Russia said on
Saturday it had stepped up its bombing campaign against Islamic State
militants in Syria, while local observers said several of the air
strikes had hit areas in western Syria where the hardline group has
little presence. Russia, a
top ally of President Bashar al-Assad, started bombing in Syria on Sept.
30 saying it was targeting Islamic State and other opposition groups, a
campaign that has drawn Moscow deeper into Syria's more than
four-year-old conflict. Rebels on
the ground and Western states have said Moscow's air campaign, which has
been combined with ground attacks by pro-government forces, have mainly
targeted rebel groups not associated with Islamic State, including
U.S.-trained fighters. Defense
officials from the United States and Russia held a 90-minute video
conference call on Saturday to discuss safe flight operations over
Syria, according to the Pentagon, which is concerned that dueling
bombing campaigns could lead to accidental clashes without the proper
precautions. Already, at least one
U.S. warplane has had to change its route to avoid a close encounter
with Russian planes, the Pentagon has said. "The
discussions were professional and focused narrowly on the
implementation of specific safety procedures," the U.S. Department of
Defense said in a statement released on Saturday. "Progress was made
during the talks, and the U.S. agreed to another discussion with Russia
in the near future." A Russian
defense ministry representative said on Saturday Russia had intensified
its campaign in the last 24 hours, with 64 sorties hitting 55 targets,
Russian news agencies reported. The
representative, Major-General Igor Konashenkov, described the targets
hit as controlled by Islamic State, also referring to them as belonging
to "militants" and "terrorists". He
said they included command and control centers, weapons depots and
training bases, located in the Syrian provinces of Raqqa, Hama, Damascus
and Aleppo. The first of those provinces is in eastern
Syria and the main Islamic State stronghold, while the other three are
in Western Syria where the group is typically weak. However,
Islamic State militants have been advancing on Aleppo in recent days,
seizing villages in the province from rival insurgents. Konashenkov
said one of the targets hit near Aleppo was a concealed base for
military vehicles, which he said had received a direct hit from an
Su-24M bomber. More than ten
vehicles had been destroyed, including two tanks and five infantry
vehicles, he said in comments cited by Interfax. CHECHENS Russian
strikes hit northern areas of Latakia province, the coastal heartland
of Assad's Alawite minority sect, as well as northern areas of Hama
province further east, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. There was no immediate information on casualties. The
Observatory says Islamic State has no real presence in these areas.
However, there were other militants in northern Syria, such as Chechens,
that Russia might want to attack. Syrian
state television said in a newsflash that attacks carried out by
government forces in the area had killed and wounded a number of
"terrorists", a term it uses to describe all insurgents in Syria. The Observatory
said a large explosion hit a building on the outskirts of the town of
al-Bab in northern Syria, which is held by Islamic State. It
was not immediately clear what caused the blast in the building, which
Islamic State had used to store explosives, according to the
British-based Observatory, which tracks the conflict using sources on
the ground. The Observatory also
said Syrian government forces backed by militia had captured the village
of Atshan from insurgent fighters in Hama province after Russian
airstrikes in surrounding areas. Atshan
sits to the east of the north-south highway running through major
western cities in Syria. Towns and villages around the road have been a
focus of Russian air strikes. Syrian state TV also said in a newsflash that the army had captured the village Human
Rights Watch said late on Friday that the first Russian air strikes on
northern Homs last month killed at least 17 civilians and should be
investigated for possible violations of the laws of war. Russian
President Vladmir Putin said earlier this month that reports of
civilian deaths in Russian air strikes on Syria were an "information
attack".
Russia steps up air strikes against Assad opponents in Syria

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