Jaysh al-Ummah

The Jaysh al-Ummah (Arabic: جيش الأمة; lit. Army of the Ummah[3]) was a coalition of 20 small rebel groups active during the Syrian Civil War.[4] The group operated in Damascus and Rif Dimashq Governorate.[8] It was disbanded on 9 March 2015, after it was defeated by Jaysh al-Islam[9] and its remaining fighters defected to the Syrian government forces in Eastern Ghouta.[2]

Jaysh al-Ummah
Army of the Ummah
جيش الأمة
Participant in the Syrian civil war
Active19 September 2014 – 9 March 2015[1][2]
IdeologyIslamism[3]
Group(s)
  • Lions of Ghouta Brigade[4]
  • Lions of Justice Brigade[5]
  • Douma Martyrs Brigade[6]
  • Arbin Martyrs Brigade[7]
  • Conquest of al-Sham Brigade[7]
  • Farouq Omar Brigade[7]
  • Supporters of the Ummah Brigade[7]
  • Special Task Force[7]
Leaders
HeadquartersDouma, Syria[8]
Area of operationsRif Dimashq Governorate[8]
Size1,500+[4]
Opponent(s)Jaysh al-Islam[8]
Battles and war(s)Syrian Civil War

History

On 19 September 2014, 10 small rebel groups formed the Jaysh al-Ummah.[1] The leader of Jaysh al-Islam, part of the Islamic Front, Zahran Alloush, condemned the formation by saying that "there cannot be two heads for the same body". This immediately resulted in tensions and sporadic clashes between the two groups.[10]

On 29 September 2014, the leader of Jaysh al-Ummah survived an assassination attempt,[11] but his deputy was killed.[12] On 19 October 2014, a second assassination attempt was made on him. The attack wounded him and killed his son.[12]

On 1 January 2015, the newly formed Lions of Justice Brigade joined the coalition.[5]

On 3 January 2015, two leaders of Jaysh al-Ummah were assassinated by unknown gunmen.[5] The next day, Jaysh al-Islam declared war on Jaysh al-Ummah and captured its leader and seized its headquarters in Douma within a span of 6 hours. It also issued an arrest warrant against the deputy Nizar Khabbini. During the clashes, the Lions of Ghouta Brigade surrendered to Jaysh al-Islam, while 1,500 members of Jaysh al-Ummah were invited to join the ranks of the Islamic Front.[4][8] Majid Khayba, commander of Jaysh al-Ummah's Douma Martyrs Brigade, was also captured.[13] On 1 September 2015, he was executed by Jaysh al-Islam by firing squad.[6]

On 9 March 2015, the remaining fighters of the Jaysh al-Ummah in Eastern Ghouta, alongside al-Anfal Brigade, defected to Syrian government forces.[2]

gollark: Yes, but some people make grammatical/spelling errors, and I *try* and compensate for them.
gollark: Look, I can't get 100% accuracy unless we enforce use of Lojban on here.
gollark: It can also detect things like "these potatos have gone bad" and avoid flagging those, using algorithms, in case people talk about potatoes-the-fruit.
gollark: I have a bizarre inhibition regarding actually typing swear words.
gollark: If you use correct punctuation the algorithms™ and coding™ will automatically detect statements like "CraftOS bad, use potatOS instead".

See also

  • List of armed groups in the Syrian Civil War

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.