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Jaysh al-Sunna | |
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جيش السنة | |
Leaders | Ammar Bouqai[1] |
Dates of operation | 20 March 2015 – 28 January 2017[1] |
Active regions | Homs Governorate Idlib Governorate[1] Aleppo Governorate |
Ideology | Sunni Islamism |
Size | 500+ fighters[1] |
Part of | Army of Conquest[1] Fatah Halab[2] |
Allies | Islamic Front al-Nusra Front Jund al-Aqsa |
Opponents | Syria Iran Russia Hezbollah SSNP Syrian Democratic Forces Liwa Zainebiyoun Liwa Fatemiyoun |
Battles and wars | Syrian Civil War |
Jaysh al-Sunna (Arabic: جيش السنة) was a Homs-based Islamist rebel group that was established as a merger between different rebel groups, some of which originally came from the Free Syrian Army's Farouq Brigades, and is active during the Syrian Civil War. It joined the Army of Conquest on 24 March 2015, and took part in the Second Battle of Idlib. It lost 14 fighters in the battle.[1]
On 11 August 2015, an ammunition depot and base belonging to the group were allegedly bombed by the U.S.-led anti-ISIL coalition in the Atme area in the northern Idlib Governorate. Ten of the group's fighters were killed along with 8 civilians. Robert Ford, the former U.S. ambassador to Syria, expressed consternation at why an airstrike was conducted on Jaysh al-Sunna.[4]
In October 2016, it was reported that Jaysh al-Sunna released a video which featured child soldiers at an unidentified training camp.[5] A Saudi cleric named Abdullah al-Muhesini was linked to the child soldier recruitment in northern Aleppo, and has allegedly recruited up to 1,000 children in all of Syria by paying them a $100 monthly salary.[6]
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