Syrian troops break siege imposed by IS on base since 2013

Damascus: Syrian government forces today broke a siege imposed by the Islamic State group on a northern military air base since 2013, marking the first major achievement by President Bashar Assad’s troops since Russia began its airstrikes in late September, state media said.

A state TV report said government forces met with troops that were defending the Kweiras air base in the northern province of Aleppo. Syrian troops, backed by pro-government gunmen, launched a large-scale offensive to reach the base last month under the cover of Russian airstrikes.

The TV report said dozens of IS fighters were killed in the battles today. A soldier inside the base said hundreds of dead extremists were found around the compound. IS has been besieging the base since 2013 when they defeated rival militant groups who had surrounded the base for a year. “We are inside the air base,” a Syrian soldier that took part in the offensive told state TV today evening. “We have met our friends and the situation is good.”

Assad’s office issued a statement praising “the heroes who defended the base in a legendary way.” Information Minister Omra al-Zoubi took the occasion to call on all Syrians who are fighting the government “to drop their weapons and surrender to the state,” adding that they do not seek revenge.

Today’s push is a major victory for the government against IS, which controls nearly half of Syria. Syrian troops tried in the past to reach the air base with no luck but Russian airstrikes appear to have helped in forcing IS from the area. The capture of Kweiras air base will boost the Russian and Syrian government’s narrative that Moscow is concentrating its airstrikes against extremists.

Moscow says it is targeting mainly IS militants, but U.S. officials and Syrian rebels have said the strikes have hit mainstream rebels for the most part and are aimed at shoring up Assad’s embattled government and troops. Many of the rebel groups hit by the Russian strikes are also at war with the IS group.

IS fighters had been besieging the nearly 1,000 soldiers inside the base since 2013, but the forces there have managed to hold on despite repeated attacks using multiple suicide bombings.

Another officer speaking from the base told state TV “with the liberation of Kweiras, we will liberate other areas.” The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the government forces were backed by pro-government Syrian gunmen as well as members of Lebanon’s militant Hezbollah group.