Book Read Free

The Morning They Came for Us

Page 17

by Janine di Giovanni


  US and Russia hold peace plan talks brokered by Brahimi, ending without a breakthrough.

  February Bombing in Damascus kills dozens of Ba’ath party members and others.

  Rebels continue to make advances with the help of foreign arms. US and UK once again pledge non-military aid to rebels.

  March Syrian planes bomb Raqqa after rebels seize control of the town.

  Islamists set up the Eastern Council. Reports of Jabhat al-Nusra implementing Islamic Law.

  Weapons flow in from Iran. Obama and Putin seek ‘New Syria Initiatives’ for peaceful resolution to the conflict.

  EU vetoes Franco-British push to arm Syrian rebels.

  UN says more than a million Syrians are now refugees.

  Arab League gives Syria’s place to the National Coalition.

  April Foreign jihadis in Syria grow in number with the appearance of Islamic State (ISIS). Its leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi announces merger with Jabhat al-Nusra, which is spurned by al-Nusra.

  Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah says his Shiite fighters are supporting Assad. UK and France report to UN that chemical weapons have been used by Assad.

  UNSC reaches agreement on Syria, calling for an end to violence and condemning human rights violations.

  US pledges additional $23 million in non-lethal aid to rebels.

  May Air strikes hit a shipment of missiles from Iran in Damascus.

  Car bombings and clashes leave 50 dead in bordering countries.

  Hezbollah sends thousands of fighters to help Assad. EU lifts its arms embargo on Syrian opposition but keeps embargo on Assad regime.

  UN says 4.25 million Syrians are displaced within Syria.

  June Government recaptures the strategically important town of al-Qusair, between Homs and the Lebanese border.

  Massacre of over 60 in Hatla by rebels.

  UN says 93,000 have been killed in the conflict so far, revised a few days later to over 100,000. US says that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapons on several occasions in past 12 months and concludes that direct military support can be provided to rebels.

  UN calls Syria the ‘worst humanitarian disaster’ since the Cold War.

  July Saudi-backed Ahmed Jarba becomes leader of the National Coalition.

  Government troops advance in Homs and occupy the Khalid Ibn Al-Walid mosque, a symbol for rebels.

  The Syrian government begins a siege of Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp near Damascus, leading to hundreds starving to death. Amnesty condemns the siege as a crime against humanity.

  August Chemical weapons in a Damascus suburb kill 1,429 people in their sleep. Human Rights Watch (HRW) suspects sarin gas was used. UN weapons inspectors are sent in a few days later and come under fire from snipers. The use of chemical weapons forces Obama to consider a limited military strike with Congressional backing.

  UK prime minister David Cameron also calls for a military response but this is rejected in parliament.

  September Eleven of the biggest Islamist rebel groups reject the National Coalition’s aims and declare their goal of an Islamic state. Russia questions US intelligence on the chemical attack and issues a warning over US air strikes. Russia proposes a diplomatic solution with Syria signing the Chemical Weapons Convention. US agrees.

  UN inspectors declare that they found ‘clear and convincing evidence’ of sarin gas being used.

  UN resolution 2118, aiming to eliminate chemical weapons, is adopted unanimously.

  October Inspectors arrive to begin destroying chemical weapons.

  November Islamist rebels make gains in Deir Al-Zor province.

  December 2.3 million refugees are confirmed in Turkey, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon and Egypt, many living in refugee camps.

  US and Britain suspend any support for rebels after Islamist rebels seize FSA bases.

  Navi Pillay says UN fact-finding team has amassed evidence of the Syrian government’s complicity in war crimes to the ‘highest levels’.

  * * *

  2014: Heading for Stalemate

  * * *

  Date Inside Syria International Reaction

  * * *

  * * *

  * * *

  January UN temporarily stops reporting death tolls through inability to verify the information.

  War crimes analysts say smuggled information shows torture and killing of prisoners on an ‘industrial scale’. Geneva II peace talks begin, including US, Russia, Syrian government and the National Coalition. No progress is made.

  February Government barrel bombs kill almost 250 in Aleppo. Second round of Geneva peace talks fail.

  US warns the war could become a ‘perpetual stalemate’.

  March Syrian Army and Hezbollah recapture the rebel stronghold of Yabroud.

  Israel launches air strikes on Syrian forces.

  April Jordanian Air Force strikes a convoy near the border. Later reports suggest it may have been rebels seeking refuge from government troops.

  May Rebels are evacuated from Homs, marking the end of three years of resistance in the city.

  An HRW report claims that Assad’s forces have used chlorine gas bombs and barrel bombs on rebel-held areas. Special Envoy Lakhdar Brahimi resigns and apologizes for the failure of peace talks.

  June General elections in government-held areas. Opposition groups and the international community describe them as a sham.

  ISIS militants declare a ‘caliphate’ in territory stretching from Aleppo to the eastern Iraqi province of Diyala.

  July ISIS consolidates power and takes a large military base near Raqqa. UNSC votes to allow cross-border aid to victims of the conflict in rebel-held areas.

