BEIRUT (AP) - Syria's increasingly
powerful Islamist rebel factions rejected the country's new
Western-backed opposition coalition and unilaterally declared an Islamic
state in the key battleground of Aleppo, a sign of the seemingly
intractable splits among those fighting to topple President Bashar
Assad.
The move highlights the struggle over the
direction of the rebellion at a time when the opposition is trying to
gain the West's trust and secure a flow of weapons to fight the regime.
The rising profile of the extremist faction among the rebels could doom
those efforts.
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