Apocalypse Aleppo: How an obscene array of weapons - that destroy internal organs, stick to skin and burn at 2,200F and suffocate victims with smoke - is turning Syria's second largest city into a slaughter house

  • WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT 
  • Barrel bombs: Cylindrical containers packed with up to 1,000kg of explosives dropped from helicopters
  • An estimated 5,000 to 6,000 barrel bombs used in the civil war so far accounting for up to 10,000 deaths
  • Napalm bombs: Developed during World War II oily substance sticks to the skin and burns at up to 2,200F
  • The use of napalm bombs have been reported widely around Syria - including last weekend in Aleppo
  • Thermobaric bombs: Devastatingly powerful and the most potent weapon aside from a nuclear warhead
  • It sucks all the oxygen from around the blast point and destroys all internal organs of anyone nearby
  • Cluster Bombs: A weapon that releases several small bomblets inflicting huge damage on a wider area
  • Nearly 50 cluster bomb attacks were reported during the months of June and July, many of which in Aleppo
  • Phosphorus bomb: Incendiary toxic bombs that spontaneously ignite at 30C typically targeted at people
  • The weapon causes horrific burns which melt flesh and suffocate victims with fumes and lots of smoke 

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Aleppo was once revered as a World Heritage Site, an ancient city boasting historic citadels, schools and souks, whose status and wealth were founded upon its fortunate location near Turkey’s border in the north of Syria.

Today, however, it is better known for being the world’s charnel house.

No longer a centre of culture and trade, it is a place of extreme violence and death, a hell in which explosives, chemicals and fire rain from the sky, killing and burying alive its inhabitants in their hundreds, with many more maimed or made homeless. 

For four long years Syrian government forces have besieged and pulverised the city, intent on crushing enemy rebels who have made large swathes of it their base.

But in those rebel-held areas live an estimated 300,000 civilians and daily there have been terrible images of destruction and death, of their bloodied children being dragged from rubble, of innocent families in despair as they seek medical help for their loved ones.

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Over the last week the bombardment has dramatically escalated. 

Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, backed by the ruthless air-power of his ally President Putin as well as by Iranian forces, has launched an aerial assault of cataclysmic proportions. 

A ground attack to capture the city began two days ago.

Russian and Syrian jets, helicopters and rocket launchers have, for hour upon hour, been carpeting civilian areas of Aleppo with barrel bombs, which spray shrapnel and chemicals over large areas, and with cluster bombs containing deadly incendiary substances such as white phosphorus and napalm.

They have even unleashed brutal ground-penetrating ‘thermobaric’ weapons which suck the oxygen out of the air and from people’s lungs to create an intensely hot explosion, and whose effects are so devastating they have been described as the most powerful explosive apart from a nuclear bomb.

Syrian man carries a baby after removing him from the rubble of a destroyed building following a reported air strike in the Qatarji neighbourhood of the northern city of Aleppo

Syrian man carries a baby after removing him from the rubble of a destroyed building following a reported air strike in the Qatarji neighbourhood of the northern city of Aleppo

A wounded Syrian child is rushed into a hospital after she was hit by mortar shells that targeted Aleppo's government controlled Aziziyah and Suleimaniyah neighbourhoods on Thursday

A wounded Syrian child is rushed into a hospital after she was hit by mortar shells that targeted Aleppo's government controlled Aziziyah and Suleimaniyah neighbourhoods on Thursday

Aleppo was once revered as a World Heritage Site, an ancient city boasting historic citadels, schools and souks, whose status and wealth were founded upon its fortunate location near Turkey’s border in the north of Syria. Today, however, it is better known for being the world’s charnel house

Aleppo was once revered as a World Heritage Site, an ancient city boasting historic citadels, schools and souks, whose status and wealth were founded upon its fortunate location near Turkey’s border in the north of Syria. Today, however, it is better known for being the world’s charnel house

Yesterday, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry warned Russia it would end talks unless the bombing stopped.

It was only last month that the world recoiled in disgust at the haunting picture of an injured five-year-old Syrian boy, Omran Daqneesh, who had been pulled from the rubble after a Syrian attack.

Dazed, covered in dust, and with blood streaming from his head, he was sitting alone in an ambulance seat that appeared many times too big for him.

Yet global revulsion as the image went viral on the internet did nothing to stop the carnage.

Aleppo’s importance to Assad cannot be overstated. 

As Syria’s main commercial centre before the war, with a population of 2.3 million, it is of immense psychological and strategic value to the regime, and its capture from the rebels would help to ensure Assad remains in power.

But for that very reason rebel groups are determined to hold the ground they have taken in the eastern quarter of the city.

They consist of a multitude of factions that don’t always see eye to eye — from the Islamist soldiers of the Free Syrian Army to jihadist-linked groups like Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, which until earlier this year was Al-Qaeda’s front in Syria. 

What these factions have in common is a mutual loathing of Assad’s rule.

