Al Qaeda chief urges militants to use ‘guerrilla tactics’ in Syria

In an audio recording posted online, Zawahri called for the rebels to be patient

Al Qaeda's Ayman al Zawahri speaks from an unknown location, in this still image taken from video uploaded on a social media website June 8, 2011. PHOTO: REUTERS

Al Qaeda leader Ayman al Zawahri has called militants in Syria to wage guerrilla war against enemies ranging from Syrian President Bashar al Assad and his Iranian-backed allies to Western powers.

In an audio recording posted online on Sunday, Zawahri called for the rebels to be patient, saying they should be prepared for a long battle with the Western-led coalition in Iraq and Syria and Iranian-backed  fighting alongside Syrian President Bashar al Assad's government.

"Our people in Sham (Syria) prepare yourselves for a long battle with the Crusaders and their allies the Shias and Alawites," the successor to Osama bin Laden said.

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Zawahri said militants were targeted by their enemies because they sought to impose Islamic rule in Syria, adding that the West and its allies were doing everything they could to prevent an "Islamic" wave that was sweeping the region.

It was not clear when the recording, in which the militant leader also said holy war in Syria was not just the prerogative of Syrians but all Muslims, was made.

He also warned insurgents not to turn the conflict into an purely internal Syrian one.

Syria's former al Qaeda branch Nusra Front now spearheads an alliance of Islamist brigades known as Hayat Tahrir al Sham which is leading battles against Syrian government forces and their Russian and Iranian backed allies on most of the main fronts in the country.

This alliance plays a key role in the control of most of Idlib province, although US led coalition strikes have killed dozens of its leaders in recent months.
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