Rebels declared the battle to "liberate" Damascus has begun as heavy fighting raged across the city on Tuesday and Russia said an agreement is possible for a UN resolution on the Syria crisis.
The proclamation by the Free Syrian Army, which also claimed it had shot down a helicopter in the capital, came as peace envoy Kofi Annan said the 16-month crisis now increasingly described as a civil war was at a "critical time."
Heavy machinegun fire was reported in Damascus's Sabaa Bahrat Square, where President Bashar al-Assad's regime has staged rallies to counter anti-regime protests that erupted in March 2011.
At least eight people were killed as tanks and helicopter gunships were deployed in Qaboon district, while battles were fought in Al-Midan and Al-Hajar Al-Aswad, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
As the fighting inched closer to the regime's nerve centre, FSA spokesman Colonel Kassem Saadeddine said "victory is nigh" and that the fight would go on until the city was conquered.
Fighting in the city has raged since Sunday, with the rebels announcing a full-scale offensive dubbed "the Damascus volcano and earthquakes of Syria."
AFP could not independently verify the account.
Witnesses also reported heavy machinegun fire in Sabaa Bahrat Square in central Damascus and in nearby Baghdad Street.
But an army officer in Damascus told AFP that troops have "the situation under control" and were "chasing the terrorists seeking refuge in apartments and mosques."
The source said "battles raged" in Qaboon, "where the majority of rebels were," adding that "33 terrorists were killed, 15 were wounded and 145 were arrested," referring to rebels.
The regime has vowed not to surrender the capital.
In that context, the Israeli army's intelligence chief said Syrian troops had been moved from the Golan Heights towards conflict zones including Damascus.
"Assad has removed many of his forces that were in the Golan Heights to the areas of conflict," Major General Aviv Kochavi told MPs.
"Radical Islam" was gaining ground, he warned, adding that Syria was undergoing a process of "Iraqisation," with militant and tribal factions controlling different zones.
In Moscow, Russian President Vladimir Putin told Annan he would "do everything" to support the former UN chief's plan to end the conflict.
"We will do everything that depends on us to support your efforts," Putin told Annan at the Kremlin.
Annan's Moscow meetings came one day before Western powers plan to hold a vote on a UN resolution that threatens sanctions against Damascus.
Russia and China have twice blocked resolutions against Syria at the Security Council, which remains divided over Western calls to impose new sanctions.
On a visit to Syria's neighbour Jordan, The Observatory said at least 35 people were killed across Syria on Tuesday, 16 of them civilians, adding to its toll of more than 17,000 people dead since the uprising began.
The International Committee of the Red Cross has said that Syria is in a state of all-out civil war and that all sides must respect humanitarian law or risk war crimes prosecutions.
Meanwhile, Nawaf Fares, who became the most prominent figure to abandon Assad when he defected as Syria's ambassador to Iraq, warned the regime will use chemical weapons against opposition forces and may have already deployed them.
Another key defector, General Manaf Tlass, a childhood friend of Assad, said in a statement sent to AFP that he was in Paris and called for a "constructive transition" in the country.