Siege of Abu al-Duhur Airbase | |||||||
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Part of the Syrian Civil War | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
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![]() (Abu al-Duhur commander) ![]() ![]() (Syrian Arab Air Force 678 Squadron division commander) ![]() (Syrian Air Force officer) ![]() (Syrian Air Force officer) |
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Units involved | |||||||
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Strength | |||||||
1,000+ fighters | 250–700 soldiers | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
dozens killed (final assault) |
56+ killed, 71 captured (all executed), 40+ missing (final assault) ----- One helicopter Antonov An-26 crashed |
Rebel victory
The Siege of Abu al-Duhur Airbase was a battle for the Abu al-Duhur Military Airbase in the Idlib Governorate during the Syrian Civil War. It was captured by rebel forces on 9 September 2015. The base had been besieged since September 2012.
On 22 September 2012, rebels from the Free Syrian Army carried out a coordinated attack involving 3 rebel battalions on the airbase at Abu al-Duhur, and then preventing Syrian Army reinforcements from reaching the base. They also claimed to have shot down a fighter jet during the attack, though this was not independently confirmed. By September 2012, the Syrian Air Force base was partially besieged by rebel fighters. The rebels, led by prominent commander Jamal Maarouf, established positions on the base's western edge, from where they were able to fire on the base's runways. The base was reported to have been rendered effectively unusable as a result, with planes no longer able to fly to or from it. By this time, supplies for the troops were airdropped by helicopters that flew in from airbases in Hama. The rebels also upped their attacks on the airbase. They claimed that as a result of their employment of anti-aircraft weaponry, they rendered flights from the base inoperable. In August and September 2012, two MiG-21 and one MiG-23 jet fighters were reportedly downed above the airbase, including one reportedly shot down by Maarouf himself.
In 2013, al-Khashir checkpoint (north east of the airport) was destroyed and burned by rebels. However, the army kept control of the village. The base itself was also unsuccessfully stormed by the FSA on 30 April 2013, which temporally seized the western part of the base.