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Rebel Groups Claim Assad Targeted in Mortar Attack | Rebel Groups Claim Assad Targeted in Mortar Attack |
(35 minutes later) | |
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Two Syrian rebel groups claimed Thursday that they had attacked President Bashar al-Assad’s motorcade in the capital, Damascus, as he headed to a mosque for morning prayers on Id al-Fitr, the holiday marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan. | BEIRUT, Lebanon — Two Syrian rebel groups claimed Thursday that they had attacked President Bashar al-Assad’s motorcade in the capital, Damascus, as he headed to a mosque for morning prayers on Id al-Fitr, the holiday marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan. |
But the information minister, Omran al-Zoubi, dismissed the rebel claims, telling Syrian state television: “The news is wholly untrue.” | But the information minister, Omran al-Zoubi, dismissed the rebel claims, telling Syrian state television: “The news is wholly untrue.” |
Video released by rebel groups showed smoke rising over Malki, the upscale neighborhood in central Damascus where Mr. Assad lives and where, in calmer times, he was known for driving his own car. The area has been relatively untouched by the occasional rebel shells that reach central Damascus, which is largely cordoned off from the fighting by government checkpoints. | Video released by rebel groups showed smoke rising over Malki, the upscale neighborhood in central Damascus where Mr. Assad lives and where, in calmer times, he was known for driving his own car. The area has been relatively untouched by the occasional rebel shells that reach central Damascus, which is largely cordoned off from the fighting by government checkpoints. |
If the rebel claims are true, the attack would be the closest call known for Mr. Assad during the conflict. Last summer, four of his top officials were killed in a rebel bombing, and shells have periodically landed close to some of his many residences, but Mr. Assad is not known to have personally come under fire. If the rebels did manage to target and hit a moving motorcade, it would signal an unusual tactical feat or perhaps new weapons more precise than the usual rockets and mortars, as well as good intelligence. | If the rebel claims are true, the attack would be the closest call known for Mr. Assad during the conflict. Last summer, four of his top officials were killed in a rebel bombing, and shells have periodically landed close to some of his many residences, but Mr. Assad is not known to have personally come under fire. If the rebels did manage to target and hit a moving motorcade, it would signal an unusual tactical feat or perhaps new weapons more precise than the usual rockets and mortars, as well as good intelligence. |
Al Arabiya, the news broadcaster based in Dubai, cited one rebel group, Tahrir al-Sham Brigade, a unit of the Free Syrian Army, as saying in a statement: “After conducting reconnaissance on the timing and course of Bashar al-Assad’s motorcade the area was hit with artillery. We pray to God and await the field report about the results.” | Al Arabiya, the news broadcaster based in Dubai, cited one rebel group, Tahrir al-Sham Brigade, a unit of the Free Syrian Army, as saying in a statement: “After conducting reconnaissance on the timing and course of Bashar al-Assad’s motorcade the area was hit with artillery. We pray to God and await the field report about the results.” |
Al Arabiya also cited Islam Alloush, a rebel with another group, the Liwa al-Islam Brigade, as saying fighters had fired rockets at Mr. Assad’s motorcade near the Dedeman Damascus Hotel. “Assad was not hit, but the information we have based from sources within the regime is that there were casualties within his entourage,” the statement said. | Al Arabiya also cited Islam Alloush, a rebel with another group, the Liwa al-Islam Brigade, as saying fighters had fired rockets at Mr. Assad’s motorcade near the Dedeman Damascus Hotel. “Assad was not hit, but the information we have based from sources within the regime is that there were casualties within his entourage,” the statement said. |
There was little clarity about the rebel claims. | There was little clarity about the rebel claims. |
Syrian state television showed Mr. Assad next to Syria’s grand mufti, Ahmad Badr Eddin Hassoun, standing and praying in a row of men in suits. It was unclear whether the footage was new. | |
Mr. Zoubi said that Mr. Assad had driven himself to the mosque as usual, adding that Al Arabiya should fire “the administrative staff that supervised this false news.” | Mr. Zoubi said that Mr. Assad had driven himself to the mosque as usual, adding that Al Arabiya should fire “the administrative staff that supervised this false news.” |
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition group based in Britain, reported that two mortar shells had fallen in the Kafar Souseh neighborhood, on the outskirts of Damascus, and that another had fallen in Mr. Assad’s neighborhood of Malki. No casualties were reported, it said. | |
Hwaida Saad contributed reporting from Beirut, and David Jolly from Paris. | Hwaida Saad contributed reporting from Beirut, and David Jolly from Paris. |