kayhan.ir

News ID: 40999
Publish Date : 24 June 2017 - 21:16

Syrian Forces Advance on Dayr al-Zawr



DAMASCUS (Dispatches) – Syrian army forces, supported by allied fighters, have reportedly managed to advance on the Daesh-held eastern province of Dayr al-Zawr for the first time since 2014 days after an Iranian missile strike against terrorist positions there.
Backed by pro-government forces, "the Syrian army entered Dayr al-Zawr Province from the southeast, near the Iraqi border,” the so-called Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said.
SOHR Head Rami Abdel Rahman noted that the Syrian forces had advanced eight kilometers into the province and were just 12 kilometers from the key T2 oil pump.
The Syrian forces now control part of Dayr al-Zawr city and a nearby military airport, but Daesh is in control of most of the provincial capital.
Earlier this month, the Syrian troops reached the eastern border with Iraq and they were reported to be in control of an 85-kilometer stretch of the frontier.
The fresh gains came less than a week after the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) pounded Daesh headquarters in Dayr al-Zawr with six medium-range ballistic missiles fired from western Iran.
The missile attack killed more than 170 terrorists and inflicted heavy damage on their equipment and systems, the IRGC said in a statement. The strike was conducted in retaliation for the June 7 terror attacks in the Iranian capital, Tehran.
Separately, drone footage showed smoke rising above the al-Waer district on the outskirt of Homs city, where fighting is underway between Syrian troops and terrorists. The pro-government forces recaptured Ard al-Washash, al-Waer Dam and Al-Waer Canyon region.
The Syrian fighters further retook almost the entire Ayn Tarma Valley in east Damascus and several sites in the southern part of the city such as al-Jisr neighborhood.
In another development on Friday, a bomb blast hit the al-Furqan neighborhood of the city Aleppo, killing four people and wounding 30 others.
Aleppo police chief said the bomb was planted beside a trash bin, but media reports said the explosion was caused by a mortar fire.
Over the past few weeks, tensions have escalated in Syria between the government forces, the U.S. and Russia.
In two occasions in June and May, U.S. warplanes attacked Syrian military forces near the town of At-Tanf, claiming they posed a threat to U.S. forces, an allegation rejected by Damascus.
Last week, a U.S. Navy F/A-18 Super Hornet shot down a Syrian SU-22, which was conducting an operation against Daesh terrorists on the outskirts of the city of Raqqah.
The shootdown led Moscow to announce a halt to a hotline with the U.S. meant to minimize incidents in Syrian airspace and vow to track U.S.-led coalition aircraft in central Syria as "targets.”