Russian warplanes
pounded Syrian rebels unaffiliated with Islamic State on Sunday,
insurgents said, helping Moscow's ally Bashar al-Assad reclaim territory
and dealing a fresh setback to the strategy of Washington and its
allies. President
Vladimir Putin - who has infuriated Assad's enemies in the United
States, Europe, Turkey and the Arab world by bombing the rebels to
protect him - reached out to one of the Syrian leader's fiercest
opponents by meeting the powerful defense minister of Saudi Arabia. The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a group that monitors the
4-year-old conflict, said the Syrian military and its Lebanese Hezbollah
militia allies had taken control of Tal Skik, a highland area in Idlib
province, after fierce Russian bombing. That
brings Syrian government forces closer to insurgent-held positions
along the main highway that links Syria's principal cities. The area is
held by a rebel alliance that excludes Islamic State fighters. "The
coming battles are going to be ferocious, the Russians are using
scorched earth policy and they are hitting the targets very accurately
but this is a battle of destiny," said Abu Hamed, the head of the
military bureau of Jabhat Sham, an insurgent group that operates mainly
in Hama province. The Syrian
army made advances from the towns of Mourek and Atshan in Hama province
using tanks, heavy artillery and new surface-to-surface missiles, he
said. Russia said its planes had
flown 64 sorties, striking 63 targets and destroying 53 fortified
positions in the previous 24 hours. As in the past, it described all
targets as belonging to Islamic State, although most of the areas it
said it had struck are not held by that group. Syrian state television also reported that the government had captured Tal Skik with the help of Russian air strikes. BOMBING CAMPAIGN STEPPED UP However, the
advance came at a cost, with the Observatory and a Lebanese television
station reporting that a senior Hezbollah commander had been killed
fighting on the Syrian government side. In
recent days, Russia has dramatically intensified its 10-day-old bombing
campaign. Moscow says it is targeting the Islamic State militant group,
but most of its strikes have hit other rebel factions fighting against
Assad, some of which have the support of Gulf Arab powers, Turkey or the
United States. The Russian
bombing has been accompanied by a major advance by Syrian government
forces, backed by thousands of Lebanese Hezbollah militiamen and
hundreds of Iranian troops. Putin's
meeting with Riyadh's Defence Minister Mohammed bin Salman, a son of
the Saudi king and leading figure in its regional security policy, was
the Kremlin's boldest move to reach out to Assad's foes since launching
the strikes. After the meeting,
which took place on the sidelines of a Formula One Grand Prix race in
the Russian resort of Sochi, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Moscow
had sought to assuage Riyadh's concerns. Both sides shared the objective
of preventing a "terrorist caliphate" from taking root in Syria, he
said. Foreign Minister
Adel al-Jubeir said Saudi Arabia, which along with other Arab states has
joined a U.S.-led coalition bombing Islamic State in Syria and Iraq,
was still demanding Assad's removal from power. He hoped talks with
Russia would continue. Putin also
met Abu Dhabi's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, who holds a
senior post in the armed forces of the United Arab Emirates, another
rich Gulf state hostile to Assad. Turkey,
a NATO member that has accused Russian aircraft of violating its air
space during the bombing campaign, said Syrian jets and missile systems
had harassed its fighter planes at the border on Saturday in the latest
incident. Moscow said its officials
had held a second video conference with counterparts from the United
States to ensure safety as the former Cold War foes both fly combat
missions in the same air space for the first time since World War Two. OBAMA POLICY UPENDED The
Russian intervention has upended the strategy of the U.S.
administration of President Barack Obama, which has led a separate
bombing campaign against Islamic State for a year but failed to
establish strong ties with fighters on the ground. Washington
and Moscow say they have the same enemy in Islamic State, the world's
most violent jihadist group, which has set up a caliphate in much of
eastern Syria and northern Iraq. But they have very different friends. Washington
and its European and Middle Eastern allies say the Syrian president
should step down in any peace deal, while Moscow says his government
should be the centerpiece of international efforts to fight extremism. Washington
has announced in recent days that it is abandoning a failed effort to
train "moderate" rebel groups opposed to both Assad and Islamic State.
Other rebels fighting against Assad are equipped and trained by
Washington's Arab allies and range from secular nationalists to Islamist
militants affiliated with al Qaeda. Moscow
accuses Washington of effectively siding with other militants that are
no different from Islamic State; Washington says the Russian campaign
helps Islamic State by targeting its rivals. In
recent days, Islamic State fighters have taken advantage of the Russian
attacks on rival rebel groups to advance near Aleppo in the north of
Syria, the Observatory and sources on the ground say. The Observatory
said there was fighting on Sunday between Islamic State and other rebels
in that area, although no change in positions since Saturday. In
neighboring Iraq, the army said it had struck a convoy carrying Islamic
State's leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi to a meeting of Islamic State
figures. Local residents in the town of Karabla near the Syrian border
said eight Islamic State leaders had been killed in an air strike, but
Baghdadi did not appear to be one of them.
Assad army advances with help of Russian strikes; Putin reaches out to Saudis
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