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Syrian troops, rebels fight it out near Damascus
(Reuters) Intense clashes took place in Damascus early on Monday as the army counter-attacked rebels who had advanced in the northeast of the Syrian capital on Sunday, a war monitor said.

A Syrian military source said on Monday that the army had recaptured all the positions it had lost on Sunday.

A Reuters witness said that warplanes were active above Damascus early in the day and that some streets in government-held areas near the fighting had been closed.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based war monitor that collects information from a network of sources across Syria, said heavy fighting continued around the Jobar and al-Qaboun districts in the northeast of the city.

Rebels had attacked in Jobar to relieve military pressure after their recent loss of ground in nearby Qaboun and Barza, a commander from the Failaq al-Rahman group which is fighting there said on Sunday.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and his army, along with allied Russian, Iranian and Shi’ite militia forces, have put rebels on the back foot with a steady succession of military victories over the past 18 months, including around Damascus.

Rebels still hold a large, heavily populated enclave in the Eastern Ghouta district of farms and towns to the east of the capital, as well as some Damascus districts in the south, east and northeast of the city.

The most recent fighting has focused on the areas around Qaboun and Barza, which the army has isolated from the rest of the main rebel enclave of Eastern Ghouta and the eastern districts of Damascus

Syrian airstrikes hammer rebel positions near Damascus

BEIRUT: Syrian warplanes hammered opposition-held neighborhoods of Damascus on Monday after regime forces pushed back a surprise assault that saw opposition try to fight their way into the city center.

The opposition, led by former Al-Qaeda affiliate Fateh Al-Sham Front, launched an attack early Sunday on regime positions in east Damascus, initially scoring key gains.

But forces loyal to President Bashar Assad drove them back by nightfall and began a fierce bombing campaign on Monday morning.

“There have been intense air strikes since dawn on opposition-held positions in Jobar from which the offensive was launched,” said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

“The government and allied forces have retaken the initiative and are striking the groups that launched yesterday’s assault,” he added.

Abdel Rahman said it was unclear whether regime forces or their Russian allies were carrying out Monday’s raids on Jobar.
Control of Jobar — which has been a battleground for more than two years — is divided between the opposition and the regime.
On Sunday, opposition fighters seized several buildings in Jobar before advancing into the neighboring Abbasid Square area — the first time in two years that the opposition had advanced so close to the capital’s center.

The clashes left dead at least 26 regime forces and 21 opposition and jihadists, Abdel Rahman said, but he did not have an immediate toll for Monday morning’s air strikes.

Sniper fire and air strikes were heard across the city on Sunday as civilians cowered inside their homes and schools announced they would close because of the violence.


But by Monday, the front line had been pushed back, and AFP correspondents said activity in the typically bustling Abbasid Square was returning to normal levels.

Airplanes could still be heard circling above but many of the roads that had been sealed off by army troops the previous day were reopened.

According to the Observatory, regime forces managed to recapture most of the territory overrun by the opposition in their assault.

Opposition forces still controlled several key points in an industrial zone lying between Jobar and the besieged northeastern district of Qabun to the north, according to the Britain-based monitor.

State news agency SANA said Syrian regime troops were targeting opposition bases around Jobar on Monday.

“The military operations north of Jobar targeted the areas from which the terrorists set out, and a large number of them were killed,” it said.

The Islamist Faylaq Al-Rahman opposition group and the Fateh Al-Sham Front — known as Al-Nusra Front before it renounced its ties to Al-Qaeda — have a presence in Jobar.

Syria’s conflict erupted in March 2011 with protests against Assad’s rule but has morphed over the years into a complex civil war.

More than 320,000 people have been killed and millions more have been displaced by the conflict.

Syrian forces launch counterattack on Jobar

Syrian army restored on Monday control over all points infiltrated by terrorists a day earlier the in the outskirts of Jobar neighborhood, east of Damascus city.

Military source said that army units launched a counterattack on Nusra Front terrorists in which it secured the factories region north of Jobar, Hezbollah’s Military Media Center reported.

The operation was decisive and accurate in which army units targeted the points which the terrorists infiltrated the area through, the source added, hailing the swiftness of the offensive as well as the cooperation between the military units.

Meanwhile, the source confirmed that the army crushed all of the infiltrating terrorists, including commanders and foreigners.

The source also said that the army units took control of Abbasiyeen area, north of Jobar as well as the power plant, textile industry and the surrounding buildings.

Source: Hezbollah Military Media Center
Posted by: badanov 2017-03-21
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