Help is on the way, Assad tells besieged troops in Shughur
Syrian President Bashar Assad said on Wednesday that troops would head to an insurgent-held town to help besieged soldiers holed up on its outskirts and said army setbacks were part of normal warfare, Reuters reported.
Last month Islamist insurgents including al-Qaeda's wing in Syria, Nusra Front, captured the town of Jisr al-Shughur in Syria's Idlib province, edging closer to the government-held heartland of Latakia along the coast.
"And now, God willing, the army will arrive soon to these heroes who are besieged in the Jisr al-Shughur Hospital to continue the battle to defeat the terrorists," he said in comment broadcast on Syrian state television.
He was speaking at a school in an undisclosed location at an event to commemorate Syria's Martyrs' Day. In the rare public appearance, he was surrounded by throngs of people chanting in support. Security officials held back surging crowds.
In his first remarks since the insurgents seized Jisr al-Shughur, and the city of Idlib at the end of March, Assad played down such setbacks, saying to-and-fro gains were normal in any war, adding the armed forces would remain resolute.
"Psychological defeat is the final defeat and we are not worried," he said.
Assad said while the army was waging a relentless war across swathes of territory and gaining ground, there were occasions when the fighters had to "retreat back when the situation warrants."