U.S. warns Syria against attack on south

BEIRUT -- The United States warned it would take "firm and appropriate measures" to protect a cease-fire in southern Syria if President Bashar Assad's forces move against rebels there.

The area in southwestern Syria, between the border city of Daraa and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, has emerged as a flashpoint in a wider standoff between regional archrivals Israel and Iran.

The U.S., Russia and Jordan agreed last year to include Daraa in a "de-escalation zone" to freeze the lines of conflict.

But government forces have recently dropped leaflets on rebel-held areas warning of an imminent offensive and urging fighters to lay down their arms, Syrian state media said Friday.

In a statement released Friday, the U.S. State Department said it was concerned by reports that Assad's forces were preparing for an operation in southwestern Syria. It warned the government against "any actions that risk broadening the conflict."

Assad has relied on Russia, Iran and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah to battle an uprising against his family's decades-long rule and roll back an Islamic State insurgency that grew out of the country's seven-year civil war.

Iran has sent military commanders to oversee battles and organize militias from across the Middle East to fight alongside Assad's troops.

The U.S. and Israel view Iran's extensive military presence in Syria as a threat to Israel and have threatened action.

The Israeli military is believed to be behind dozens of airstrikes in recent years against Hezbollah, Iran, and Syrian military positions.

Earlier this month, Israel bombed Iranian military positions in Syria in what it said was retaliation for an Iranian rocket attack on the occupied Golan Heights.

Israel called it its most serious operation in Syria since the 1973 Mideast war.

The government began moving reinforcements to Daraa province last week after expelling the last rebels and Islamic State militants from around Damascus, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which closely monitors the war.

Leaflets dropped on northern Daraa, which is divided between rebel and government-controlled areas, warned: "The men of the Syrian army are coming."

The Syrian uprising began in Daraa in 2011.

The cease-fire has slowly disintegrated as government warplanes have carried out airstrikes against rebel-held areas.

Meanwhile, Syria's Foreign Ministry says it has handed to the Russian and Iranian ambassadors in Damascus a list of the members it has named to a committee to review the national constitution.

Control over the constitutional process has been a key point of conflict between Assad's government and the international community and Syrian opposition.

Assad has said his government will only consider amendments to the current constitution, in defiance of a U.N. initiative to have the government, opposition, and independents draft a new document.

The U.N. initiative was given a boost in February by Russia, which organized a Syrian congress in Sochi earlier this year to press the warring sides to pen a new constitution.

But the Syrian government has refused to endorse the effort.

The Foreign Ministry's statement, published on state media on Saturday, was vague on the matter of whether the government was naming its own commission or nominating members to a U.N. commission. It did not identify the members named in the list. And it said the government was satisfied with "the current constitution."

Also Saturday, a car bomb in one of Idlib's main streets killed at least four people and wounded about 30 others, according to the Syrian Civil Defense search-and-rescue group.

Idlib, the capital of a province by the same name, has suffered deterioration to its security in recent months as rebel and jihadist factions battle with the al-Qaida-linked Levant Liberation Committee for dominance. The province is one of the opposition's last remaining footholds in the country. The other is Daraa.

It was not clear who was behind Saturday's bomb blast. According to the Observatory, at least 119 people have been killed over the past month in the factional infighting in Idlib.

Thirty-one of them have been civilians.

A Section on 05/27/2018

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