The Syrian army and allied militia, backed by Russian bombardments, took control of two towns in western Syria after heavy battles with ISIS fighters, reports said Monday. Syrian state media reported the military and a local force had taken control of Mheen and Hawwarin towns, to the southeast of Homs city, and had killed a large number of ISIS militants. The two towns lie to the east of the north-south highway running through Syria's major cities that is crucial to control of mainly government-held territory in the west of the country. They are also close to roads that link the ISIS-held city of Palmyra in the central Syrian desert to western cities. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which tracks Syria's nearly five-year-old conflict using sources on the ground, said Syrian and Russian aircraft had carried out dozens of strikes on the areas surrounding Mheen and Hawwarin. Russia, a main ally of President Bashar Assad, started carrying out airstrikes in Syria nearly two months ago in support of the Syrian army and allied ground forces. The West has accused Moscow of mainly targeting rebels unaligned with ISIS during the campaign which started on Sept 30. Last week Russian and Syrian aircraft bombarded ISIS-held areas of eastern Syria.