| Battle of Taftanaz |
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| Part of April 2012 Idlib Governorate Operation (the early insurgency phase of the Syrian civil war) |
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| Belligerents |
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Syrian Arab Republic
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| Commanders and leaders |
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Hassan Aboud
Abu Ali Bard |
Unknown |
| Strength |
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Unknown |
1st Armoured Division
300 soldiers, 50 tanks |
| Casualties and losses |
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Unknown |
9 tanks[4] |
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120 killed in total (opposition claim)[5] |
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Idlib ceasefire (March 2020 – Nov. 2024) |
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- 6th Idlib inter-rebel conflict
- Ayn Issa
- Qamishli & Al-Hasakah
- 4th Israeli missile strikes
- 3rd Qamishli
- 11th Daraa
- 7th Idlib inter-rebel conflict
- 3rd Al-Hasakah city
- 1st Aleppo inter-rebel conflict
- Jabal al-Bishrī
- 2nd Aleppo inter-rebel conflict
- Claw-Sword
- Northwestern clashes
- 3rd U.S. missile strikes
- 2nd Northern clashes
- Deir ez-Zor clashes
- 3rd Northern clashes
- Homs drone strike
- Israel–Hezbollah conflict (Iranian consulate airstrike)
- February 2024 airstrikes
- Anti-Turkish riots
- Masyaf raid
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Opposition offensives and Assad overthrown (Nov. – Dec. 2024) |
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- Opposition offensives
- 6th Northwestern
- 2nd Aleppo city
- 8th Hama offensive
- 19th Aleppo offensive
- 7th Deir ez-Zor offensive
- 3rd Homs offensive
- 6th Palmyra
- 3rd Southern Syria
- 3rd Damascus
- Fall of the Assad regime
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- Foreign intervention on behalf of Syrian Arab Republic
- Foreign intervention on behalf of Syrian rebels
- U.S.-led intervention against ISIL
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The Battle of Taftanaz started on February 11, 2012, in Idlib Governorate, between anti-government fighters and Syrian Arab Army troops participating in a nationwide crackdown on dissent against Bashar al-Assad's government. Heavy fighting took place on the outskirts of the town of Taftanaz, killing 20 people.[6][7] On the day of the battle Kofi Annan announced a cease-fire for the Syrian conflict.
By 5 April, the military captured Taftanaz's city center, which was defended by 200 armed rebels, after a two-hour battle, following which the army reportedly rounded up and executed 82 people. It was unknown how many were opposition fighters and how many were civilians.[8]
Two months after, it was called a "massacre" in the town of Taftanaz, two-thirds of the population had left. The town had been a centre for opposition protests until the army had raided it with tanks on 3 April. Witnesses in the town said that tanks shelled the town from four sides before armored cars brought in dozens of soldiers who dragged civilians from their homes and gunned them down in the streets, and they also claimed that the soldiers looted, destroyed and torched hundreds of homes, bringing some down on their owners' heads. Videos showed this, and 62 people were killed during the attack, despite the town only having a small rebel presence. Nine Syrian Arab Army tanks were destroyed by homemade bombs as they left the town.[4]
References
External links
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Overviews |
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| Effects and ongoing concerns | |
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| Phases and processes | |
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| World reaction | |
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| Specific groups and countries | |
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| Agreements and dialogues | |
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| Transitional phase |
- Syrian caretaker government
- Syrian transitional government
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| Background | |
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2011 Jan–Apr May–Aug Sep–Dec | |
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2012 Jan–Apr May–Aug Sep–Dec | |
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2013 Jan–Apr May–Dec | |
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2014 Jan–Jul Aug–Dec | |
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2015 Jan–Jul Aug–Dec | |
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2016 Jan–Apr May–Aug Sep–Dec | |
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2017 Jan–Apr May–Aug Sep–Dec | |
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2018 Jan–Apr May–Aug Sep–Dec | |
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2019 Jan–Apr May–Aug Sep–Dec | |
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2020 Jan–Dec | |
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2021 Jan–Dec |
- Siege of Qamishli and Hasakah
- Missile strikes (Jan)
- US airstrike (Feb)
- Battle of Qamishli (Apr)
- US airstrike (Jun)
- Daraa clashes
- Tahrir al-Sham–Junud al-Sham conflict
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2022 Jan–Dec |
- Battle of Hasakah
- Ahrar al-Sham–Levant Front clashes
- Jabal al-Bishrī clashes
- Jarqli airstrikes
- Northern Aleppo clashes (Oct)
- Operation Claw-Sword
- Northwest clashes (Dec)
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2023 Jan–Dec | |
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2024 Jan–Oct Nov–present |
- Opposition offensives
- Deir ez-Zor offensive
- Northwestern Syria offensive
- Battle of Aleppo
- Hama offensive
- Southern offensive
- Operation Dawn of Freedom
- Manbij offensive
- Ayn Issa attack
- Kobani clashes
- Homs offensive
- Palmyra offensive
- Fall of Damascus
- Fall of the Assad regime
- Western Syria clashes
- Hezbollah-Syria clashes
- Turkish offensive
- Israeli invasion
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2025 Nov 2024 –present |
- Druze insurgency
- Jaramana clashes
- Southern clashes (April–May)
- Massacres of Syrian Druze
- Southern clashes (July–present)
- Massacres of Syrian Alawites
- Daraa clashes
- Mar Elias Church attack
- Aleppo clashes
- Homs mosque bombing
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2026 Nov 2024 –present |
- Northeastern Syria offensive
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| Spillover | |
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Category
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