2015 On 28 March 2015, after four days of fighting, rebels captured Idlib city and managed to besiege the towns of
Kafriya and
al‐Fu'ah, resulting in thousands of civilians being trapped in the two settlements. In July 2015, the
battle of Zabadani began as
Hezbollah and the
Syrian Army launched an offensive against rebel-held
al-Zabadani, as part of the
Qalamoun offensive. The pro-government attack on Zabadani and the concurrent rebel siege of Kafriya and al-Fu'ah became linked in negotiations. On 2 August, Army of Conquest announced it would continue its operations against the besieged enclave of Kafriya and al-Fu'ah. On 10 August, the rebels launched an assault on al-Fu'ah after detonating a
car bomb and
tunnel bomb, advancing towards it. A temporary ceasefire in Zabadani and the two Idlib towns was put in place after negotiations between
Ahrar al-Sham rebels and an Iranian delegation in Turkey, but these collapsed in late August after the government refused the rebel demand to release 1,500 female detainees, according to Ahrar al-Sham. On 31 August, Army of Conquest rebels launched a powerful attack on the enclave and captured al-Suwaghiyah, forcing the government soldiers to retreat to Tal Khirbat. On 18 September, the rebels launched a new attack on the enclave, firing almost 400 shells and rockets, while nine car bombs (including seven
suicide bombers) were detonated at government positions. The clashes led to the death of at least 29 rebels and 21 Syrian soldiers, as well as seven civilians. The SOHR reported that the rebels gained some ground, though Iranian media said
National Defence Forces and Hezbollah were able to defend their positions.
Ajnad al-Sham threatened on social media to shell Fu'ah and Kafriya with over 100 mortars a day. On 19 September, SOHR reported that rebels advanced again in the vicinity of al-Fuah, capturing Tal Al-Khirbat and a number of checkpoints around it according to pro-government sources. According to government claims, the rebels lost over 100 fighters, including 31 foreign fighters. A violation of this cease-fire was reported the next day as the rebels resumed shelling the towns. Rebels again violated the cease-fire by shelling the towns at the end of the month, but the overall cease-fire held. The
Iranian Air Force began to airdrop supplies for al-Fu'ah and Kafriya using two
Lockheed C-130 Hercules in October.
2016 On 11 January 2016, the
International Committee of the Red Cross and the
World Food Programme organized an aid convoy to deliver food, medicine and other aid to Kafriya and Fu'ah, along with
Madaya in the south. On 21 July, two ill civilians from Fu'ah and Kafriya were evacuated to
Latakia by the
Syrian Arab Red Crescent, in return for two ill civilians also being evacuated from
Zabadani to
Idlib. Medical and food aid arrived to the towns, in addition to
Qalaat al-Madiq. At the end of September, 52 aid trucks went to Zabadani and Madaya and 19 arrived in Fu'ah and Kafriya. On 21 November, rebel shelling and sniper fire killed at least one civilian in Fu'ah and Kafriya. From 3–6 December, more than 10 civilians in Fu'ah and Kafriya were killed by rebel shelling, in retaliation to the
Syrian Air Force bombings throughout the governorate which killed more than 121 civilians. On 18 December, a group of busses from
Aleppo headed toward Fu'ah and Kafriya in order to evacuate 2,500 civilians there as part of an agreement that would also evacuate the remaining civilians from the former rebel-held districts of Aleppo after the
offensive. En route, 6 buses were attacked and burned by fighters from the
al-Nusra Front, preventing the evacuation. Two days later, more than 1,000 people from Fu'ah and Kafriya left the towns in the buses and headed to Aleppo.
2017 In January 2017, according to SOHR, rebels shelled al-Fu'ah, which led to several injuries. In mid-March,
Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) captured Tall Umm A'anoun hill from the NDF in an attempt to cut the road linking Fu'ah and Kafriya. On 28 March, an agreement was brokered by
Qatar and signed by Ahrar al-Sham, HTS, Hezbollah and
Iran, for the evacuation of Fu'ah and Kafriya in exchange for the evacuation of residents and rebels in Zabadani and Madaya. The agreement came into effect beginning on 12 April and buses and ambulances arrived in the four towns with the assistance of the Syrian Arab Red Crescent to begin the evacuations. The Free Syrian Army condemned the agreement, considering it to establish a dangerous precedent of ethnic and sectarian cleansing in preparation for redrawing the borders of the Syrian state, as well as a
crime against humanity and contrary to article 7, paragraph (d), of the Statute of the
International Criminal Court. On 15 April, a convoy of buses carrying evacuees was
attacked by a suicide bomber west of Aleppo, killing more than 100 people. In September, seven trucks carrying medical supplies, food and an electric generator were allowed by the rebels into the besieged towns, while the government in exchange allowed supplies into the insurgent-held
Yarmouk Camp.
2018 On 17 March 2018, FSA fighters of "Saraya Darayya", a group formed by rebels from
Damascus who had been exiled to Idlib following the end of the
siege of Darayya and Muadamiyat, assaulted NDF positions in the two towns. Pro-government sources claimed that the attacks had failed, while Saraya Darayya claimed to have killed many NDF fighters. A total of 121 buses accompanied by Syrian Arab Red Crescent ambulances entered the two towns the next day. == Aftermath ==