As Syria’s main commercial centre before the war, with a population of 2.3 million, it is of immense psychological and strategic value to the regime, and its capture from the rebels would help to ensure Assad remains in power

As Syria’s main commercial centre before the war, with a population of 2.3 million, it is of immense psychological and strategic value to the regime, and its capture from the rebels would help to ensure Assad remains in power

This photo captured from a video shows that injured Sabah Sheikh Qasim, one of 6-year-old Syrian twin sisters, is being taken to hospital after she was pulled out from the wreckage of a five-storey building hit by Assad regime forces' air strikes in Shaar town of Aleppo, Syria on Thursday

This photo captured from a video shows that injured Sabah Sheikh Qasim, one of 6-year-old Syrian twin sisters, is being taken to hospital after she was pulled out from the wreckage of a five-storey building hit by Assad regime forces' air strikes in Shaar town of Aleppo, Syria on Thursday

Earlier this summer, the rebels had been gaining ground and came close to breaking through the government lines besieging the city

Earlier this summer, the rebels had been gaining ground and came close to breaking through the government lines besieging the city

Amid the devastation there have been military successes on both sides. 

Earlier this summer, the rebels had been gaining ground and came close to breaking through the government lines besieging the city.

Putin — determined to see Assad stay in power, not least because he wants a Russian naval base on Syria’s Mediterranean coast — responded by unleashing aerial devastation. 

Appalled, the UN brokered a ceasefire earlier this month. 

But Russian belligerence ensured its collapse — as this week’s unprecedented onslaught shows.

The terror unleashed has been so appalling that Britain and America have both accused Putin of committing war crimes.

Last week, American officials said that a UN aid convoy was destroyed outside the city by bombs dropped from Russian jets.

Now, a barrel bomb has hit a hospital in the rebel-held area of the city. 

Save The Children described the attack as outrageous: ‘When hospitals are targeted or damaged in air strikes, children die. 

'Such disregard for civilian life is a potential breach of international humanitarian law.’

Medics are already overwhelmed by the sheer volume of bleeding and broken humanity in Aleppo, where other hospitals have been attacked: doctors work in unhygienic makeshift wards and medicines are in desperately short supply. 

Blood is needed for transfusions, but donors no longer exist because it is too dangerous for people to venture out to a donor centre.

Worse still, water is becoming desperately scarce. In a move that can only be considered genocidal, Assad’s jets have attacked the Bab al-Nayrab pumping station, which supplies some 250,000 people in the eastern part of the city and its outskirts.

‘Depriving children of water puts them at risk of catastrophic outbreaks of waterborne diseases and adds to the suffering, fear and horror that children in Aleppo live through every day,’ says Hanaa Singer, the Unicef representative in Syria. 

‘In the eastern part of Aleppo, the population will have to resort to highly contaminated well water.’

That will mean diseases such as cholera, which is as deadly as the Russian bombs that are estimated to have killed as many as 200 in the past few days.

Even after the bombs have exploded, the damage they wreak continues. 

‘These new bombs, they make the buildings shake so much that some are collapsing even when there are no strikes,’ says Ammar al-Selmo, the chief of Aleppo’s Syria Civil Defence rescue group. 

‘People can’t hide from them, even underground.’

A handout photo released by Syria's Arab News Agency (SANA) shows an injured civilian lay in a hospital, Aleppo, Syria

A handout photo released by Syria's Arab News Agency (SANA) shows an injured civilian lay in a hospital, Aleppo, Syria

At least 12 aid workers and truck drivers were reported killed in Syria late on Monday when their convoy was hit by airstrikes in Aleppo province

At least 12 aid workers and truck drivers were reported killed in Syria late on Monday when their convoy was hit by airstrikes in Aleppo province

A Syrian man carries his son to a field hospital after Syrian and Russian army carried out airstrike on Merce town of Aleppo

A Syrian man carries his son to a field hospital after Syrian and Russian army carried out airstrike on Merce town of Aleppo

Indeed, rescue workers have alleged that Russian bunker-buster bombs have killed families hiding in cellars.

There are many around the world who are horrified at what is happening in Syria, and deeply frustrated by the failure of the United Nations or the West to stop Assad’s apocalypse on Aleppo.

None is angrier than David Nott, the hugely respected consultant surgeon at the Royal Marsden and Chelsea and Westminster Hospitals in London, who has spent several weeks every year carrying out life-saving operations in war zones all over the world, including Afghanistan, Iraq, Bosnia, Libya, Pakistan — and Aleppo.

Mr Nott last worked in the city two years ago, but he has maintained regular contact with his Syrian surgical colleagues, and recently even helped perform an extraordinary operation via Skype in which a man’s jaw was reconstructed.

‘Somebody in Aleppo sent me a message saying that airstrikes are taking place every two to five minutes,’ he says. 

‘On Sunday, a colleague told me that he had to deal with 168 casualties in just a few hours.

‘At the weekend, 20 children were killed in just one air strike. 

'They had all been standing in a line to get some bread.’

Mr Nott insists that both British Prime Minister Theresa May and the French premier Francois Hollande should fly to Moscow, and tell Vladimir Putin in person that he should no longer be supporting President Assad.

Others are calling for the United Nations to intervene, but experts believe it is already too late to stop the bombardment and that the battle for Aleppo has reached a decisive phase.

‘Russian bombs will destroy east Aleppo and kill everyone it in unless the UN helps the civilians to evacuate,’ Joshua Landis, director of the Centre for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma, has said.

‘They will continue to pound it into dust ... the rebels are in an unsalvageable position.’

Which means that, for the poor souls of the benighted city of Aleppo, the worst is yet to come. 

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