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Al-Fauj al-Awwal

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Al-Fauj al-Awwal
الفوج الأول‎
Military leaderHassem Kenjo 
Dates of operation5 March 2015 - present
Split fromLevant Front
Country Syria
MotivesOverthrow of the Baathist regime of Bashar al-Assad
Active regionsAleppo Governorate, Hama Governorate
IdeologySunni Islam, Syrian nationalism
StatusActive
Size1,500 militants (2016 estimate)
Battles and wars

Al-Fauj al-Awwal (Arabic: الفوج الأول‎, English: The 1st Regiment) is an armed rebel group formed in 2015 during the Syrian Civil War.

History

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Al-Fauj al-Awwal was founded by former fighters of Liwa al-Tawhid on March 5, 2015, amid the Syrian Civil War. The group was initially part the Levant Front, with which they were split from in late 2015. The group is affiliated with the Free Syrian Army. Al-Fauj al-Awwal helped found the Ansar al-Sharia Joint Operations Room that became active in Aleppo on July 2, 2015. The group eventually ended up joining the Fatah Halab Joint Operations Room in early 2016. In April 2016, they were again transferred to the Hawar Kilis Operation Room.[1][2]

Al-Fauj al-Awwal is Islamist according to Jennifer Cafarella and Genevieve Casagrande, analysts for the Institute for the Study of War.[3] The group was led by Hassem Kenjo, who was killed in combat in Aleppo, in the Sheikh Saïd district, on November 17, 2016. The group had an estimated 1,500 men within its ranks during 2016, although the current number is unknown. From the end of 2015, the group obtained several BGM-71 TOW anti-tank missiles delivered by the United States. It also obtained weapons that were delivered by Turkey around the same time.[4]

The group is active in the city of Aleppo and in the northern region of the Aleppo governorate, but it has also intervened occasionally in the Hama governorate. They participated in the Battle of Aleppo, the siege of Nubl and al-Zahraa and the Battle of al-Bab. The group took part in Operation Euphrates Shield from 2016, alongside the Turkish Land Forces.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Stéphane Mantoux, Syrie: le régiment, le groupe rebelle syrien patronné par la Turquie, France Soir, 27 décembre 2016.
  2. ^ Les combattants islamistes et les rebelles lancent une offensive d'ampleur à Alep, France 24 avec Reuters, 3 juillet 2015.
  3. ^ Jennifer Cafarella et Genevieve Casagrande, Syrian Armed Opposition Forces in Aleppo, Institute for the Study of War, 13 février 2016.
  4. ^ a b Syrie: Ansar al-Charia, une nouvelle alliance rebelle à l’offensive à Alep, RFI, 3 juillet 2015.