Beirut: An offensive by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) group against Syrian government-held territory has killed at least 74 people in the past 24 hours, a monitoring group said on Friday.

Buoyed by their capture of swathes of western and north-central Iraq last month launched multiple attacks on army positions across northern and northeastern Syria on Thursday.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it was the first time that Isil, accused by rival rebel groups of focusing its formidable firepower more on them than on the Damascus regime, had launched such coordinated assaults on army positions.

The militants went on the offensive near the main northern city of Aleppo, in Hasakeh province in the northeast and in Raqa province around their Euphrates valley stronghold, the Observatory said.

The Isil, which in June announced a “caliphate” straddling Syria and Iraq, controls swathes of both countries and is seeking to seize more territory.

The Britain-based Observatory said at least 74 people were killed in clashes in 24 hours, mainly in Hasakeh and Raqa.

It said the toll included at least 32 jihadists, 30 soldiers and 12 members of the ruling Baath party of President Bashar Al Assad.

In Hasakeh’s provincial capital of the same name, four suicide bombers launched an attack inside the local Baath headquarters.

Among the 12 dead was “a Baathist who was decapitated with a sharp instrument”, said the Observatory, which relies on activists and medics on the ground for its information.

South of Hasakeh city, 11 soldiers were killed in an Isil attack on an army position and 17 militants were killed, it said.

Regime bombardment forced the Isil to withdraw overnight, Observatory chief Rami Abdul Rahman said on Friday.

In Raqa province, which is mainly held by Isil, the jihadists attacked two positions of the army’s 17th Division, sparking fighting that left dozens of dead and wounded, the Observatory said.

In one attack, two suicide bombers - one a Saudi - blew up trucks packed with explosives.

“At least six soldiers, one an officer, were decapitated and eight jihadists were killed,” the Observatory said.

Isil posted photographs on its Twitter account of six decapitated corpses that it said were soldiers of the 17th Division.

“The IS wants to ‘clean’ the province of any army presence,” Abdul Rahman said.

East of Aleppo, the militants attacked the Kuwayris airbase, sparking fierce fighting on Thursday that has since died down, the Observatory said.

The more than three-year conflict in Syria is becoming increasingly complex as the Isil battles regime forces, mainstream rebels, its former allies of Al Qaida affiliate Al Nusra Front, as well as Kurdish militia.

Isil is seeking to expand the fiefdom they have carved out along the Euphrates Valley by taking the battle to neighbouring government-held areas after routing rival rebels in Deir Al Zor province in Syria’s east earlier this year.