Syrian army s Aleppo advance slows but victory in sight

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The Syrian army's advance in Aleppo slowed on Thursday but a victory was still firmly in sight after President Bashar al-Assad vowed that retaking the nation's second city would change the course of the six-year civil war in his favor.

Lightning gains in recent days in which government forces and their allies recaptured Aleppo's historic Old City lost some momentum in the face of stiff rebel resistance but the Syrian leadership was confident.

Assad has long sought to seize divided Aleppo which would put him in control of Syria's major cities, the south, central spine and western flank bordering the Mediterranean, dealing a devastating blow to rebels who have fought to unseat him.

Outside of Aleppo, the government and its allies are also putting severe pressure on remaining rebel redoubts. Assad said in an interview with a Syrian newspaper that victory in Aleppo would be a landmark, but not the end of the war.

The rebels on Wednesday called for an immediate five-day ceasefire and the evacuation of civilians and wounded, but gave no indication they were ready to withdraw, as demanded by Damascus and its ally Moscow.

"In the past several days an intensive document exchange on the situation in Aleppo has taken place," the Interfax news agency quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov as saying.

"We are close to reaching an understanding, but I want to warn against high expectations," he said.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said after meeting his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov he was not confident but "hopeful" about reaching an agreement, and was still waiting for "certain feedback and input" from Moscow.

The U.N. assessment for a possible deal, which would see civilian evacuations from besieged rebel-held areas of eastern Aleppo and help aid delivery, was bleak.

Russia and the United States were "poles apart" in trying to agree on terms for evacuations from east Aleppo, U.N. Syria humanitarian adviser Jan Egeland kiem tien tren mang said.

Five months of negotiations over aid plans had all failed and produced "nothing", Egeland said, adding that it was up to Moscow and Washington to agree an evacuation from east Aleppo, where the U.N. Syria envoy has said more than 100,000 people may still be living.

More than 800 people have been killed and 3,000-3,500 wounded in eastern Aleppo in the past 26 days, while the remaining trapped civilians await an effective death sentence, the president of the Aleppo local council said.

"Today 150,000 people are threatened with extermination. We are calling for a halt to the bombing and guarantees of safe passage of all," Brita Haji Hassan said during a trip to Geneva.



'WAR WILL NOT END'

As the Cold War foes struggled to agree, fighting raged on around the Old City, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, with the Syrian army trying to push into the few remaining rebel-held Aleppo neighborhoods.

A Reuters journalist said government forces were shelling rebel-held areas of southwestern Aleppo into the afternoon. Columns of smoke were seen rising from rebel-held areas.

Pro-Damascus media reported that Syrian government forces and their allies had launched attacks against insurgents in the Sukkari, Kalasa and Bustan al-Qasr neighborhoods, west and south of the ancient citadel.

An opposition activist in Aleppo said insurgents had staved off the attacks on the latter two districts.

Monitoring group the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported heavy clashes in those areas, but said there was no new government advance on Thursday.

Government forces have in the past two weeks seized more than two-thirds of rebel-held eastern Aleppo, which had been in insurgents hands for years.

Assad said the army advances will completely change the course of the war, and vowed to fight on after recapturing Aleppo. He described Aleppo as the "last hope" of rebels and their backers, "after their failure in the battles of Damascus and Homs".

"Aleppo will completely change the course of the battle in all of Syria," Assad said, speaking in an interview with the Syrian newspaper al-Watan.

"The battle of Aleppo will be a gain, but ... it doesn't mean the end of the war in Syria. It is a significant landmark towards the end of the battle, but the war in Syria will not end until terrorism is eliminated.

"Terrorists are there in other areas, so even if we finish in Aleppo, we will carry on with the war against them," he said.

Damascus says all insurgents it is fighting are terrorists.



'MAKE A DESERT AND CALL IT PEACE'

Retaking Aleppo would also be a success for President Vladimir Putin who intervened to save Moscow's ally in September 2015 with air strikes, and for Shi'ite Iran, whose elite Islamic Republic Guard Corps has suffered casualties fighting for Assad.

The war has killed hundreds of thousands of Syrians and made more than 11 million homeless, creating the world's worst refugee crisis, and allowed for the rise of the ultra-hardline Islamic State group, which still controls areas of eastern Syria.

The head of Britain's MI6 foreign intelligence agency Alex Younger warned on Thursday that Islamic State was plotting attacks on the West "without ever having to leave Syria".

"Russia and the Syrian regime seek to make a desert and call it peace. The human tragedy is heart-breaking," he added.

The scale of death and destruction, and lack of access has made it difficult for humanitarian organizations to reach hundreds of thousands of besieged people in Syria.

Nearly 150 civilians, most disabled or in need of urgent medical care, were evacuated overnight from a hospital in Aleppo's Old City, the first major evacuation from the eastern sector, the International Committee of the Red Cross said.

It urged "all parties to allow a humanitarian pause," adding that the situation in east Aleppo "is known to be catastrophic".

Tawfik Chamaa, a representative of the Union of Syrian Medical Relief Organizations (UOSSM), said 1,500 people needed medical evacuation, but any evacuation should have international observers to prevent them being "executed or diverted on the way to hospital".



(Click here for the graphic report "Aleppo: A city under siege" here)



(Reporting by Laila Bassam in Aleppo, John Davison in Beirut, Jack Stubbs in Moscow, Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva, Suleiman al-Khalidi in Amman; Writing by John Davison, editing by Peter Millership)