Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Syria's Battle For Aleppo Far From The First

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Syria's Battle For Aleppo Far From The First

    Syria's battle for Aleppo far from the first
    by Patrick Martin

    Globe and Mail
    July 26, 2012 Thursday 9:24 AM GMT
    Canada

    Conquering armies have battled for the Syrian city for centuries --
    some with luck, others without

    ABSTRACT Conquering armies have battled for the Syrian city for
    centuries -- some with luck, others without

    FULL TEXT This is far from the first time people have fought over
    Aleppo, Syria's largest and most outward-looking city. Since the 16th
    century BCE , conquering armies have taken or tried to take the place,
    which sits at a major crossroads in Asia Minor.

    Alexander the Great conquered it in 333 BCE, and the Armenians who
    had come to rule over it surrendered it to Pompey in 64 BCE.

    Arabs, radiating out from the Arabian Peninsula with the word of God
    in the form of the Koran, won over the city quickly in 637 CE, and
    the Crusaders from Europe twice attempted to defeat the garrison of
    the city and failed, continuing on, nevertheless, to the more easily
    captured Holyland.

    Saladin came to control the great city, still flourishing then as
    the last stop on the Silk Road before Europe and the Mediterranean.

    However, Mongol forces riding down that Silk Road captured it in 1260.

    Tamerlane took it in 1400; the Ottomans in 1516.

    There is scarcely a single regional warrior or leader who could resist
    trying to conquer the city.

    Domestically, too, there long has been rivalry between Aleppo and
    Damascus. The French split Syria during their mandate period from
    1920s to 1940s, with separate states of Aleppo and Damascus.

    After independence, and during an effort to reunite the country of
    Syria, the people of Aleppo said they would prefer union with Iraq,
    then ruled by a Hashemite monarch, rather than union with Damascus,
    which leaned toward Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

    It wasn't to be and, once more, in the past few months, and especially
    in the past few days, the people of Aleppo are paying the price as
    the rebels from Syria joined by fighters from Iraq are trying to take
    the city, while an army and air force, directed by Damascus, don't
    hesitate to blast away at the city they already think of as foreign.

Working...
X