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Al Qaeda releases abducted U.S.-backed Syrian rebels

BEIRUT - Al Qaeda's affiliate in Syria has released seven members of a U.S.-backed rebel faction that it abducted late last month, the rebel group said in a statement.

The Division 30 rebel group said in a statement late Saturday that it hopes the Nusra Front will release the group's commander who has been held since July 30. Days after the abduction, the Nusra Front attacked the Division 30 command in northern Syria, leading to the near-collapse of the group that has dozens of fighters.

The kidnapping and attack on Division 30 came a few days after the U.S. and Turkey announced the outlines of a deal to help rebels push the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) back from a strip of territory it controls along the Syrian-Turkish border, replacing it with more moderate rebels backed by Washington and Ankara.

The Nusra Front said at the time it abducted the rebels because they were trained by the U.S. It was also around the time of the announcement by the U.S. and Turkey about their joint effort that the al Qaeda affiliate said they would be withdrawing from the northern border region.

More stumbling blocks in U.S. training of Syrian rebels 02:16

The Division 30 statement described Nusra Front fighters as "brothers" and thanked them for the release, saying, "We value this noble step."

It said Division 30 is on the "same page with all holy warriors in Syria."

The U.S. has sometimes been at odds with the rebel groups inside Syria it backs. Last month, two U.S.-trained rebels told CBS News they believe their bigger fight is against Bashar Assad, not ISIS or other extremist Islamic factions fighting in the country's chaotic and brutal civil war.

On Sunday, Syrian government warplanes struck a market in the rebel-held Damascus suburb of Douma, killing and wounding dozens, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the Local Coordination Committees said.

The LCC and Observatory said rescue operations are ongoing in the area. Neither group gave a death toll.

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