Syrian regime
forces and allies including Lebanese Hezbollah fighters seized an
extensive area southeast of Damascus from rebels on Thursday and fought
other insurgents near a highway leading southwest, a monitoring group
said. The advance is part of
a wider escalation in fighting that has accompanied failed diplomatic
efforts to end the five-year conflict. Syria's war has killed 250,000
people, created the worst refugee crisis since World War II, allowed for
the rise of Islamic State and drawn in many regional and global powers. The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it was one of the most
significant government advances this year, after its forces took
territory in northwestern and central Syria. Insurgents have also
advanced in some areas recently, including in Aleppo province. Hezbollah's
Al Manar television said the fighting in Damascus's Eastern Ghouta
suburbs was part of a new military operation by the Syrian army against
the rebels. The fighting began
early on Thursday when government forces and Hezbollah fighters captured
the town of Deir al-Asafir, and then seized a number of other areas
nearby, closing off a pocket of rebel control in Eastern Ghouta, the
British-based Observatory said. Pro-opposition
Orient News television reported that government forces had "taken
complete control" of the southern part of Eastern Ghouta. The
region has long been held by rebels. Most of Eastern Ghouta is still in
rebel hands, but Thursday's gains could pave the way for further
government and Hezbollah advances there, Observatory director Rami
Abdulrahman said. Government
forces and their allies have recently sought to exploit rebel
infighting in areas east of the Syrian capital. The insurgents have
failed to halt that violence despite attempts at mediation. On
Thursday hundreds of families fled Deir al-Asafir because of the
intensity of the clashes between the government side and the rebels, the
Observatory said. Hezbollah
fighters played a key role in the assault, Abdulrahman said, which took
place near to where the group's top military commander in Syria was
recently killed by what it said was rebel shellfire. AIR RAIDS, BATTLES SOUTHWEST Separately,
southwest of Damascus, the Syrian army and its allies pressed attacks
to try to shore up control of a main highway running from the capital to
southwestern Syria, including Quneitra province and the Golan Heights,
the Observatory said. Government
forces have carried out dozens of air raids around the town of Khan
al-Shih, where rebel groups control areas straddling the highway, it
said. Capture of Khan al-Shih would help secure control of the road, Abdulrahman said. The
Syrian army said in a video report that rebels attacked the area first,
and had been beaten back and driven from some of their positions by
government forces. The Observatory did not immediately report
significant advances. The fighting raged despite international attempts to revive a wider ceasefire in western Syria and restart peace talks. Fighting
continues elsewhere in western Syria, including in Aleppo and Latakia
provinces, and Islamic State is engaged in battles farther east
separately against government forces, Kurdish fighters and a U.S.-led
air campaign.
Syrian regime forces, allies capture extensive area near Damascus

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