Russian warplanes continued providing crucial support to Syrian forces in their offensive to recapture the Syrian city of Palmyra, a UNESCO Heritage Site, as they carried out 158 airstrikes hitting terrorist targets in and around the city. According to the Russian Defense Ministry, more than 100 extremists were killed in the bombardment, along with several pieces of heavy equipment.
“Russian Aerospace Forces have carried out 40 sorties in the Palmyra region,” a statement published on the Defense Ministry’s official website read, adding that “as a result … four tanks, three artillery pieces, four ammunition depots, and five vehicles were destroyed.”
In recent days, the Syrian army and allied militias have been advancing into Palmyra in an effort to retake it from the jihadists. They have already taken full control over several of the city’s districts, breaching Islamic State’s (IS, former ISIS/ISIL) last line of defense. Fierce clashes are still taking place throughout the city, however, according to Syrian state news agency SANA.
The army also launched intensive military operations in the area’s southern orchards, and is nearing Palmyra’s airport in the eastern part of the city.
Syrian governmental forces seized medieval Palmyra Castle on Thursday, taking control of the high point overlooking the city.
“Our heroic forces are continuing to advance until we liberate every inch of this pure land,” a soldier told state-run television in a broadcast from the slopes of the citadel, as quoted by Reuters.
Earlier on Friday, an army unit in cooperation with popular defense groups dislodged Islamic State from the Syriatel hill near Palmyra Castle, a military source told SANA.
Kamal Alam, a fellow at the Royal United Service Institute (RUSI), who advises the British Army on Syrian affairs, told RT that the battle for Palmyra has a “very significant,” “strategic and symbolic” meaning, as the city lies “in the middle [of the country] and connects the east and the central [Syrian regions],” adding that its liberation will give the Syrian army control over “the main highway that goes towards eastern Syria as well as Raqqa.”
At the same time, he expected the international reaction to be “skeptical” because “international bodies and organizations [are] basically against the Syrian government and the Syrian army, and this is actually a [rebuke] for them.”
The Syrian army’s “strategic victory against [Islamic State] goes against what Americans are talking about, which is that IS can only be removed by the rebels backed by the West,” Alam said. However, he added that there is a possibility that the Western countries could “change their stance and finally recognize that the Syrian government and the Syrian army are the only [force] capable of fighting IS, [as] they are proving it on the ground.”
On March 14, Russia announced that it was withdrawing the majority of its forces from Syria, as the five-month operation nears its goals. At the same time, Deputy Defense Minister Nikolay Pankov stressed that Russia’s remaining air contingent is still tasked with hitting terrorist targets, as it is “early to talk about victory over terrorism.”
Palmyra is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, formerly known as home to some of the best-preserved monuments of antiquity anywhere in the world. Giovanni Boccardi from the UNESCO Emergency Preparedness and Response Unit told RT that Palmyra “is not just an archeological site, it is a symbol of Syria.”
After capturing the historical landmark, the jihadists blew up the 2,000-year-old Temple of Bel and the Arch of Triumph, while also using Palmyra’s Roman-era amphitheater for filmed public executions.
Regaining control over Palmyra will allow Syrian governmental forces to advance into the eastern part of the country to liberate the city of Deir ez-Zohr, which has been besieged by Islamic State terrorists since May of 2015, as well as to launch an offensive against the group’s self-proclaimed capital of Raqqa.
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