The Syrian
army has made a sudden advance against Islamic State in the desert area west of
Raqqa, a military media unit run by its ally Hezbollah said on Tuesday.
Syria's vast
deserts have become the main theater of war in recent weeks as rival forces
race to capture ground from the jihadist group, which is slowly retreating on
several fronts.
The area
between Ithriya and Tabqa, west of Islamic State's de facto Syrian capital
Raqqa, is important for the army since it can be used to attack government-held
towns and supply routes.
According to
the Hezbollah military media unit, the army has punched southwards to the
Ithriya-Tabqa highway, a distance of about 20 miles (32 km) from its positions
south of Maskaneh.
The road was
used by Islamic State to attack positions along the government's main supply
route to Aleppo near Ithriya, and, if fully captured, would help the army
advance into the desert.
It captured
the villages of Rajm Askar, Bir Inbaj, Zahar Um Baj, Jab Aziz, Jab al-Ghanem,
Abu Sousa and Jab Abyad from the jihadist group, the media unit said.
Syria's army
is aided in the six-year-long war by Shi'ite militias backed by Iran, including
Lebanon's Hezbollah, and by Russian air power.
A war
monitor, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, also said the
Syrian army had advanced in that area. Al-Rusafa oil field is located nearby.
The advance
will help the army to relieve pressure on the Ithriya-Khanaser road, part of
the government's supply route to Aleppo, the Observatory said.
The army has
also launched attacks to push Islamic State back from the Salamiya-Ithriya
road, part of the same supply route, in recent weeks.
The Syrian
Democratic Forces (SDF), a group of militias backed by a U.S.-led coalition,
holds Tabqa, northeast of the advances the army was reported to have made on
Tuesday.
A week into
its assault on Raqqa, the SDF on Monday reached the walls of the Old City from
the eastern suburbs, the war monitor and a militia spokesman said. It is also
pushing into Raqqa from the west and the north.
REUTER*
0 Comments