Hama offensive (September 2017)

The Hama offensive (September 2017), code-named Oh Servants of God, Be Steadfast, is a military offensive launched by rebel groups led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) north of the city Hama, as part of the Syrian Civil War.

Background
In March 2017, rebels led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham launched an unsuccessful offensive against the Syrian Armed Forces north of Hama. Although they achieved territorial gains in the first month of the offensive, occupying more than double the territory, after seven days, a counter-offensive was launched by government forces and their allies, recapturing territory. By April, government forces fully expelled the rebels from the initial position of the offensive.

Tahrir al-Sham-led attack
On 19 September, members of Tahrir al-Sham, alongside the TIP and militants aligned to the FSA, launched an offensive on pro-government and Russian Armed Forces positions overseeing the process of the de-escalation of the zone in the province of Idlib following an agreement with Turkey and Iran in negotiations in Astana in May 2017. The rebels initially captured four villages, but after back-and-forth fighting during which the villages changed hands several times,  government forces recaptured all of the villages by 22 September. Russia stated it had killed 850 rebel fighters by 21 September. In contrast, SOHR reported that 66 rebels and 38 soldiers were killed during the offensive, as well as more than 40 civilians over two days in nearly 500 air-strikes on about 40 towns and villages in retaliation for the rebel offensive. The Russian Air Force and Russian Navy conducted air and cruise missile strikes against HTS targets, reportedly including a large military camp. The US State Department accused Syria and Russia, besides bombing civilian targets, of also targeting medical facilities. One of the three bombed hospitals was the al-Rahma clinic in Khan Shaykhun, which treated victims of the chemical attack there in April.

Syrian Army counter-attack and air-strikes
On 23 September, Russian air-strikes targeted rebels in Idlib and Hama governorates, including a Faylaq al-Sham headquarters in the area of Tal Mardiqh in Idlib province, leaving at least 45 rebels dead. There were multiple other Russian airstrikes in Hama and Idlib, including on Khan Sheikhoun, Jisr al-Shaqour, Saraqeb and Kafr Sajna. Around 40 people were reported killed in airstrikes on 24 September.

Concurrently, the Syrian Arab Army launched a counter-offensive in the northern part of the Hama, capturing two villages. However, a strong rebel counter-attack in the evening forces government troops to retreat. The next morning, government forces once again attacked the villages, supported by Russian combat helicopters. On 25 September, the Army made a new attempt to capture the two villages. However, two days later, government forces withdrew from their positions around the villages.

Airstrikes by the government and its allies continued over the following days. On 25 September, Syria Civil Defence reported over 40 deaths on airstrikes on Idlib. On 26 September, there were reports of a fifth hospital in rebel territory targeted, the Sham 4 hospital in Kafr Nabl, Idlib. On 27 September, another 43 deaths were reported in towns in Idlib, including Khan Shaykhun and Jisr al-Shughur, as a result of the campaign, including 12 children. By 28 September, Syria Civial Defence had reported more than 152 civilian dead in the bombing campaign and that six hospitals had now been targeted, displacing urban residents into rural areas. The bombing campaign was halted on the night of 29 September.

Aftermath – New rebel assault
On 6 October, HTS launched an attack northeast of Hama, capturing al-Msherfeh and several other nearby areas. However, the military recaptured most of the territory lost the next day, except al-Msherfeh and Tal Aswad. At least 12 rebels were killed in the fighting, as well as eight government soldiers. On 8 October, the rebels captured Abu Dali and Tal Maqta'a.