Insurgents have seized a historic town in southern Syria from the government, a group monitoring the war said yesterday, part of a rebel counter-attack to stop Damascus reclaiming the border zone near Israel and Jordan.

A Syrian military source reported heavy fighting with armed groups on Tuesday night in and around Bosra al-Sham, whose ancient city is listed as a Unesco world heritage site. “We are investigating the facts in the field,” the source said.

An alliance of mainstream rebels who are backed by Western and Arab foes of President Bashar al-Assad said they had taken Bosra and declared the start of a new attack against government forces in another area of Deraa province to the northwest.

Bosra’s historic sites include a citadel built around a second century Roman amphitheatre. It was the capital of the Roman province of Arabia.

Syria’s southwestern corner is of strategic importance due to its proximity to Damascus and neighbouring states Israel and Jordan. It is also the last significant foothold of mainstream rebels, who have mostly been crushed elsewhere in Syria by government forces or jihadist groups. An offensive launched by al-Assad’s forces in early February made quick gains but its territorial advance then slowed. The mainstream rebels, known as “The Southern Front”, say they have received more military support from Assad’s foreign foes since the start of the push by the Syrian army and allied militia including the Lebanese group Hizbollah. Support to the Southern Front groups has been channelled via Jordan, a staunch ally of the United States.

Our strategy was to attack in areas where the regime was not expecting it

Washington says al-Assad has lost legitimacy and must leave power, although its focus has switched to fighting the Islamic State jihadist group that has seized swathes of northern and eastern Syria as well as chunks of Iraq.

The monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said 21 insurgents had been killed in four days of fighting for Bosra, some 20 km north of the border with Jordan. The spokesman for the Southern Front alliance said 85 percent of the fighters who took part in the attack were from mainstream rebel groups and the rest from Islamist factions.

The Nusra Front, al-Qaeda’s wing in Syria, did not take part, said spokesman Issam al-Rayyes. “We liberated the whole city, even the old castle and old city,” he said.

The Southern Front launched the attack because the army had been mobilising pro-government militia in Bosra for a new stage of its offensive in the south, he added.

The new attack announced by the Southern Front on Wednesday was aimed at taking Jadieh, some 80 km to the northwest of Bosra.

“Our strategy was not to hold on to territory, but to attack in areas where the regime was not expecting it,” Rayyes said.

“We have started to liberate additional areas.”

The southwestern corner of Syria is seen as a priority for the Damascus government as it tries to shore up its control over western regions including the cities of Homs and Hama, the border with Lebanon and the coast.

In northwest Syria hardline Islamists including the Nusra Front and Ahrar al-Sham have launched an offensive to take the city of Idlib from the government.

The Observatory reported heavy clashes between the sides yesterday. The Nusra Front ignited a car bomb on Idlib’s outskirts, it said, identifying two of the bombers as Gulf Arabs.

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