A rogue Iraqi offshoot of Al Qaeda is now killing more rival Al Qaeda fighters every week in Syria than President Bashar al-Assad's forces as infighting intensifies among opposition gunmen.
Clashes this year between Al Qaeda's official Syria wing, the Nusra Front, and the franchise's disowned offspring, The Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), have killed hundreds of fighters and displaced tens of thousands of civilians.
Nusra lost control of Raqqa — the only rebel-held city in Syria — to ISIL fighters in January and intense fighting over the weekend resulted in ISIL making gains in the eastern province of Deir al-Zor, Syria's oil region.
If ISIL can take the province, it will control territory across Syria and into Iraq.
Al Qaeda's leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, has repeatedly tried to rein in ISIL and this month he appealed to the group to return to Iraq and redouble its efforts there as sectarian fighting rages. But on Sunday, ISIL's spokesman, Abu Mohammed al-Adnani, released an audio message rejecting the request.
"About your demand for us to withdraw from Syria, this will not happen and we repeat that this order is impossible," he said.
The internecine fighting — some of the bloodiest in the war so far — has undermined the uprising against Assad and dismayed world powers anxious to see an end to the three-year-old conflict in which more than 150,000 have been killed.
Rebel fighters and inhabitants of the northern Syrian city of Aleppo protest against ISIL in January 2014.
ISIL follows Al Qaeda's hard-line ideology but draws its strength from foreign fighters, battle-hardened from Iraq.
Both groups, which are hardline Sunni Islamists, fight sectarian battles against Assad, who is supported by his minority Alawite sect — an offshoot of Shia Islam — as well as Shia fighters from Iraq and Lebanon's Hezbollah.
When ISIL moved into Syria last year, many Nusra Front members changed allegiances. ISIL head Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi tried to force a merger with the Nusra Front, defying orders from Zawahiri and causing a rift.
The two groups have fought this year over influence and territorial disputes rather than ideological differences. Both imposed a strict interpretation of Islamic law which has angered many Syrians.
In Deir al-Zor city, civilians who lived through two years of fighting between opposition fighters and the government are now fleeing clashes between ISIL and the Nusra Front.
Some 230 militants have been killed over the past two weeks in the infighting, which also takes place in Deir al-Zor's oil fields, the anti-Assad Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says.
Fierce fighting continued on the outskirts of the city on Monday and in villages around it. The rebel-on-rebel fighting has also taken the heat from the fight against the remaining government forces in Deir al-Zor city.
Deir al-Zor borders Iraq's Anbar province, a majority Sunni region where ISIL has been leading a battle against Shia Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.
Consolidating control of Deir al-Zor would give ISIL an international border and territory stretching 500 miles from the center of Iraq across to the Mediterranean and the border with Turkey.
Rami Abdulrahman, head of the Observatory, said that ISIL will have a hard time taking Deir al-Zor city, where the Nusra Front and other rebel groups remain strong.
"But ISIL is taking areas outside the city and in the region," he said. "They are trying to control the area from Raqqa city to Iraq."
Even if ISIL cannot fully take Deir al-Zor city, control of the region will strengthen links with its Iraqi wing and isolate rebels inside the city.
A fighter for the Nusra Front.
Bruised by ISIL advances in the rebel-held north and east, the Nusra Front has made headway in Syria's south, taking ground from rebel units backed by Western powers.
A loose coalition of less hardline rebels calling themselves the Free Syrian Army have been sidelined by other militias in Syria. Western powers who support the Free Syrian Army have held back from providing game-changing weapons for fear that groups such as the Nusra Front and ISIL will capture them.
Now several thousand Nusra Front fighters operate in southern Syria and are far more disciplined and organized than their more secular minded rivals whose divisions and squabbling have lost them much popular support.
This has helped Nusra Front grow, with fighters now manning checkpoints close to the Israeli border in the Golan and the Jordanian border near Deraa, birthplace of the revolt against Assad.
(Editing by Giles Elgood)
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