria, according to a preliminary toll released by the Observatory. Among the casualties were 20 civilians, 19 soldiers and 33 rebels.

Syria's opposition chief said on Wednesday he was "surprised" by a US decision to reject his demand for NATO to provide Patriot missile protection for rebel bastions in the country's north.

"There is an international will that the revolution does not come out victorious," Ahmed Moaz al-Khatib, head of the National Coalition, said in Doha, Qatar.

"But the people that have defied injustice and tyranny will not stop," said Khatib, who still acts as the head of the coalition despite announcing his resignation on Sunday.

He told an Arab League summit on Tuesday that he had asked US Secretary of State John Kerry to extend the umbrella provided by Patriot anti-missile batteries positioned in Turkey to protect rebel-held parts of north Syria.

Khatib said he was waiting for a NATO response, in an address to Arab leaders after the League gave the opponents of President Bashar al-Assad the seat of Syria at the 22-member organisation.

But the White House reacted swiftly saying that "at this time, NATO does not intend to intervene militarily in Syria".

"I think that a Patriot missile battery would follow the definition of military assistance," White House spokesman Jay Carney said, adding that Patriot anti-missile batteries in Turkey were for self-defence only.

In Brussels, NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen on Wednesday echoed the White House's position and said the alliance has "no plans to change the purpose of the coverage of the deployed Patriot missiles", despite the opposition plea.

"We made clear from the outset that this deployment is purely defensive. We have no offensive intentions. We are there to ensure effective defence and protections of Turkish people and territory," Rasmussen told reporters.

"That's a core task of NATO to protect our allies and we stick to that declaration that was issued when we decided to deploy."

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