According to Syria’s state agency (SANA), a number of biased satellite channels have lately persisted to broadcast news claiming the occurrence of dissension among army units in a bid to harm the reputation of the military institution and deviate attention from the fact of conspiracy that targets Syria's resisting approach as well as destabilizing its security.
"As we denounce that, we stress that what has been reported is completely baseless and untrue and reflects the failure of the side which has circulated such news in fulfilling its mean objectives," a military source was quoted by SANA as saying. "It is a media distortion aimed at falsifying facts to hit the structure of national fabric of the Syrian society in general and the military institution in particular," the source said.

Meanwhile, six members of the military and security forces on Wednesday were laid to rest escorted in a solemn procession from Tishreen Military Hospital after they were targeted on Tuesday by extremist terrorist groups. The martyrs' bodies were carried on hands, and the military band played the 'Martyr' and the 'Farewell' music.
A military source has said on Wednesday that extremist terrorist groups in Dara'a and its countryside cut roads, set up barricades and shot citizens using civilian vehicles with false car plates to transport weapons and explosives. "Army units confronted the terrorist groups, killing a number of terrorists and hunting others who escaped," the source added.

In other developments, press reports said hundreds of Syrians fled into northern Lebanon on foot after they said unrest broke out in the Syrian border town of Tall Kalakh. Those fleeing, mostly women and children, carried mattresses and their belongings as they entered Lebanon through an unofficial border crossing in the Wadi Khaled border region located in Lebanon's northern district of Akkar.
Mahmood Khazaal, the former mayor of the Lebanese town of Mkaybleh, located at the border, said some 700 people had fled and were seeking refuge with family and friends in Lebanon. "A few people fled last night but the pace really picked up this morning beginning at 8:00 am (0500 GMT)," Khazaal told AFP. "Most of those fleeing have family in the Wadi Khaled region."
An official crossing point between the two countries is located about a kilometer from Mkaybleh but those fleeing said the road leading to it had been blocked with stones and tires, thus preventing cars from reaching the border.
River to Sea