Northwestern Syria offensive (April–August 2019)

Northwestern Syria offensive
(April–August 2019)
Part of the Syrian Civil War

Situation in northwestern Syria as of 31 August 2019. Locations of Turkish and Russian outposts are pictured.
  Syrian Army control
  Syrian Opposition control
  Syrian Army & SDF control
Date30 April – 31 August 2019
(4 months and 1 day)
Location
Northwestern Syria
Result Syrian Army and allies victory
Territorial
changes
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Maj. Gen. Maher al-Assad
Brig. Gen. Suheil al-Hassan
Col. Ghiath Dalla
Col. Bashar Ratabah 
Nizar Mahmoud 
Maj. Alaa Mohammed Khaddour 
Abdullah Sabah Ajaj 
Abu Mohammad al-Julani
Osama Hussein al-Dib 
Mansur Dagestani 
Maj. Jamil al-Saleh (WIA)
Abdul Baset al-Sarout (DOW)
Abu Muhammad al-Muhajir
Abu Riad al-Deiri 
Abu Musab al-Tunisi 
Abu Setif al-Binnishi 
Abu Qatada al-Homsi 
Abu Salman Belarus (Malhama Tactical leader) 
Abu Omar al Dayk 
Mohammad Husein Qasem 
Sayf Bulad
Abdullah Halawa
Abdul Jashari
Units involved
Strength
Unknown 60,000
Casualties and losses
1,391 killed
1 SyAAF Su-22 shot down
1,659 killed
1 killed
1,043 civilians killed

The 2019 northwestern Syria offensive, codenamed "Dawn of Idlib" (Arabic: فجر إدلب), was a military operation launched on 30 April 2019 by the Syrian Armed Forces and its allies against rebel groups in northwestern Syria during the Syrian civil war in a region known as "Greater Idlib", consisting of northwest Hama, southern Idlib and northeastern Latakia provinces. The government's main objectives were to open the M5 highway and to expel non-compliant militant groups, particularly the internationally proscribed al-Qaeda-linked group known as Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), from the 15–20 km demilitarized zone demarcated by Turkey and the Russian Federation at Sochi in 2018. The offensive was seen by both parties as crucial to the outcome of the war.

On 1 August 2019, the Syrian government declared that it would halt its operation on Idlib on the next day. In response, Tahrir al-Sham stated that the truce proved "the failure of the criminal regime’s military operation against the liberated north." In response to HTS refusal to agree to a ceasefire, alongside HTS' refusal to comply with the parameters of the Sochi Agreement, the Syrian Army resumed the offensive on 5 August, capturing numerous villages and strategic hilltops in southern Idlib before seizing Khan Shaykhun and subsequently the entire rebel-held pocket in southern Idlib.

During the course of the offensive, the Syrian and Russian air forces continually conducted airstrikes against rebel positions, while pro-government ground forces intensively targeted them with surface-to-surface missiles and heavy artillery on a daily basis.