Syrian officials have ordered military units to step up patrolling near the Turkish border in a warning to its increasingly irate northern neighbour not to establish a buffer zone inside Syria.
Diplomats in Ankara and Beirut believe the Syrian advance on the border village of Khirbet al-Jouz on Friday, initially portrayed as a sweep against dissidents, was a veiled threat to Turkey, which is steadily turning on President Bashar al-Assad as his regime's crackdown on dissent continues.
In the wake of Assad's speech last week, Turkish officials gave him one week to start reforms and stop the violent suppression of protests, which is estimated to have killed more than 1300 people in less than four months.
British Government officials travelled last week to the south of Turkey to interview Syrian refugees. A British Foreign Office official said that diplomats are compiling accounts of what happened in Jisr al-Shughour and the villages around it during the first two weeks of this month, when the Syrian army mounted a series of raids, followed by an assault that led almost every resident of the 41,000-strong town to flee, first for the nearby hills, then to Turkey.
Among the allegations being investigated are claims that Iranian soldiers operated alongside Syrian units - especially the Fourth Division of the army, which is led by Assad's brother Maher and has a reputation for ruthlessness.
The European Union last week adopted sanctions against three leading officers of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, among them Qassem Suleimani, commander of the elite Al-Quds force, who is widely regarded as the leader of all the Iranian military's clandestine missions abroad.
A senior diplomat in Beirut said that intelligence agencies had evidence that Iran sent weapons to Syria, but had not yet determined whether there had been an actual Iranian presence at demonstrations.
In a further sign of Turkish unease with Damascus, officials from the country's Red Crescent who run the five refugee camps along the border no longer seem to be banned from talking to reporters. Embarrassment to Syria has clearly become less of a concern.
Refugee accounts are being used to compile a referral to the International Criminal Court, which will be asked to prosecute Assad and key regime officials for crimes against humanity. The referral is being prepared by several rights groups, including Insan, which is also compiling testimonies from defecting Syrian soldiers.
Turkey's growing diplomatic anger at Syria has made Istanbul an attractive hub for the Syrian opposition movement, which has received scores of defectors in recent weeks. Beirut, which is less than three hours' drive from Damascus and offers easy access to Syrian citizens, is now considered too dangerous for anti-regime dissidents. "It is a clearing house only," said one Syrian activist. "There are many ways that the regime can get to people here - they don't even have to be here themselves. They just use their proxies."
At least 1000 refugees crossed into Lebanon at the Wadi Khalled border point on Saturday, including five men with gunshot wounds, after an assault on the Syrian city of Homs, according to Lebanese officials.
- OBSERVER
Regime bares fangs at Turkey
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