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Explosion Levels Hotel Housing Government Troops in Syria Explosion Levels Hotel Housing Government Troops in Syria
(about 2 hours later)
BEIRUT, Lebanon — A hotel used by Syrian government troops in the northern city of Aleppo was leveled by a huge explosion on Thursday, after Islamic militants tunneled underneath the building and planted explosives linked to remote detonators, activist groups and state media reported.BEIRUT, Lebanon — A hotel used by Syrian government troops in the northern city of Aleppo was leveled by a huge explosion on Thursday, after Islamic militants tunneled underneath the building and planted explosives linked to remote detonators, activist groups and state media reported.
There was no immediate word on casualties. Video footage, whose authenticity could not immediately be confirmed, showed huge clouds of gray smoke blotting out the Aleppo skyline. The Islamic Front, one of the biggest insurgent groups in Syria, took responsibility for the blast, saying the attack was in response to the mass killing of unarmed civilians in Aleppo. There was no immediate word on casualties. Video footage whose authenticity could not immediately be confirmed showed huge clouds of gray smoke blotting out the Aleppo skyline.
The Islamic Front said the attack was a prelude to a “large-scale operation” to secure territorial gains. The group is a coalition of insurgents including former Free Syrian Army fighters and members of harder-core Islamist factions, and it has clashed in many areas with Qaeda-influenced insurgents. The Islamic Front, one of the biggest insurgent groups in Syria, claimed responsibility for the blast, saying the attack was in response to the mass killing of unarmed civilians in Aleppo. The group, a coalition of insurgents including former Free Syrian Army fighters and members of harder-core Islamist factions, said the attack was a prelude to a “large-scale operation” meant to secure territorial gains.
The state news agency SANA said the “enormous attack” had rocked the Old City of Aleppo, destroying historical sites. Attackers blew up “tunnels they dug under archaeological buildings,” SANA said. The state news agency SANA said the “enormous attack” had rocked the Old City area of Aleppo and had destroyed historical sites there. The attackers blew up “tunnels they dug under archaeological buildings,” SANA said.
State television identified the hotel as the Carlton. Images on the Internet depicted the hotel as a traditional building in pale stone with palm trees outside. The destroyed hotel was seen in Internet images as a pale stone building in traditional style with palm trees outside. State television identified it as the Carlton, which was built as a hospital in the era of Ottoman rule before World War I and later renovated and reopened as a hotel, facing the historic citadel in Aleppo. Government forces had been billeted there for two years.
The hotel was built as a hospital during the Ottoman period that ended with World War I. It was later renovated and reopened as a hotel facing the historic citadel in Aleppo, Syria’s largest city. Government forces had been billeted there for two years. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which is based in Britain and collects information from contacts inside Syria, said that Islamist forces had tunneled under the hotel from areas held by rebels seeking the overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad. The explosion “completely destroyed” the hotel, according to the observatory.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which is based in Britain and collates information from contacts inside Syria, said that Islamist forces had tunneled from areas held by rebels seeking the overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad. The hotel was “completely destroyed” and government soldiers suffered unspecified casualties, according to the observatory. Aleppo, the country’s largest city, has been carved into a checkerboard of areas held by one side or the other as the Syrian civil war has intensified. Government forces have been bombing rebel areas from the air, while the rebels have detonated car bombs and fired mortar rounds into government-held districts.
An activist group, the Shaam News Network, said government forces had been based in the hotel. The attack in Aleppo came a day after rebels in the city of Homs began evacuating positions they had held since the revolt against Mr. Assad took root in 2011. The evacuation was seen as a bitter defeat and emotional blow for antigovernment forces there, but it was not clear whether the bomb in Aleppo was intended as a direct response.
Aleppo has been carved into a checkerboard of areas held by rebels and government troops as the civil war has intensified. Government forces have launched a campaign of aerial bombardment on rebels, who have fired mortars and detonated car bombs. Homs is Syria’s third-largest city, and was one of the first where peaceful protests turned to armed combat; it was also among the first to experience indiscriminate bombing by government forces, a bellwether for the nation’s descent into turmoil.
The attack in Aleppo came a day after rebels in the city of Homs began an evacuation of positions taken as the revolt against Mr. Assad took root in March 2011. The evacuation was seen as a bitter defeat and emotional blow for antigovernment forces there, but it was not clear whether the bomb in Aleppo was intended as a direct response. Talal Barazi, the provincial governor in Homs, told state media that 80 percent of the rebel fighters had left their positions in the city center under a truce, and the rest were scheduled to leave on Thursday, Reuters reported.
Homs is Syria’s third-largest city and was one of the first in which protesters switched from street demonstrations to armed combat with government forces. Some of its neighborhoods were also among the first to be targeted by indiscriminate bombardment by government forces, a bellwether for the nation’s descent into turmoil. Rebels tried once before this year to tunnel under the hotel in Aleppo and blow it up. That attack did damage but did not force government troops to abandon the building.
For the government, the rebels’ evacuation was held up as proof that it could retake a major urban area through brute force and local talks. Tamam, an activist from Aleppo now living in Turkey who did not give his family name for fear of reprisals, said that government forces had turned the hotel into a military base where snipers and mortar crews could attack much of the city’s old quarter.
Talal Barazi, the provincial governor in Homs, had told state media that 80 percent of the rebel fighters had left positions under the terms of the evacuation. The remaining fighters were scheduled to leave on Thursday, when the center of Homs would be “declared a secure city” and reconstruction would commence, Reuters reported. Government supporters in Aleppo speculated in postings on Facebook that the rebels may have detonated two tunnels packed with explosives on Thursday, one under the hotel and the other in a separate neighborhood.
The attack on the hotel in Aleppo was the second of its kind in a little over a month. In the earlier blast, explosives in a tunnel underneath the hotel damaged much of the building but did not force government troops to abandon it. The tactic of tunneling under opponents’ fortifications has nearly a 900-year pedigree in Aleppo; when Crusaders besieged a Muslim-held castle there in 1131, the premature collapse of a siege tunnel fatally injured their leader, Count Joscelin I of Edessa.
Tamam, an activist from Aleppo now living in Turkey, who did not wish to give his family name for fear of reprisals, said government forces had turned the hotel into a military base overlooking the old quarter of the city, using it as a base for mortar and sniper attacks. In video images posted on YouTube, the Islamic Front showed what it said was a similar attack this week on a government outpost in Idlib, southwest of Aleppo. The images showed a huge blast in which the Islamic Front said 35 government soldiers had died.
Government supporters in Aleppo said in postings on Facebook that there may have been two tunnels packed with explosives, one under the hotel and the other in a separate neighborhood.
In video footage posted on YouTube, the Islamic Front showed what it said was an example of a similar attack this week in a tunnel underneath a government outpost in the city of Idlib, southwest of Aleppo. The footage showed a huge blast in which the Islamic Front said 35 government soldiers had died.