Syrian troops backed by Russian jets enter key rebel-held town

Government forces occupy part of Sheikh Maskin on Damascus to Deraa supply route

A relative examines an injured child after what activists said were air strikes by forces loyal to Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad on the town of Abtaa, Deraa, Syria, yesterday. Photograph: Alaa Al-Faqir/Reuters
A relative examines an injured child after what activists said were air strikes by forces loyal to Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad on the town of Abtaa, Deraa, Syria, yesterday. Photograph: Alaa Al-Faqir/Reuters

Syrian troops fought their way into a rebel-held town in the southern province of Deraa yesterday in an assault that rebels said was supported by the heaviest Russian aerial bombing campaign so far in the south.

Troops were in Sheikh Maskin’s main square and had taken over the eastern and northern neighbourhoods of the town, which lies on a major supply route from the Syrian capital, Damascus, to the city of Deraa, the army said in a statement.

A rebel source confirmed troops had entered parts of the town and said fierce clashes were raging in the eastern neighbourhood known as the Masaken – an area of dozens of apartment buildings that formerly housed top army officers.

A commander in a leading rebel group fighting in the area said the heavy Russian bombing on their posts, where rebels had counted at least 100 raids in the past two days, had been decisive in tipping the balance against the rebels.

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“This is the heaviest Russian bombing on the side of the regime in Deraa and without it the army, which faces manpower shortages, would not have made these gains,” said one commander from Jabhat Thuwwar Souria, a group involved in the fighting.

Rebels from an array of groups – some backed by Western powers and including the Islamist Muthana group – fought the offensive near a former air base north of the town of Sheikh Maskin, insurgents on the ground told Reuters.

The army assault on Sheikh Maskin is part of the government’s first major offensive in southern Syria since Russia joined the fight on September 30th to support its ally President Bashar al-Assad.

Its recapture would consolidate the army’s hold over the heavily fortified region, which has formed a southern line of defence protecting Damascus.

Russia, which did not confirm the strikes and has up to now concentrated on the northwest and coastal areas, has said it is primarily targeting hardline Islamic State fighters.

Washington and other regional powers have regularly accused it of striking other anti- Assad rebel groups, seen as more moderate.

The army took the Brigade 82 base from the rebels on Tuesday, lost it as bad weather set in, and took it once more overnight with the support of the air strikes, said rebels.

Syria’s army said it had made advances overnight against insurgents, who it said were mainly al-Qaeda-inspired groups.

Sheikh Maskin lies on one of the main supply routes from the capital Damascus to the city of Deraa, close to the border with Jordan.

Meanwhile, the three months of Russian air strikes in Syria have killed more than 2,300 people, a third civilians, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Russia began conducting its air war in Syria on September 30th. Moscow’s strikes in Syria have killed 2,371 people so far. The toll includes 792 civilians, among them 180 children.

Activists and residents say Russian air strikes, in which missiles and bombs are launched from a high altitude, are distinct from Syrian air force strikes, which rely more on barrel bombs dropped from helicopters flying at a lower height. – (Reuters)