- ... Aleppo residents cope with onslaught of strikes. ... [Syrian airstrikes hammer Aleppo amid expanding offensive against rebels] ... “Aleppo is being burned. ...
Aleppo Is Being Burned: Onslaught of Airstrikes News
A ferocious assault on Aleppo suggests the U.S. may be wrong on Syria
Washington Post13 hours agoAssad has repeatedly expressed his intention to reconquer all of Syria from the rebels he uniformly calls “terrorists,” and he reiterated that determination on the eve of the cease-fire ...After brief period of calm, Aleppo residents cope with onslaught of strikes
Washington Post9 hours agoSelmo is director of the White Helmets’ Aleppo branch. Overnight Thursday, three of the group’s four centers were nearly destroyed in airstrikes. “The White ...Aleppo residents describe onslaught as airstrikes bombard Syrian city
The Guardian14 hours agoThe statement called for...only way to curb the bloodshed was for “the ones who have the air power in this part of the conflict to simply stop using it”. Facebook Twitter Pinterest A ...‘Aleppo is being burned’: Residents cope with an onslaught of airstrikes
ISTANBUL — Residents of the Syrian city of Aleppo have grown used to the explosions. But on Friday, the bombs rained down like never before.
First, a nationwide cease-fire collapsed. Then, on Thursday, government forces warned that they would retake the part of the city held by rebels. By Friday night, hundreds of strikes had pounded Aleppo, and scores of people were dead.
“The bombing is constant, and it doesn’t stop,” said Om Majed Karman, a resident of a part of Aleppo now under attack. The past few days, she said, have been “the worst I’ve ever seen.”
The offensive dealt a fresh blow to efforts to revive the cease-fire, which was sponsored by Russia and the United States. The U.N. special envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, said the situation was “really tragic.”
The next few days “are crucial for making or breaking it,” he said. The meetings between the United States and Russia have been “long, painful, and disappointing.”
Now, residents in the eastern part of Aleppo — Syria’s largest city — are under bombardment and grappling with the shocks of the last two weeks.
An estimated 250,000 people remain in eastern Aleppo, which the rebels have controlled since 2012. But residents are cut off from food, fuel and water, and government planes frequently bomb the area.
The truce, which began on Sept. 12, brought a rare calm, silencing weapons and allowing residents to sleep. Children frolicked in parks, and neighbors chatted. Both activities would have been unthinkable just days earlier.
The welcome lull in violence lasted six days. But the cease-fire was rapidly unraveling, and the United Nations struggled to get aid to the besieged populace.
The United Nations prepared a 40-truck convoy with packages of rice, flour, oil and beans to feed roughly 80,000 people for a month. But the trucks remained stuck on the Turkey-Syria border, awaiting clearance from the Syrian government to proceed.
The holdup in relief supplies made the cease-fire bittersweet. There were no bombs, but neither was there food, fuel or electricity.
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But even as Syrians emerged to enjoy the cease-fire, the accord quickly crumbled, shattering their hopes of even temporary peace.
“This is not the same city as last week,” said Ammar al-Selmo, a civil-defense volunteer with the White Helmets group.
Selmo is director of the White Helmets’ Aleppo branch. Overnight Thursday, three of the group’s four centers were bombed. The strikes destroyed vehicles and equipment, and volunteers could not reach the trapped and wounded.
“The White Helmets are completely exhausted,” Selmo said. “Aleppo is being burned.” [U.S., Russia continue to exchange charges amid effort to salvage cease-fire]
The war, which began in 2011 with demonstrations against the government of President Bashar al-Assad, has killed nearly half a million people. The United States, Russia, Iran and Turkey are all involved in the fighting.
Russia and the United States are on opposing sides in the war, but together they have brokered two cease-fires that have failed.
Russia intervened last year to prop up Assad, sending troops and aircraft into the country. The United States, meanwhile, has trained some rebel groups and backs the Syrian opposition. At the same time, the United States is spearheading airstrikes against the Islamic State extremist group.
Each side has accused the other of violating the latest cease-fire, or at least failing to persuade local allies to abide by it. A week ago, warplanes from the U.S.-led coalition mistakenly struck a camp occupied by Syrian government soldiers, killing more than 60 troops. Russia blamed the United States.
Later, U.S. officials blamed Russia for deadly strikes on a humanitarian convoy. That attack killed more than 20 people, including aid workers, and temporarily halted the movement of U.N. convoys in Syria.
Still, residents of eastern Aleppo have their own coping mechanisms. And amid the political and diplomatic chaos, they reach for small moments of daily normality.
Karman, whose son was killed, rocks her 2-year-old granddaughter when the airstrikes are frighteningly loud.
“The older children have stopped caring, in a way,” she said. “They stay in the street and watch the planes so they can figure out where they’re going.”
Amr Arab and his family survived an assault on their home on Wednesday. He said he tells his brother’s children stories to distract them from the war.
“We try to talk and joke,” he said. “To make it seem like it’s not a big deal, and so the children stay calm.”
In the mornings, teacher Mohammed Adel and his pregnant wife, Rahaf, thank God that they are alive.
“She asks me for apples, but I can’t bring them,” Adel said of his wife. Her diet now is just rice, dates and beans.
In the Arab household — which includes Amr’s aunt, his brother and his brother’s children — everyone sleeps in the same room each night.
“We head to the basement, or rooms close to the center of the house,” said Arab, 24.
“We open the doors, and make sure there is no metal,” he said. “Because it will turn into shrapnel.”
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