Syrian government forces have carried out heavy air strikes on rebel positions in and around the northern city of Aleppo, aiming to repel a major Islamist-led offensive on areas controlled by President Bashar al-Assad.
The rebel push, the most intense insurgent offensive in Aleppo in three years, aimed to build on recent advances against Assad by an array of groups fighting on separate fronts, including Islamic State and rebels backed by his regional foes.
Aleppo, 30 miles south of the Turkish border, was Syria's most populous city before the country's descent into civil war. It has been partitioned into zones of government and insurgent control since 2012.
Aleppo is of vital importance to Assad, and losing it would further entrench a de facto partition of Syria between western areas still governed from Damascus and the rest of the country run by a patchwork of militias.
Fighting between the insurgents and government forces in Aleppo raged and Syrian air and army strikes on rebel emplacements were continuous, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a group monitoring the war, said.
A Syrian military source said the attack had been repulsed and heavy casualties had been inflicted on the insurgents. He added the air force and artillery had been used to target the rebels, who he said had used heavy weapons in their attack.
The Observatory's Rami Abdulrahman said rebel forces had seized some buildings from government control on the northwestern city outskirts of Jamiyat al-Zahra, but the advance was not of strategic importance.
At least 35 insurgents were killed in that area, including a dozen Syrians and many others of central Asian origin, Mr Abdulrahman said. The Syrian war has drawn foreign fighters from across the Muslim world, including jihadists from central Asia.
Air strikes were also reported near the town of Azaz in the north of Aleppo, just over the border from Turkey
An insurgent alliance including the al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front and the hardline Islamist Ahrar al-Sham said they had set up a joint operations room to run the offensive to "liberate" Aleppo and later govern it according to Islamic sharia law.
Security sources in Turkey, one of the countries most hostile to Assad, said Turkish authorities had deployed additional troops and equipment along part of its border with Syria as fighting north of Aleppo intensified.
But Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said there were no immediate plans for any incursion.
The Syrian government has said Turkish assistance to the rebels has been crucial to their advances in the northwestern province of Idlib, most of which has fallen to the insurgents since they captured its provincial capital in late March.
The military source said the rebels had bombarded government-held parts of Aleppo with weapons including highly destructive "hell cannons" - improvised mortar bombs made out of cooking gas cylinders.
In addition to most of Idlib province, Assad has also recently lost the central city of Palmyra to IS, and areas of southern Syria to an alliance of rebels known as the "Southern Front" that profess a moderate vision for Syria.
With vital backing from the Shi'ite Islamist government of Iran, Assad has meanwhile been trying to shore up his control over western areas of Syria near the border with Lebanon, helped by Lebanese Shi'ite militant group Hezbollah.
Hezbollah has in recent days been sending reinforcements to areas near the insurgent-held town of Zabadani near the frontier with Lebanon, sources briefed on the matter said, in apparent preparation for an attack on the rebels there.
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