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Syrian army battles Daesh for third day near key road

By Reuters - Feb 25,2016 - Last updated at Feb 25,2016

AMMAN/BEIRUT — The Syrian army and Daesh militants waged fierce battles on Wednesday around Khanaser, a strategic town southeast of Aleppo, where an attack by the extremist group has cut the main land route to the city during three days of fighting.

A government military source denied reports Khanaser had fallen to Daesh. But he said its fighters were firing on it from nearby positions.

"They are around Khanaser — it is under their sniper fire," the source told Reuters.

Daesh is escalating its assaults on government-held areas. Its suicide bombers launched some of their deadliest attacks of the war on Sunday in Damascus and Homs, killing about 200 people. It also attacked government forces near Palmyra on Wednesday.

The attacks appear to be a preemptive move, the military source said, because the militants expect to come under more pressure from the Syrian army soon. The group is not part of a US-Russian plan to halt fighting in Syria, due to start on Saturday.

Suicide bombers also helped Daesh seize Khanaser, according to Amaq, a news outlet that supports the group. It said three of them drove into army fortifications there — a tactic the militants have used before to take government-held towns.

Two rebel sources credited the Daesh attack with relieving pressure on them around Aleppo.

The latest attack cut a main army supply route to parts of Aleppo where the Syrian army, backed by Russian warplanes, Iran's Revolutionary Guards and Lebanon's Hizbollah, has been gaining ground. Daesh also said it hit an army convoy between Salamiya and Athriya that was heading to Khanaser.

The military source said the road was closed as a result of military operations, denying Daesh had seized it.

"There were fierce battles yesterday evening, in which Daesh suffered large numbers of dead, and three armoured vehicle bombs were destroyed," the source said.

Russian air strikes hit Daesh outposts near Khanaser while army artillery pounded them from government-held Safira, a rebel source said.

Separately, the army said it had repelled infiltration by Daesh militants against the government-held towns of Al Barda and Al Bayarat almost 10km west of Palmyra and killed dozens of militants. The militants seized the ancient city of Palmyra from the government in May.

 

The Syrian army and its allies have also extended their control of parts of a road running towards the extremist group's stronghold of Raqqa, building on gains made earlier this month. 

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