Islamist rebels retook most of a military base in northern Syria from forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Saturday after two days of fighting in which at least 60 people have been killed, a monitoring group said.
The heavy fighting reflects the strategic importance of the 80th Brigade army base, a few hundred meters from Aleppo airport on the eastern approaches of the disputed city.
Rebels had held the site for nine months until Friday when al-Assad’s troops, backed by heavy artillery fire and air strikes, briefly pushed them out.
Photo: Reuters
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said fighting continued on Saturday around the base, one of several locations to the east and southeast of Aleppo where al-Assad’s forces have been challenging rebel control.
The army has recaptured the town of Safira, where one of Syria’s main chemical weapons facilities was housed, and has advanced to attack the rebel-held towns of Tel Arn and Tel Hasel which are closer to the southeastern edge of Aleppo.
If it were to take those towns and the army base, authorities would have tightened their control around the airport, which has been closed to most civilian flights after rebels fired at an airliner there in December last year.
Rami Abdelrahman of the British-based Observatory, which monitors the violence in Syria through a network of medical and security sources, said at least 21 soldiers and 41 rebels — including 11 foreign fighters from the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant — had been killed in fighting for the base.
He said the army was backed by the Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah and pro-al-Assad Syrian militias.
State media made no reference to the fighting around the army base, but said a rocket-propelled grenade fired by rebels killed six children in the Ashrafiyeh District of Aleppo.
Once Syria’s most populous city and commercial hub, Aleppo has been divided roughly in half by the warring parties. Rebels hold most of Aleppo Province, but the government wants to keep a foothold in the north, where rebel supplies flood in from Turkey.
Al-Assad’s forces also took the strategic southern town of Sbeineh near Damascus on Thursday, threatening rebel control of the wider area and cutting off a supply route for insurgents around the capital.
After two-and-a-half years of war, which started when al-Assad’s forces fired on pro-democracy protests, the fighting has settled into a broad stalemate in which more than 100 are killed every day.
More than 100,000 have died since the start of the conflict, the UN says, and millions more have been displaced.
ACTIONABLE ADVICE: The majority of chatbots tested provided guidance on weapons, tactics and target selections, with Perplexity and Meta AI deemed to be the least safe From school shootings to synagogue bombings, leading artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots helped researchers plot violent attacks, according to a study published on Wednesday that highlighted the technology’s potential for real-world harm. Researchers from the nonprofit watchdog Center for Countering Digital Hate and CNN posed as 13-year-old boys in the US and Ireland to test 10 chatbots, including ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Perplexity, Deepseek and Meta AI. Eight of the chatbots assisted the make-believe attackers in more than half the responses, providing advice on “locations to target” and “weapons to use” in an attack, the study said. The chatbots had become a “powerful accelerant for
Australians were downloading virtual private networks (VPNs) in droves, while one of the world’s largest porn distributors said it was blocking users from its platforms as the country yesterday rolled out sweeping online age restriction. Australia in December became the first country to impose a nationwide ban on teenagers using social media. A separate law now requires artificial intelligence (AI)-powered chatbot services to keep certain content — including pornography, extreme violence and self-harm and eating disorder material — from minors or face fines of up to A$49.5 million (US$34.6 million). The country also joined Britain, France and dozens of US states requiring
Since the war in the Middle East began nearly two weeks ago, the telephone at Ron Hubbard’s bomb shelter company in Texas has not stopped ringing. Foreign and US clients are rushing to buy his bunkers, seeking refuge in case of air raids, nuclear fallout or apocalypse. With the US and Israel pounding Iran, and Tehran retaliating with strikes across the region, Hubbard has seen demand for his product soar, mostly from Gulf nation customers in Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. “You can imagine how many people are thinking: ‘I wish I had a bomb shelter,’” Hubbard, 63, said in
STILL IN POWER: US intelligence reports showed that the Iranian regime is not in danger of collapse and retains control of the public, casting doubt on Trump’s exit Nearly every US Senate Democrat on Wednesday signed a letter sent to US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth requesting a “swift investigation” of airstrikes on a girls’ school in Iran that killed scores of children and any other potential US military actions causing civilian harm. Reuters reported on Thursday last week that US military investigators believe it is likely that US forces were responsible for the Feb. 28 strike on the school, as US and Israeli forces launched attacks on Iran. “The results of this school attack are horrific. The majority of those killed in the strikes were girls between the ages