SYRIAN GOVERNMENT THANKS RUSSIA FOR HEL CAPTURING KEY TOWN.
Syrian government thanks Russia for help capturing key town
SALMA, Syria (AP) — Pictures of Syrian President Bashar Assad hang on nearly every building in the town of Salma, which government troops captured last week in one of their most significant advances since Russia intervened militarily on their side.
The Syrian government offensive has given Assad a stronger hand going into peace talks with the opposition that are planned for next week in Switzerland.
The Russian military on Friday
took Moscow-based reporters to see the town in Latakia province, which
had been out of government control for more than three years. Most of
the buildings bore visible signs of fighting, with holes in concrete
walls gaping open and windows blown out.
Government
forces were able to capture the city "thanks to the support of the
friendly Russian aviation," Latakia Governor Ibrahim Khder al-Saalem
said. "Our army will now press its offensive further."
Since
Russia launched its bombing campaign on Sept. 30, its warplanes have
flown nearly 6,000 missions in support of the Syrian government troops.
The airstrikes were ostensibly to target Islamic State militants and
other extremists, but they also have helped Assad push back rebels on
several fronts and capture dozens of villages in the north and west
While Salma had been under rebel
control since 2012, the government had continued to hold most of the
rest of Latakia province, the heartland of Assad's minority Alawite
sect. Salma, a town of 10,000, sits on hills overlooking the
Mediterranean coast, about 40 kilometers (25 miles) away.
The governor said the
militants who had held Salma burned 200 hectares (500 acres) of apple
orchards and 300 hectares (750 acres) of forest around the city before
retreating toward Turkey. The border with Turkey, a key supporter of
rebels in the area, is only 12 kilometers (seven miles) away.
On
Friday, Syrian troops captured more areas from insurgents in Latakia
province, including Kaluksi mountain and several other villages,
according to the state-run SANA news agency.
The
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported heavy
clashes in the mountains of Latakia province, saying that the Syrian
army and pro-government forces were advancing in the area.
The
hills around Salma were littered with blown-up tanks and other vehicles.
Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov said
Russian planes had helped destroy military vehicles and bunkers placed
in strategic positions, helping prepare the way for the Syrian army to
capture the city. He said the area had many ammunition depots, holding
massive caches of explosives, which also were targeted by Russian
warplanes.Syria's five-year civil war has killed a quarter of a million people, displaced half the country and enabled the radical Islamic State group to seize a third of Syria's territory.
The
talks planned for next week in Geneva are meant to start a political
process to end the conflict, which started in 2011 as a largely peaceful
uprising against Assad's rule but escalated into an all-out war after a
harsh state crackdown. The plan calls for cease-fires in parallel to
the talks, a new constitution and elections in a year and a half.
Before
the fighting began, Salma was a popular spot in the summer with people
seeking a respite from the heat. On Friday, life was returning to the
city, with doctors standing outside the local clinic and police officers
gathering at their station, which was adorned with a multitude of Assad
portraits.
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