After intense clashes with anti-government army defectors Syrian
security forces have retreated from the streets of one of biggest
suburbs of the capital. The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights' head Rami Abdul-Rahman says that as of early Sunday,
government troops had pulled back to a provincial headquarters and a
security agency building in the Damascus suburb of Douma. Central
Damascus has for most of Syria's 10-month uprising been under the
tight control of forces loyal to President Bashar Assad, but its
suburbs have witnessed intense anti-regime protests. Douma, about 20
kilometers northeast of Damascus, is an important strategic point for
the Assad regime, mainly because of its proximity to Adra, where there
is a Scud missile base. In May 2010, the Times of London reported that
satellite imagery showed Hezbollah fighters training in the operation
of surface-to-surface missiles at a large base near Adra. The photos
showed barracks, a large arsenal and a fleet of trucks used to move
missiles to Lebanon.