  Staffan de Mistura is appointed UN Special Envoy to Syria.

  August ISIS controls the entire Raqqa province.

  US journalist James Foley is killed by ISIS in the first of a number of gory execution videos. US assembles an international anti-ISIS coalition in Paris.

  UN says that ISIS has committed human rights abuses and atrocities.

  September ISIS executes journalist Steven Sotloff.

  The US and five Arab countries launch air strikes against ISIS around Aleppo and Raqqa. ISIS launches a huge assault on the Kurdish border enclave of Kobani. Obama authorizes air strikes in Syria against ISIS.

  Special Envoy Staffan de Mistura visits Damascus.

  October ISIS advances into Kobani but is pounded by Coalition air strikes.

  Syrian government forces surround Aleppo, cutting off the main supply lines to the city.

  Lebanon closes its borders to Syrian refugees after more than a million people flee there to escape the fighting. Special Envoy de Mistura calls for ‘freeze zones’ around Aleppo to allow humanitarian aid in.

  November Jabhat al-Nusra pushes the Hazm Movement, an alliance of moderate Syrian rebels, out of Idlib province. The secular militia had been supplied with US weapons. NGOs say the international community must do more to help civilians fleeing the civil war. Turkey, Iraq, Lebanon and Jordan are being overwhelmed by refugees.

  Special Envoy Staffan de Mistura visits Damascus again.

  December The Syrian government allows the World Health Organization (WHO) to deliver medical supplies to opposition areas.

  The UN states that 76,000 have died in 2014, the deadliest year yet. Joint defence pact signed by 17 rebel leaders in southern Syria, hoping to attract more backing from Western countries and the Arab states.

  * * *

  2015: The Conflict Deepens

  * * *

  Date Inside Syria International Reaction

  * * *

  * * *

  * * *

  January Kurdish forces push ISIS out of Kobani on the Turkish border after four months of fighting.

  Fighting intensifies around Damascus.

  The conflict between Hezbollah and Israel in the Golan Heights spills into Lebanon. Reports emerge that a number of Syrian rebel groups are no longer to receive aid through a covert CIA programme.
/>
  February The Syrian government agrees to suspend air and artillery strikes on Aleppo as proposed by the UN. However it resumes a new offensive on 17 February, leading to the abandonment of ‘freeze zones’ on the same day that Staffan de Mistura was to brief UNSC on the proposal in New York.

  HRW claims Assad is still using barrel bombs despite his denial.

  Hazm announces it will disband after being defeated by Jabhat al-Nusra in Aleppo. ISIS release a video showing a captured Jordanian pilot being burnt alive. US and Turkey sign a deal to train and arm Syrian rebels fighting ISIS.

  Staffan de Mistura announces that any political resolution will have to involve Assad.

  Staffan de Mistura visits Damascus again.

  March Opposition offensives push back government forces.

  New Jaish al-Fatah (Army of Conquest) Islamist rebel alliance, backed by Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, captures Idlib and threatens Latakia, a government stronghold.

  Southern Front alliance of secular and Islamist groups takes the Jordanian border crossing at Nassib. The opposition rejects de Mistura’s call for ceasefire, saying it would only benefit Assad.

  The UN and a global alliance of charities including Oxfam and Save the Children name 2014 as the worst year of the conflict yet. The international community is accused of failing the victims and doing little to mitigate the humanitarian disaster.

  Ban Ki-Moon tells the Arab League he has instructed de Mistura to ‘operationalize and flesh out elements in the Geneva communiqué’.

  April ISIS takes control of Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp on the outskirts of Damascus, making conditions in the camp even more difficult. UN announces a series of talks with multiple regional and global parties to assess the possibility of restarting peace talks.

  De Mistura invites Iran to participate in peace talks despite previous opposition threats to boycott any discussions including the Iranians.

  May US carries out targeted air strikes against ISIS, killing a top ISIS official. ISIS now controls Palmyra, and effectively over 50% of the country.

  Hezbollah states it sees ‘no end’ to the civil war. Low-level peace talks launched in Geneva, meeting with opposition representatives, Arab states, US, Russia and other regional and global stakeholders.

  Over 30 Syrian opposition groups reject invitation to talks.

  June Kurdish YPG forces seize the border town of Tal Abyad, in Raqqa province, an important link in the supply chain to Raqqa. ISIS kills at least 145 in Kobani, causing 60,000 to flee. De Mistura criticizes barrel bombs during a three-day visit to Damascus.

  Geneva talks continue.

  August–September An epic number of desperate refugees spill across the European border, seeking asylum.

  October Russia steps up its military campaign in Syria. President Vladimir Putin denounces Washington for not being constructive.

  * * *

  The Syrian Civil War in Numbers

  * * *

  4 years + The time since the conflict started with the Syrian Day of Rage protests on 15 March 2011.

  * * *

  * * *

  * * *

  3 years + The time since the Red Cross declared the situation to be a civil war.

