Palmyra

WATCH: Russian drone footage shows ISIS destruction of Palmyra’s amphitheatre

Drone footage has confirmed that ISIS has destroyed much of the Hellenic amphitheatre of Palmyra, the location where maestro Valery Gergiev led a concert of Russian musicians for the troops of the Syrian Arab Army, Russian military and civilians who liberated Palmyra from the last ISIS occupation in May of 2016.
Now much of this site has been destroyed by ISIS in the wake of their second occupation of the ancient city.

BREAKING: Syrian Army Close to Recapturing Palmyra

21st Century Wire says…
According to reports from Hezbollah’s military media unit, Syrian National forces and their allies have already recaptured the historic UNESCO World Heritage Site at the Palmyra citadel from ISIS, located on the western side of the city. 
In addition, Syrian Army units have also advanced to the modern palatial complex to the southwest of the city limits.
This is the second time the Syrian allied forces have fought to retake Palmyra from GCC state-backed ISIS terrorists.

CONFIRMED: ISIS destroys ancient amphitheater in Palmyra (VIDEO)

ISIS and their followers are first and foremost a human tragedy. They are despicable death cults which kill in the most barbaric ways imaginable. They enslave people, rape women and children, and degrade the most fundamental elements of human dignity.
But beyond this, ISIS and Al-Qaeda are also a plague to culture. These terrorists do not resist destroying ancient monuments, artifacts, sculptures, paintings, musical instruments and have frequently attacked people for the ‘crime’ of watching football matches.

DEVELOPING: Syrian army ‘less than 20 km from Palmyra’

The Russian General Staff has commented on the progress army as it continues offensive in central Syria against ISIS.
Starting in December ISIS launched a major offensive in central and eastern Syria.  This captured Palmyra and a belt of gas fields west of Palmyra, and also involved a major attack on the besieged eastern desert city of Deir Ezzor.