BEIRUT: Syria鈥檚 rebel-held enclave of Eastern Ghouta near the capital is the regime鈥檚 Achilles heel, and because of this it faces an almost inevitable military offensive, experts say.
The battle-scarred region east of Damascus, which has been under near-daily bombardment and a crippling government siege since 2013, is strategically vital to President Bashar Assad.
Despite residents facing a humanitarian crisis, rebels controlling the region have been able to use it as a launch pad for rocket and mortar attacks on the capital.
Joshua Landis, director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma, said the ongoing rebellion in Eastern Ghouta contrasted with the regime 鈥減resenting itself as the winner鈥� of Syria鈥檚 war elsewhere.
鈥淭he persistence of the East Ghouta resistance has become a major embarrassment and liability for the Assad regime,鈥� he said.
The Assad regime, militarily backed by its ally Russia, has retaken control of more than half of the country with a string of victories against rebel and jihadist forces.
鈥淚t hopes to convince the international community that it faces little opposition any more save for the enclaves on the margins of Syria,鈥� Landis said.
But rebel and jihadist groups managed this week to surround a regime base on the edge of Eastern Ghouta, prompting intensified regime air strikes there.
Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said the enclave is the regime鈥檚 鈥渨eak spot.鈥�
鈥淭he factions there are strong and directly threaten Damascus,鈥� he told AFP.
Even though Eastern Ghouta was one of four 鈥渄e-escalation zones鈥� agreed under a deal between rebel and regime backers, fighting has continued there.
The area is the target of near-daily regime air strikes and artillery fire that has killed thousands of people since 2011.
Rebels have killed hundreds of civilians with mortar rounds and rockets fired at Damascus, although such attacks have waned since the regime seized several areas close to the capital.
The beleaguered 100-square-kilometer (40-square-mile) enclave鈥檚 estimated 400,000 inhabitants are suffering severe shortages of food and medicine.
Children there are particularly vulnerable to malnutrition.
Despite the civilian suffering caused by the blockade, rebel groups in Ghouta 鈥渟till have a popular base, because thousands of their fighters are from the region,鈥� Abdel Rahman said.
Jaish Al-Islam, a powerful Islamist rebel group that has recognized the de-escalation deal and takes part in United Nations-backed peace talks, is among the most powerful groups in Eastern Ghouta.
It controls Douma, the largest city in the region, but shares power with Faylaq Al-Rahman, another Islamist rebel group that controls the localities of Erbin and Hammuriyeh.
But the offensive against the regime military base was the work of Ahrar Al-Sham and an alliance dominated by the jihadists of Fateh Al-Sham, a former Al-Qaeda affiliate.
Syria analyst Sam Heller of the Century Foundation think tank said the regime had responded by intensifying its operations, 鈥渨hatever the cost in terms of troops and reinforcements.鈥�
Additional forces have been deployed to the area, according to pro-regime Syrian media.
Heller said things were moving 鈥渢oward a militarily settlement in the regime鈥檚 favor鈥� in areas held by Faylaq Al-Rahman, Ahrar Al-Sham and the Fateh-al Sham-dominated alliance.
But the situation is different in areas controlled by Jaish Al-Islam, he said.
The group 鈥渋s an armed force that is not to be underestimated, and it controls large residential areas that the regime would struggle to absorb,鈥� he said.
He said talks between the group and Russia could lead to 鈥渁 negotiated solution that would leave it in place once it has made some concessions.鈥�
Landis said the de-escalation deal over the area would be 鈥渘ibbled away at鈥� in the coming weeks.
鈥淎ssad has preferred until now to starve and bomb the Ghouta enclave rather than launch an expensive frontal attack,鈥� he said.
Rights groups and the UN have criticized 鈥渞econciliation鈥� agreements that see civilians evacuated following sieges and bombardment apparently aimed at forcing civilians to leave their homes.
Such deals have seen rebels transferred to Idlib in the north, the only province in Syria fully outside regime control.
鈥淲e should also expect that increased pressure will be applied to the Ghouta militias to surrender or agree to reconciliation or deportation to Idlib,鈥� Landis said.