Battle of Damascus (2012)

Battle of Damascus (2012)
معركة دمشق
Part of the Syrian civil war (Rif Dimashq Governorate campaign)

Situation in the city during the battle of Damascus. Pink indicates a conflict area.
Date15 July – 4 August 2012
(2 weeks and 6 days)
Location33°30′44″N 36°17′54″E / 33.51222°N 36.29833°E / 33.51222; 36.29833
Result

Syrian government victory

  • Rebel offensive on Damascus repelled by government forces
  • President Bashar al-Assad remains in power
  • Rebels fail to capture the capital and to topple Assad's government
  • Four senior government officials killed in a bombing attack
  • Sporadic insurgent attacks continue leading to a military offensive into the countryside in mid-August
Belligerents
Syrian Government
Commanders and leaders
Bashar al-Assad
Dawoud Rajiha X
Assef Shawkat X
Fahd Jassem al-Freij
Ali Abdullah Ayyoub
Maher al-Assad (WIA)
Mohammad al-Shaar (WIA)
Hasan Turkmani X
Hisham Ikhtiyar X
Riad al-Asaad
Qasem Sadedine
Khaled al-Haboush
Zahran Alloush
Hassan Aboud
Abu Mohammad al-Julani
Units involved
Strength
Unknown

2,500–5,000 militants(start of the battle)

  • 1,500 militants from Idlib
Casualties and losses
92–97 soldiers and policemen killed
130 soldiers and policemen wounded
3 tanks and 1 armored car destroyed
1 armored car captured
3 Mil Mi-8 helicopters shot down
300 soldiers and policemen killed (opposition claim)
300 militants killed
Hundreds arrested
14 vehicles destroyed
(government claim)
140+ civilians killed
  • Figures updated to 19 July
Location within Syria

The Battle of Damascus (Arabic: معركة دمشق), also known as Operation Damascus Volcano (Arabic: عملية بركان دمشق), started on 15 July 2012 during the Syrian civil war. It is unclear who started the battle. Thousands of rebels infiltrated Damascus from the surrounding countryside. Following this, according to some reports, the opposition forces launched an operation to capture the capital, while according to other reports, the military learned of the large-scale rebel operation beforehand and made a preemptive strike. Some reports even suggested the rebels launched the operation prematurely due to their plans being discovered by the security forces.

After the rebels initially captured half a dozen districts and killed four high-ranking government ministers in a bombing, opposition forces were forced to retreat following a military counter-attack, leaving the army in control of the capital after three weeks of fighting. It was the first time tanks and helicopters had been deployed in central Damascus and left parts of the city as a warzone.