  222,000 The number killed, according to the UN.

  55 Current life expectancy in Syria, which has dropped by two decades since the war began.

  3.9 million Refugees who have left Syria.

  7.6 million Internally displaced people who are still living in the country but have abandoned their homes.

  * * *

  Index

  A. (fixer), here

  Abdullah (boy at refugee camp), here

  Abidjan (Ivory Coast), here

  Abu Suleiman al-Darani Mosque, here, here

  Addounia TV channel, here

  Afghanistan, here, here

  al-Ahmad, Abeer, here, here

  al-Ahmad, Bassam, here

  Ahmed (FSA soldier), here

  Ahrar Surya brigade, here

  Akhmatova, Anna, here

  Alawites, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here

  history of, here, here, here

  Aleppo, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here

  Arabic name for, here

  barrel bombing, here, here, here

  destruction of Old City and bazaar, here

  ethnic and religious diversity, here

  graveyard, here

  history and archaeology, here, here

  hospitals, here, here, here

  increase in radicalization, here

  named Islamic City of Culture, here

  war begins, here, here, here

  Almahatta district (Homs), here

  Annan, Kofi, here, here, here

  Antakya, here, here

  Antonella (Syrian-American), here

  Aramaic language, here, here

  Armenian genocide, here

  Art House concert, here

  al-Assad, Asma, here, here

  al-Assad, Bashar

  and Assad family, here, here

  and Darayya massacre, here, here

  and political process, here, here, here

  his portrait, here

  promotes nationalist regime, here

  seen as winning war, here

  al-Assad, Bassel, here

  al-Assad, Hafez, here, here, here

  al-Assad, Na’saa, here

  Atma refugee camp, here

  Azaz, Micheline, here

  Bab al-Sebaa district (Homs), here, here

  destroyed church, here

  Baba Amr district (Homs), here, here, here, here, here, here

  Baba, General, here

  Baghdad, here

  barrel bombs, here, here, here, here

  Barzeh district (Damascus), here, here

  Basra, here

  Beirut, battle of, here

  Belgrade, here, here

  ‘Believers’ (followers of Assad), here

  Benghazi, here

  Berlin, battle of, here

  Bosnia, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here

  death toll, here

  Brahimi, Lakhdar, here, here, here

  Buck, Joan Juliet, here

  Burt, Alistair, here

  Bustan al-Qasr district (Aleppo), here

  Carla (Christian in Homs), here

  Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue, here

  Chechnya, here, here, here

  China, here, here

  Christians

  in Aleppo, here

  in Damascus, here

  in Homs, here, here

  in Ma’loula, here, here

  Colvin, Marie, here

  Congo, here, here

  Dama Rose Hotel, here, here

  Damascus, here, here, here, here, here, here

  car bombs, here, here, here

  elite support for Assad, here, here

  rape in, here

  two faces of, here

  war begins, here, here, here, here, here

  Damascus opera house, director of, here, here

  Daraa, here, here, here

  Darayya, here, here, here, here, here

  Darwish, Mazen, here

  Dayton Agreement, here

  de Mistura, Staffan, here, here, here, here

  detention law, French, here

  Diab, Mahmoud, here, here

  Dima (actress), here

  diseases, return of, here

  Douma district (Damascus), here, here

  Druze, here, here, here

  East Timor, here

  Egyptian revolution, here, here, here, here

  Facebook, here, here, here, here, here

  Al Fawl, here

  Fisk, Robert, here

  Foley, Jim, here, here, here

  ‘foosball’, here

  foreign fighters, here, here, here

  Free Syrian Army, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here

  in Aleppo, here, here, here
, here, here

  and Darayya massacre, here, here

  in Homs Old City, here, here, here

  in Zabadani, here

  ‘freeze zones’, here

  Gaza, here, here

  Geneva Convention, here

  Geneva II talks, here, here

  Great Syrian Revolt, here

  Haitian earthquake, here, here

  Hama, here, here, here, here, here, here

  Handarat bakery, here

  Hersey, John, here

  Hezbollah, here, here, here, here

  Homs, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here

  death of Marie Colvin, here

  ‘ordinary people’ in, here

  refugees flee, here, here

  refugees return, here

  religious diversity, here

  starvation in, here

  war begins, here, here, here, here, here

  Houla, here, here, here, here

  Human Rights Watch, here, here, here, here, here, here, here

  Hussein, Saddam, here, here, here

  Hussein (law student), here, here, here

  Idlib, here

  Independent, here

  informers (awhyny), here

  International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), here

  International Federation of Human Rights, here

  International Rescue Committee report, here

  Iran, here

  Iraq, here, here, here

  advance of Islamic State, here

  border with Syria erased, here, here

  ISESCO (Islamic Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization), here

  Islamic State (ISIS), here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here

  adopts Raqqa as capital, here, here

  advances in Iraq, here

  kidnappings and beheadings, here, here

  Israel, here, here

  and torture, here

 

‹ Prev