Syrian pro-government forces walk at the Kweyris military air base, in Aleppo, Nov. 11 – AFP |
DAMASCUS — The Syrian army and allied forces captured the town of Al Hader in the northern province of Aleppo on Thursday, state television said, opening the way for advances into a strategic rebel-held area northern Syria with the backing of Russian air power.
The rebels fled the town south of Aleppo city after pro-government forces took full control, it said, quoting a military source.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Al Hader was the main bastion of rebels in the province’s rural south, where a major government assault backed by Lebanese Hezbollah fighters and Russian air strikes began last month.
Rami Abdulrahman, the head of the Observatory, said the town’s capture would help the Syrian army press towards two besieged Shi’a towns of Kefraya and al-Foua, further to the west in Idlib province.
Kefraya and al-Foua are part of a regional ceasefire deal that came into effect in late September and has largely held despite isolated violations.
The six-month deal includes the safe withdrawal of rebels from government-besieged Zabadani near the border with Lebanon, and the evacuation of civilians from the two Idlib villages.
The Aleppo offensive targets a large area to the south of the city, near the highway to Damascus, and is one of the major multiple assaults that the army has launched since the start of Russian aerial bombing in Syria aimed at bolstering President Bashar al Assad’s over-stretched forces.
The army and its allies, who have already captured several villages and towns, want to regain the initiative from rebels in the more than four-year-old civil war.
“This means the regime forces are able to effectively put all of the southern Aleppo countryside under their firing range control,” said Abdulrahman.
Its capture gives government forces a big boost and allows them to disrupt rebel lines linking their Aleppo province strongholds with rebel-controlled Idlib.
It would give them a launching pad to push further against insurgents strongholds in mainly rebel-held northwestern Syria.
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