Syria's Palmyra in Peril as IS Seizes Ancient City

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Islamic State group jihadists seized full control of the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra on Thursday, putting the world heritage site and its priceless artifacts at risk of destruction.

The ransacking of Palmyra, a 2,000-year-old former stopping point for caravans on the Silk Road, would be "an enormous loss to humanity," UNESCO head Irina Bokova warned.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said IS now controlled half of all territory in the war-torn country.

The capture of Palmyra is the latest blow to efforts to hold back the advancing jihadists, following the fall of Iraq's Ramadi.

"IS fighters are in all parts of Tadmur, including near the archeological site," Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP, using the Arabic name for the city.

Syrian state media said loyalist troops withdrew after "a large number of IS terrorists entered the city."

In an online statement, IS proclaimed its capture of the entire city, which is strategically located at the crossroads of key highways leading west to Damascus and Homs, and east to Iraq.

The Observatory, which relies on a network of sources on the ground, said some residents had headed to the city of Homs but others stayed home, while state media said most of Palmyra's civilians had been evacuated.

IS also seized Palmyra's prison, notorious for the killings of hundreds of regime prisoners in the 1980s and seen as a symbol of oppression during the reign of President Bashar Assad's father Hafez Assad.

- 'Birthplace of civilization' -

The jihadists, notorious for demolishing archaeological treasures since declaring a "caliphate" last year straddling Iraq and Syria, fought their way into Palmyra on foot after breaking through in the city's north.

Known in Syria as "the pearl of the desert," Palmyra is home to colonnaded alleys, elaborately decorated tombs, and ancient Greco-Roman ruins.

"At the end of the day, it's the birthplace of human civilization. It belongs to the whole of humanity and I think everyone today should be worried about what is happening," Bokova said.

The jihadists sparked international outrage this year when they blew up the ancient Assyrian city of Nimrud and smashed artifacts in the museum of Mosul, both in Iraq.

Before Syria's conflict began in March 2011, more than 150,000 tourists visited Palmyra every year

"Palmyra was the number one destination in Syria for all international tour operators," said Maha Qandalaft at Syrian travel agency Adonis. 

The pro-government newspaper Al-Watan said Palmyra's capture "shames the international community, which crossed its arms as IS infiltrated the most celebrated historical city in the world."

- 'What went wrong?' -

Fierce clashes in and around Palmyra have cost the lives of at least 462 people, including 71 civilians, 241 regime forces, and 150 jihadists, the Observatory said. 

By taking Palmyra, which sits 210 kilometers (130 miles) northeast of Damascus in desert that extends to the Iraqi frontier, IS controls more than 95,000 square kilometers of Syria, according to the monitor.

The jihadist group dominates the provinces of Deir Ezzor and Raqa and has a strong presence in Hasakeh, Aleppo, Homs, and Hama.

It has also seized most of Syria's oil and gas fields, using the income to fund the expansion of its self-styled "caliphate."

The fall of Palmyra came days after the militants took the Iraqi city of Ramadi, their most significant victory since mid-2014 when they conquered swathes of land, sparking a U.S.-led air campaign to support Baghdad.

A U.S. State Department official said the loss of Ramadi would force Washington to take an "extremely hard look" at its strategy against IS.

"You'd have to be delusional not to take something like this and say: 'What went wrong, how do you fix it and how do we correct course to go from here?'," the official told reporters.

The official said Washington would step up its aid to Iraq, including sending 1,000 anti-tank missile systems to help stop suicide car bombs and accelerating its training and equipping of tribal forces to fight IS.

On Thursday, Iraqi forces backed by powerful Shiite militias prepared to launch an offensive to retake Ramadi.

Comments 15
Thumb ex-fpm 21 May 2015, 10:12

The regime forces pulled back from an open flat land and they have airforce, tanks, and long range artillery...LOL.

Thumb marcus 21 May 2015, 10:24

just like Al Anbar fell to 400 ISIS fighters two days ago and the thousands of Iraqi Army fled leaving behind their tanks and ammunition:) and now the Shia militia are asked to go in:)

Thumb EagleDawn 21 May 2015, 10:53

Bollywood at its best:)

Thumb ex-fpm 21 May 2015, 11:58

this move links Palymra in Syria with Al Anbar in Iraq.

Missing humble 21 May 2015, 10:37

Next will be the declaration of Alawistan. In near future.

Thumb EagleDawn 21 May 2015, 11:19

الرئاسة التركية: تقدم "داعش" في سوريا يخدم النظام السوري.

Thumb justin 21 May 2015, 11:24

"mtv": تنظيم "الدولة الاسلامية" يعلن تحرير 27 لبنانيا من سجن تدمر بينهم 5 مسيحيين مسجونين منذ أكثر من 35 سنة.

Thumb theresistance4.0 21 May 2015, 15:00

Lol u M14 mongrels are hilarious! First ur in support of ur freedom loving organ eating Jihadi Isis brothers then u claim they are in fact working of Bashar now some of u claim to support them or say this is all a ruse...make up ur damn mind you sorry bunch! Hamdillah u and your keen are the MINORITY in Lebanon have a nice day my confused friends :)

Missing ArabDemocrat.com 21 May 2015, 18:20

The so-called Resistance supporters are a sad bunch. They would not live with those in the FSA that wanted a democratic pluralistic Iraq. They sent after them sectarian militias to fight them under the name of God, Ali, Fatima, Abbas and Zeinab. Now that they are faced with the equally lunatic Nusra and more lunatic IS, they point fingers!!!! Even with the US airforce in support, they cannot defeat them. Do people think that they will develop an iota of brain and settle with the majority of the Syrian populace. Unlikely.

Missing ArabDemocrat.com 21 May 2015, 18:21

Democratic pluralistic Syria

Missing ArabDemocrat.com 21 May 2015, 18:32

Tadmur does not open the road to Idlib and there is much regime controlled land in between. The c apture of Tadmur consolidate the area under their control in Anbar, makes it very difficult to re-supply regime forces in Deir Azzour, put several oil and gas field under IS control and enable IS to threaten multiple theaters at the same time.

Thumb theresistance4.0 21 May 2015, 18:02

According to you Bashars from the gut was to destroy and divide his country to create a "Allawite" state as you said, oppressing the Sunnis of his country with his Sunni majority army all the while creating a Sunni terrorist organization to fend off your fictions FSA who are backed by the real pillars of democracy Saudi, Qatar, Turkey, and Israel? Lmaooo IM DONE! There is no debating stupid you win! Plz go back to your silly spaghetti string theory rants.

Thumb theresistance4.0 22 May 2015, 01:53

Sure thing Princess the end is near O whoa is me. The Hizb are doomed Bashar falling blah blah blah...another fantastic prediction by the M14 goons. If thats what makes u and Teaxy with his fictious 100% stats sleep better good for u two! :)

Missing helicopter 22 May 2015, 05:24

I would rather see everyone be pro-Lebanon now and late.

Missing helicopter 22 May 2015, 05:28

Why do we have to rrot for one side or another. Both sides are bad news for Lebanon. We would be better off united as Lebanese and strengthen our army and institutions so we can abolish Sectarianism asap and fortify Lebanon against whoever ends up winning in Syria. Lets put citizenship above sectarianism.