Las Vegas Review-Journal

Russia says drone attacks on Syria base climb

Assad foes responsibl­e for launches from Idlib

- By Dmitry Kozlov and Sergei Grits The Associated Press

HEMEIMEEM AIR BASE, Syria — Russian air defense assets in Syria have downed 45 drones targeting their main base in the country, its military said Thursday, after an attack by the Islamic State group on a Syrian army base a day earlier killed seven troops.

The Russian Defense Ministry spokesman, Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenko­v, said that five drones were shot down in the last three days near the Hemeimeem air base. The base in the province of Latakia serves as the main hub for Russian operations in Syria.

Konashenko­v said that while the drones appear primitive, they use sophistica­ted technologi­es and have a range of up to 60 miles. He charged that the militants wouldn’t have been able to assemble the drones without outside help, but didn’t specify who might have assisted them.

The Russian general noted that the number of drone attacks have increased recently, adding that all of them were launched by militants based in the northern province of Idlib.

Idlib has become the main base for President Bashar Assad’s foes, which moved there after being forced out from other areas across Syria as part of surrender deals often negotiated with the Russians on behalf of the Syrian government.

With Russia’s support, Assad’s forces have regained control over key cities, like Aleppo, Homs and Daraa, the southern city where the uprising against the government began in March 2011. The authoritie­s also have restored control over key highways, allowing safe travel all the way from the Jordanian border in the south to the central province of Hama.

In Homs, regional Gov. Talal Barazi said that a key bridge on a highway linking the Homs and Hama provinces which was destroyed in 2012 has been restored.

Barazi said that later this year his administra­tion plans to start restoring the old part of Homs that was ravaged by fierce fighting in 2014.

He said that about 650 rebels who had left the province and moved to Idlib have come back to Homs and agreed to lay down their arms.

Barazi said that the historic city of Palmyra, home to one of the Middle East’s most spectacula­r archaeolog­ical sites, could be open for tourist visits by next summer. Many of the city’s archaeolog­ical treasures were badly damaged by the Islamic State group in 2015. Palmyra is a world heritage site protected by the United Nations’w cultural agency.

In Aleppo, Hazem Ajan, the director of the city’s industrial cluster, said about 500 companies have resumed operations in the area since the government reclaimed control in 2016.

Meanwhile, in eastern Syria, at least seven soldiers were killed when the Islamic State group attacked an army position near the city of Deir el-zour, a monitoring group said.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said the attack Wednesday near an oil field was the militants’ closest approach to the Deir el-zour air base since the government recaptured it last year.

Mohammad Hassan, a media coordinato­r for the activist-run Deir Ezzor 24, said at least 12 soldiers and five IS militants were killed in the clashes.

A recent U.N. report warned that IS, which once boasted of commanding a caliphate stretching across northern Syria and Iraq, is adopting a guerrilla profile.

The group may still have up to 30,000 members distribute­d between Syria and Iraq, according to the U.N. report.

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 ?? Sergei Grits ?? The Associated Press A man rides his bicycle near damage in the old town of Homs, Syria, on Wednesday. The Russian Defense Ministry said it is coordinati­ng efforts to help Syrian refugees return home and rebuild the country’s infrastruc­ture destroyed by the civil war.
Sergei Grits The Associated Press A man rides his bicycle near damage in the old town of Homs, Syria, on Wednesday. The Russian Defense Ministry said it is coordinati­ng efforts to help Syrian refugees return home and rebuild the country’s infrastruc­ture destroyed by the civil war.
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