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The most powerful rebel alliance in Syria -- the Islamic Front -- is on the verge of collapse.

Photo: BARAA AL-HALABI/AFP/Getty Images
Photo: BARAA AL-HALABI/AFP/Getty Images
Photo: BARAA AL-HALABI/AFP/Getty Images

Two developments took place in the past month that point to remarkable changes within Syria's Islamist landscape. In early February, al Qaeda's central leadership disavowed the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) -- a favor ISIS repaid a few weeks later, when it launched a suicide attack that killed al Qaeda's representative in the country, Abu Khalid al-Suri.

Two developments took place in the past month that point to remarkable changes within Syria’s Islamist landscape. In early February, al Qaeda’s central leadership disavowed the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) — a favor ISIS repaid a few weeks later, when it launched a suicide attack that killed al Qaeda’s representative in the country, Abu Khalid al-Suri.

The killing of Abu Khalid, a longtime comrade of both current al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri and Osama bin Laden and also one of the founders of Syria’s powerful Salafi group Ahrar al-Sham, seems destined to cause an escalation in rebel groups’ efforts to drive ISIS out of the country. Shortly after Abu Khalid’s death, Jabhat al-Nusra, al Qaeda’s official affiliate in Syria, gave the rival jihadi group a five-day deadline to end infighting or be expelled from Syria and Iraq.

But while the killing of Abu Khalid has rallied many groups against ISIS, the ongoing infighting has also polarized jihadists — and called into question the survival of what had been the single strongest rebel alliance, the Islamic Front. The Salafi alliance appears to be crumbling as its members adopt different policies on whether to confront ISIS. As a result, senior Free Syrian Army commanders believe they have an opening to regain their preeminence as the strongest anti-Assad force on the ground.

Several Islamic Front brigades have been weakened by deep internal divisions over how to handle ISIS. The formerly powerful rebel brigade Suqour al-Sham, for example, has now been reduced to a minor faction after two of its most powerful factions defected. The brigade made the fatal mistake of first aligning itself with the Free Syrian Army to fight ISIS — but then, after other members of the Islamic Front joined the battle, signing a truce with ISIS. Its two constituent parts that left, Liwa Dawoud and Liwa Siyoof al-Haqqa, were sympathetic to ISIS; Liwa Dawoud first joined the jihadi group outright, but on Feb. 18, formed a new alliance that distanced itself from both the Islamic Front and ISIS.

Two top rebel leaders told Foreign Policy that the Islamic Front had collapsed in all but name. Speaking from northern Idlib governorate, Col. Haitham Afisa, the Free Syrian Army’s newly-appointed deputy head, said that Islamic Front members recognize the failure of the alliance, but due to the fact that they present themselves as the most powerful alliance in Syria, they fear that its official demise would incur significant financial and political costs. He added that part of the challenge for the Islamic Front has been that many of its fighters required religious rulings to fight fellow jihadists in ISIS. “Each one needed a fatwa,” he said.

Ahrar al-Sham has also been riven by disagreements over what to do about ISIS. Some of its factions, for example, manned checkpoints with the jihadi group, while others were furious at ISIS for killing their commanders. The unprecedented polarization in the wake of the continuing jihadi infighting has revealed these fault lines, and the sand seems to be slowly shifting underneath the Islamic Front as a result.

In the wake ofAbu Khalid’s killing, the reluctance to fight ISIS may wane. The al Qaeda representative had tried to avoid infighting at any cost: At the height of the battles against ISIS, for example, he signed a truce allowing the jihadi group’s fighters to cross freely into the Aleppo countryside. The truce upset many Islamic Front fighters, who criticized it for deviating from the alliance’s broader position. Ahrar al-Sham justified it by saying clashes with ISIS in that area would place the Jarrah military base at risk of being captured by the regime’s forces.

For all jihadi groups, except ISIS, the overriding priority had been to safeguard jihad from any internal and external threats — that’s why al Qaeda central disavowed the group and why al Qaeda’s official faction in Syria, Jabhat al-Nusra, joined the fighting against ISIS. According to sources close to Ahrar al-Sham fighters, members long pushed for confrontation with the rival group, but top leaders such as Abu Khalid had repeatedly refused. Now, with his removal from the military scene, the voices calling for a confrontation may win out.

On the ground, the Islamic Front is increasingly checked by emerging rebel alliances. In the Idlib countryside, Jaish al-Sham is emerging as a strong rival, while in Aleppo and its countryside, Jaish al-Mujahideen enjoys a strong presence. In the areas surrounding Damascus, the presence of the radical alliance Ajnad al-Sham, which was formed on Dec. 6, almost matches that of the Islamic Front’s Jaish al-Islam. In other provinces, including Raqqa, Deir Ezzor, Hasaka, and Deraa, the Islamic Front is hardly a dominant force.

According to one rebel commander from Idlib, the continuing infighting has proved that the influence of the Islamic Front had been greatly exaggerated. Despite the fact that its fighting strength had been estimated at between 40,000 to 70,000 fighters, the alliance has been unable to decisively expel ISIS from areas under its control. The group has been hindered by the reluctance of many of its fighters to join the battles against ISIS, as well as the decision of others to leave the alliance.

Jihadi infighting is set to intensify in the days and weeks ahead, and polarization will continue to shape the landscape. In his statement on Feb. 25, Jabhat al-Nusra leader Abu Mohammed al-Joulani threatened ISIS that “hundreds of brothers in Iraq” are ready to face it down there — perhaps a confirmation of rumors that Jabhat al-Nusra plans to form a rival group in Iraq.

These ideological realignments within Syria’s jihadi sphere are still fluid and unpredictable. But the deterioration of the Islamic Front, together with the weakening of ISIS and the rise of moderate groups like the Syrian Revolutionary Front, has leveled the playing field somewhat among the different ideological groupings. And as a result, Free Syrian Army commanders see this as a perfect opportunity to rise again. They hope to convince relatively moderate rebel brigades, like Liwa al-Tawhid, to rejoin their cause.

“We do not want the Islamic Front to be weakened,” Colonel Afisa told me. “But if other groups see that the [Free Syrian Army] is effective, many will rejoin us.”

Hassan Hassan is the director of the Non-State Actors in Fragile Environments Program at the Center for Global Policy and a co-author of ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror. Follow him on Twitter at: @hxhassan.

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