Syrian forces threatened to mount a
"decisive battle" for Aleppo even as rebels clawed towards the city's
ancient centre under intense bombardment and strafing from warplanes.
In the capital Damascus, militiamen
appeared to step up guerrilla-like forays in central districts that were once
firmly in the regime's hands.
The twin fronts reflected the rising stakes
for both sides and a possible significant evolution in rebel strategies.
Opposition forces appear to be shifting towards more hit-and-run strikes in
Damascus and elsewhere to tie up Bashar Assad's forces and blur the lines
between rebel and government-held territory.
The biggest prize of the ambush brigades so
far was 48 abducted Iranians branded as spies by rebels. They were put on
display in a video that carried a warning that all Iranians in Syria would be
"captured or killed" because of Tehran's strong backing for Assad.
Iran said those captured when their bus was commandeered on Saturday were
pilgrims visiting an important Shiite shrine on the outskirts of Damascus.
The abductions threaten to suck Iran deeper
into Syria's civil war and the wider political brinkmanship around the region.
Iran claims it has no fighting forces aiding Assad, but it has sharply
amplified its criticism of countries supporting the rebels such as neighbouring
Turkey and Gulf states led by Qatar and Saudi Arabia.
In further signs of the growing proxy
nature of Syria's conflict, Iran was forced to reach out to Turkey and Qatar
with appeals to help return the captives.
The daylight hijacking on the main airport
road in Damascus also raises questions about the regime's ability to control
key parts of the capital and protect the symbols of Assad's power such as
ministries and government offices - already breached once by a bombing last
month that killed four members of Assad's inner circle including his
brother-in-law and the defence minister.
The pro-government Al Satan newspaper said
the Syrian army was bracing itself for a "decisive battle" to clear
Aleppo, Syria's largest city, from rebels. It gave no possible timetable and
for more than a week, activists have claimed the government is gearing up for
an all-out offensive on the northern commercial centre - another critical
battleground for Assad's regime to survive.
Government gunners pounded rebel-held areas
to keep militiamen from expanding their hold on the city centre, dominated by a
medieval castle whose loss would be a deep symbolic blow for Assad. Local
activist Mohammad Saeed said government warplanes joined in the attack by
strafing rebel positions. "Fighter jets to us are now as common as birds
in the sky," he said.
Mr Saeed and the British-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights reported heavy shelling and clashes mainly in
districts flanking Aleppo's historic centre - Salaheddine to the south west and
al-Sukkari and Hananou to the north east.
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