Syria’s army broke a more than year-long jihadist siege of a military air base in the country’s north on Tuesday, its first major breakthrough since Russia’s air campaign began.
Troops, backed by pro-government militia, broke through the siege by Islamic State of the Kweyris military airport in northern Aleppo province, a photographer working with AFP said.
A group of soldiers penetrated Isis lines west of the airport and reached government troops inside the base, firing into the air in celebration.
Experts said the base could be used by Russian planes in their air war against rebels fighting the regime of the president, Bashar al-Assad, aiding their efforts to re-take Syria’s second city of Aleppo.
Russia launched airstrikes in Syria in support of Assad at the end of September, but the regime has still struggled to advance against opposition forces and securing Kweyris would mark its first major victory in the province.
But the advance came as at least 22 people were killed in one of the bloodiest mortar attacks on the regime’s coastal bastion of Latakia in the four-year conflict.
As the bloodshed continued, the United Nations peace envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, urged world powers to build on the “momentum” of new international talks to end the conflict, which has killed more than 250,000 people.
Twenty countries and international bodies will meet in Vienna on Saturday to push forward a peace plan for Syria that would include a ceasefire between Assad’s regime and some opposition groups.
The meetings must “bring some deliverables to the Syrian people – one of them should be reduction of violence”, De Mistura told reporters after briefing the UN security council.
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