Syrian regime controls 85% of country, says Russia

Syrian regime forces last week reached Deir Ezzor city, the provincial capital on the Euphrates River. (Reuters)

ALEPPO: Russia’s military said on Tuesday that Syrian regime forces have liberated about 85 percent of the country’s territory from militants, a major turnaround two years after Moscow intervened to lend a hand to its embattled long-time ally.
Russia has been providing air cover for President Bashar Assad’s troops since 2015, changing the tide of the war and giving Syrian and allied troops an advantage over opposition fighters and Daesh terrorists.
Speaking to reporters at the Hemeimeem air base in Syria’s province of Latakia, Lt. Gen. Alexander Lapin said the Syrian regime still must clear the militants who hold around 27,000 sq. km, the remaining 15 percent.
The reporters were later flown to Aleppo city, which opposition fighters lost to the Syrian regime in late 2016, and where Russian military police patrol parts of the city.
Syrian troops, along with strong support from Iranian-backed ground fighters, have in recent weeks pushed Daesh militants out of central Homs province, near the border with Lebanon, and are now fighting them in the oil-rich Deir Ezzor province in the east.
Deir Ezzor is the last major Daesh holdout in Syria and the Syrian campaign, backed by Russian air power, broke a nearly three-year-old siege on the provincial capital where troops had been encircled by Daesh militants.
But activists said civilians are bearing the brunt of the offensive amid intensive airstrikes and Daesh taking them as human shields. An airstrike hit recently displaced Syrians from Deir Ezzor on the western side of the Euphrates River, killing at least eight civilians.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and Omar Abu Laila, who runs a group that monitors developments in Deir Ezzor, said the airstrikes were suspected to be from Russian aircraft.
The Syrian regime’s ally Hezbollah declared victory in the Syrian war and the group’s leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah dismissed the fighting left to be done in the country as “scattered battles.”
“We have won in the war (in Syria),” he said in comments reported by the Lebanese newspaper Al-Akhbar.
At the height of its strength, Daesh controlled nearly half of Syria, seizing mostly territories in the east and north of Syria.
Around Syria, there are still pockets of other insurgents, some backed by Turkey and others by the US, in the northwest and north as well as in the south and near the capital. Militants affiliated with Al-Qaeda control Idlib province, near the border with Turkey.
Russian air power has been instrumental in recent Syrian military successes. With Damascus facing major battlefield defeats, Moscow signed a deal with the Syrian government in August 2015 to deploy an air force contingent and other military assets at the Hemeimeem base, in the heartland of Assad’s Alawite religious minority.

In a matter of weeks, Russia’s military built up the base so it could host dozens of Russian jets. It delivered thousands of tons of military equipment and supplies by sea and heavy-lift cargo planes in an operation dubbed the “Syrian Express.” A month later, Moscow declared the launch of its air campaign in Syria — Russia’s first military action outside the former Soviet Union since the federation’s collapse.
In April 2016, Assad’s forces, relying on Russian air support, scored a major symbolic victory by taking the ancient town of Palmyra from Daesh. Daesh carried out a counteroffensive but were finally driven out of the city in March 2017.
Assad’s greatest victory in the war, now in its seventh year, came when his troops and allied militia, with Russian air support, gained full control of the city of Aleppo.
Senior Russian military officers as well as special forces were deployed alongside Syrian regime troops, providing training, planning offensives and coordinating air strikes. Russia has also deployed its latest weapons to the Syrian conflict, including state-of-the art Kalibr cruise missiles launched by Russian strategic bombers, navy surface warships and submarines, most recently in Deir Ezzor province last week.
Russia’s Defense Ministry never said how many troops it has in Syria, but turnout figures in voting from abroad in the September 2016 parliamentary elections indicated Russian military personnel in the Arab nation at the time likely exceeded 4,300. The Russian military said last week 34 of its servicemen have been killed in Syria.
Russia has also co-sponsored talks with opposition fighters and the government to negotiate local cease-fires, and set up “de-escalation zones” in Syria, which were credited with reducing fighting around the country.
A new round starts this week in the Kazakh capital of Astana, on local cease-fires and de-escalation zones.