BEIRUT/DAMASCUS: Russian lawmakers said, after hearing a
report by the nation’s defense minister, that Russia’s air campaign in Syria will not end quickly,
while Syrian government forces captured a strategic mountain in the country’s
northwest.
Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said in remarks before the
Russian parliament that “we can’t expect the operation to end fast,” according to Vladimir Gutenev,
a lawmaker who was quoted by Russian news agencies. The parliamentary session was closed to the
media, but Gutenev and other lawmakers offered highlights of Shoigu’s
speech.
According to Gutenev, Shoigu said that there is no quick end in
sight for the Russian operation because extremist groups are getting new recruits and unspecified
other nations fail to offer a strong contribution in the fight against
terrorism.
Meanwhile, Syrian troops and pro-government gunmen took Jabal
al-Nawbeh in Latakia early Wednesday, “after destroying the terrorists’ positions and
fortifications,” an unnamed military official was quoted as saying by state
TV.
Government troops have been on the offensive in different parts of the
country under the cover of Russian airstrikes. Capturing the mountains of Latakia would reduce
threats to the coast – a key stronghold of President Bashar Assad.The Britain-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said the taking of the mountain opens the way for government forces
toward the rebel-stronghold of Salma. The Observatory said government troops were backed by fighters
from Lebanon’s Hezbollah group.
Groups including Al-Qaeda-affiliate the
Nusra Front have taken up positions around Salma, according to the
Observatory.
According to Syria analyst Fabrice Balanche, Jabal al-Nawbeh
is between 500 and 800 meters high. “Its capture allows the regime to control the access to Salma
from the west, as the army already controls the access point from the east,” Balanche told
AFP.
In Lebanon, Hezbollah’s Al-Manar TV quoted one of its reporters,
embedded with Syrian troops, as saying that government forces raised the Syrian flag on the mountain
overlooking an array of rebel-held areas in Latakia.
Meanwhile, in the
central Syrian city of Homs, a convoy of 18 trucks carrying food, medical supplies and construction
material began entering the rebel-held neighborhood of Waer, according to Pawel Krzysiek, a
spokesman for the International Committee of the Red Cross.
Krzysiek said
the convoy is organized by the ICRC and the Syrian Arab Red Crescent. An ICRC statement released
later Wednesday said it may take several days to deliver all the aid. It said the trucks are
bringing in food supplies for 40,000 people and hygiene kits for 60,000 people. In addition, medical
items sufficient for 1,000 dialysis sessions for patients with severe kidney problems will also be
part of the aid delivered.
Earlier this month, a deal in Waer saw a few
hundred insurgents pull out of the district in return for a cease-fire and the delivery of
humanitarian aid.
The U.N. presided over implementation of the deal, which
allowed those leaving Waer safe passage to the north. Hundreds other fighters are expected to leave
Waer in the coming weeks and once the evacuation of the rebels is completed, the city of Homs will
fully return to government control.
Also Wednesday, the German military
said it has flown its first mission in support of the U.S.-led coalition effort against Daesh (ISIS)
in Syria.
The Bundeswehr said a German tanker aircraft had refueled two
fighter jets in-air as they flew missions against the extremist group, the dpa news agency reported.
A German frigate has also been providing protection to the French aircraft carrier Charles de
Gaulle, and German Tornado reconnaissance jets are expected to begin flying surveillance missions in
January. Up to 1,200 troops are expected to be involved in the German mission, which the military
said is an exclusively noncombat support deployment. |