BEIRUT (Reuters) - Syrian soldiers fought their way into an air base in northern Syria on Tuesday and freed military personnel inside, state television said, after a nearly two-year siege by Islamic State insurgents at the facility.

A man walks out of a crater caused by what activists said was a barrel bomb dropped by forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar Al-Assad in the town of Dael, north of Deraa, Syria November 8, 2015. REUTERS/Alaa Al-Faqir

A military source close to the government said the army was working to secure the Kweires air base in Aleppo Province, where soldiers and officers have been under attack since 2013.

It is the most high-profile victory for Syria’s army since Russia launched an air campaign in support of President Bashar al-Assad on Sept. 30.

State television broadcast live footage from the air base of an emotional, fatigue-clad reporter announcing the news, played victory songs and ran archive footage of military exercises.

“We, the heroes of Kweires, are now celebrating with our brothers this victory,” one of the freed soldiers told state TV, speaking by phone.

“We dedicate this victory to President Bashar al-Assad and we promise him we will continue fighting until all of Syria is liberated. We will not kneel to Daesh,” he said, using an Arabic name for Islamic State.

The military source said hundreds of soldiers were freed.

Syrian state media said that Assad congratulated the head of the military air base for the steadfastness of the troops and also the commander of the offensive which broke the siege.

“Your steadfastness for years is an evidence of your confidence in the Syrian Army and its hero troops,” SANA quoted Assad as telling Major General Monther Zamam, head of Kweires air base, in a phone call.

Britain-based monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, also said that an advance party of troops had reached the air base and “broken the siege.”

Syrian troops have also been supported by Iranian forces and Lebanese Hezbollah fighters in a push to regain territory, largely in the north, lost to insurgents during almost five years of conflict.

Rebels have frustrated a campaign to reclaim territory elsewhere in the country, where Russian jets have flown more than 1,600 sorties in little over a month.

Dozens of soldiers were shown on television arriving at the air base, elated and beaming, and it aired calls from the families of the freed soldiers.

“We talked to him three hours ago, and he is in high spirits,” the mother of Lieutenant Iyad Salameh said.

Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zoubi praised the “strength and steadfastness” of the soldiers, and sounded a defiant tone against “terrorists”, the term which Syria’s government uses to describe all rebels fighting against it.

The breaking of the Kweires siege stood in stark contrast to Islamic State’s capture of Tabqa air base in Raqqa province in the north of the country last year, when militants killed scores of soldiers.

The families of soldiers under siege in Kweires had staged protests urging the government to do more to take it back.