(CNN) -- Syria's shelling of a border town in Turkey has sparked fears that President Bashar al-Assad's attempt to snuff out a rebellion at home could turn into a damaging regional war between the two neighbors.
Five civilians, all women
and children, in the town of Akcakale were killed by Syrian artillery
rounds in the worst single case of violence on the Turkish side of the
border since Syria's unrest began last year.
What's behind Syria's shelling of Turkey?
While Syria hasn't
confirmed its motive for firing into Turkey, rebels fighting an 18-month
war against the Assad regime have allegedly been using positions on the
Turkish border as a safe haven to regroup and re-arm following battles
with Syrian troops.
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Another explanation, says
one expert, is that in a cat-and-mouse pursuit to neutralize rebel
groups near the border, Syrian artillery units simply overshot their
target.
"These things happen in
the fog of war," Jeremy Binnie, Middle East and Africa editor of Jane's
Defence Weekly, told CNN. "If your artillery battery is 10 kilometers
away and you're trying to call a strike down on the border, it's pretty
easy to put a few rounds in the wrong place if you put in the
calculations wrong."
The incident prompted the
Turkish parliament to give the government powers to authorize troops to
deploy to foreign countries, along with retaliatory Turkish artillery
strikes on military positions in Syria -- but both sides have insisted
they don't want war.
Which country, Syria or Turkey, has the stronger military?
Turkey, a NATO member,
has the most powerful military in the region. Binnie says Turkey flies
Western-made jets, and that its older equipment has been upgraded and
supplemented with early-warning radar airplanes and unmanned drones.
Turkey also has a formidable ground force that has spent decades fighting the Kurdish separatist rebels of the KPP in the southeast of the country.
Despite their robust
military capability, and despite the fact the Syrian army has been worn
down by 18 months of civil war, Binnie says Syria's missile capabilities
mean Turkey's not interested in anything more than limited border
excursions.
"Turkey wouldn't want to
tangle with the Syrians, who do still have the ultimate deterrent of
long-range chemical weapons capabilities," he told CNN.
What weapons do Syrian forces have? Where are they coming from?
Syria's greatest strength has also been its weakness in the current fight against rebels.
The Assad regime spent
years buying up sophisticated long range missiles, air defense systems
and chemical weapons to counter the threat of an airborne attack from
Israel.
But the long-term focus
on long range weaponry has left the regime unprepared to fight a
guerrilla war in the streets of Syrian cities -- an approach that
requires flexible, mobile infantry with stockpiles of smaller arms.
Syria has been the
Middle East's top importer of Russian weaponry, most of which is now
more than 20 years old -- and Binnie says the Syrian air force has been
underfunded to the point of "regime forces dropping what amount to IEDs
(improvised explosive devices) from helicopters."
Recently, Syria has attempted to get some of its Mi-24 attack helicopters refurbished by Russia -- a move which prompted an international outcry -- and has ordered Yak-130 advanced training jets and MiG-29 fighter jets that have yet to be delivered.
While the Kremlin has pledged not to deliver new weapons to Syria, it is unclear whether the Assad regime will get the weapons it ordered before the uprising began last year.
Syria's heavy weaponry
and battle tanks may be Russian made, but wars of attrition like this
also require huge amounts of small arms.
To that end, Iran --
Syria's other major regional ally -- has been using Iraqi airspace to
fly small arms, infantry weaponry and personnel into Syria, according to
U.S. officials.
Iraq says it is conducting random searches
on Syrian-bound Iranian planes that use its airports, but as Binnie
points out, "the Iraqis don't have any way to force Iranian planes to
land."
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In addition to the tanks
and troops fanned out across the country, Syria has also deployed
communications interception systems to try to track rebels. CNN
reporters who have been on the ground there say for the most part using a
cell phone is out of the question, as Syrian forces can easily
triangulate the user's location.
What weapons do Syrian rebels have? Where are they coming from?
The rebels are severely
outmatched, and most of their weaponry was either taken from Syrian
military arsenals or obtained from local black markets.
In addition to
individual infantry weapons like AK-47s, tripod-mounted PK machine guns,
and RPG-7 grenade launchers -- the ubiquitous shoulder-mounted weapons
seen on nightly news reports from conflicts around the world -- Binnie
says rebels have also been seen with Strela-2 shoulder-launched
surface-to-air missiles.
Rebels have also
commandeered Syrian tanks, but since they don't generally have the
capacity to maintain and refuel them, according to Binnie, they've
instead been stripping off the heavier guns and mounting them on
civilian vehicles.
Binnie says the
increasing number of improvised weapons and explosives being used in
Syria shows the rebels, without a foreign power to supply them, may be
struggling to maintain adequate levels of ammunition.
"Some of the weapons in
Syria look very similar to what we've seen in the last year in Iraq,
where they've finally ran out of all the ordinates that were lying
around from the 2003 U.S. invasion and have had to improvise," he told
CNN.
What other groups are operating in Syria?
Charles Lister, an
analyst at IHS Jane's Terrorism and Insurgency Centre, says militant
groups "of all persuasions" are now operating in Syria -- and that some
groups increasingly appear to be carrying out joint co-ordinated
attacks.
While Lister says the
majority of the militias now in Syria are not Islamic extremists,
analysts believe a hard-line jihadist group known as Jabhat al Nusra,
which has claimed responsibility for a string of recent suicide attacks
across Syria, has close links with al Qaeda's affiliate in Iraq.
"Their focus now is on
recruiting suicide bombers. They want to copycat the Zarqawi model,"
Noman Benotman, a former Libyan Jihadist now with the Quilliam
Foundation in London, told CNN.
The "Zarqawi model"
refers to the devastating campaign launched by al Qaeda in Mesopotamia
leader Abu Musab al Zarqawi after U.S. troops occupied Iraq.
At the same time,
Kurdish militias now control at least 10 towns and cities in
north-eastern Syria, some near the Turkish border -- an issue Lister
says is "of significant concern to Ankara", which has been battling
Kurdish separatists along its borders for decades.
Is Assad losing control of the Syrian army?
Not yet, it seems.
Despite some high profile defections, Binnie says "we haven't seen
significant Syrian army units going across to join the rebellion."
Binnie says: "The
speculation is that the Syrian army is focused on keeping itself
together more than deploying some of the potentially less reliable units
into rebel held areas."
Like most of the nation
itself, the majority of Syria's conscripted army is Sunni Muslim. Rather
than send some less-than-keen battalions in to kill their own
countrymen, Binnie says the approach may be to have the army bombard
cities from afar, before sending in loyal militias to do the up-close
fighting street to street.
"You give the militias
the weapons and the mobility, and you just make sure that the army units
which are largely Sunni conscripts just stay together," he told CNN.
The plan seems to be
working; Binnie says many people have been surprised at how well the
army has managed to maintain its cohesion during the rebellion.
Is Syria going to end up like Libya?
The world cheered the
fall of Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi -- but what has been left in his
place are a number of well-armed militias operating beyond the control
of a relatively weak central government operating in the capital
Tripoli.
Analysts don't believe
the Assad regime is in danger of collapse any time soon -- Syria's army
is bigger and better organized than Gadhafi's was in Libya, and foreign
intervention into the civil war seems extremely unlikely at this point.
But if the regime does
fold at some point, Binnie says the weapons proliferation in Syria is
going to be far worse than in Libya.
"Syria has a much bigger
military, more missiles and chemical weapons, and the potential for
major sectarian violence," he said. "So it's a little like Libya, but
potentially much, much worse."
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