Russia
sends artillery and tanks to Syria as part of continued military
buildup
Increase
of Russian hardware in Syria has caused concerns in the west about
the implications of Moscow militarily helping its old ally, President
Bashar al-Assad
Alec Luhn in Moscow
Monday 14 September
2015 18.41 BST /
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/sep/14/russia-sends-artillery-and-tanks-to-syria-as-part-of-continued-military-buildup
Russia has sent
tanks and artillery to Syria amid a reported military buildup, US
officials say, raising concerns about a potential mission to bolster
President Bashar al-Assad’s embattled regime.
Moscow has sent
artillery units and seven tanks to the Syrian airbase near Latakia on
the Mediterranean coast as part of an ongoing military buildup, a US
official told AFP on Monday, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The source said the
seven T-90s, Russia’s most modern service tank, arrived in Latakia
in the past few days but had not been seen outside the airbase. The
artillery was likely for airfield defence, the source said.
“Hundreds” of
Russian troops are already present in Latakia, and Moscow has
installed enough mobile housing units to house about 1,500 people,
the source added.
Also on Monday, navy
captain Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, said a “steady flow” of
Russian personnel and military equipment to Latakia in recent days
suggests Moscow plans to operate military aircraft from the base, AP
reported. But the US has not yet seen any fighter jets or attack
helicopters arrive, he said.
Although photographs
and social media posts have shown Russian soldiers are in Syria, the
Kremlin has maintained they are there as advisers. Russian military
activity could conflict with the US-led coalition’s airstrikes
against Islamic State (Isis), potentially tying up airspace, US
officials have said.
Davis said
Washington would welcome Moscow’s contributions to the effort
against Isis, but that military assistance for Assad could “risk
adding greater instability to an already unstable situation”.
Russian officials
have not commented on the alleged arrival of tanks and artillery. But
the Syrian ambassador to Moscow, Riad Haddad, on Monday denied that
Moscow was conducting a military buildup in Syria, calling news of a
Russian troop presence “a lie”. He said Syria was receiving arms
from its ally under defence contracts, state news agency Tass
reported.
“We have been
cooperating with Russia for 30-40 years in various areas, including
the military sphere. Yes, we receive arms, military equipment, all
this is done in line with agreements sealed between our countries,”
Haddad said.
“But the talk of
your (Russian) troop presence on the Syrian territory is a lie spread
by western countries, the United States.”
Last week, foreign
minister Sergei Lavrov said Russia continues to send military
equipment and advisers to Syria, but said this was only as part of
arms deals and not an expeditionary force.
“Our soldiers and
military specialists are located there to service Russian equipment,
cooperate with the Syrian army in using this equipment,” Lavrov
told journalists on Thursday.
But on Saturday
state television Channel One showed two Russian military cargo planes
delivering what it said was 50 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Syria.
Russia is suspected
of having delivered arms and ammunition to separatists in eastern
Ukraine in truck convoys that it insists are carrying humanitarian
aid.
Russia was sending
groceries, children’s food and “everything necessary to equip a
big new tent camp”, the Channel One news anchor said as footage
showed Russian soldiers loading canvas, tent stakes and wooden crates
into the aircraft.
On Sunday, bloggers
posted photos of the Nikolay Filchenko, an Alligator-class landing
ship reportedly in service with Russia’s Black Sea fleet, passing
through what appeared to be the Turkish straits. Green camouflage
netting was covering part of its deck, leading to speculation of a
military shipment.
The US-based
intelligence-gathering company Stratfor last week last week published
satellite imagery of construction on the Bassel al Assad
international airport in Latakia, Syria, that it said was evidence of
the Russian military “establishing a base of operations” and
preparing to deploy aircraft to Syria, if it has not already done so.
Among the changes
made to the airport as of 4 September were runway improvements, two
additional helicopter pads, a new taxiway, a new air traffic control
station and mobile housing.
On Monday, President
Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied reports that Moscow
was engaged in secret negotiations about Assad’s political future
with Washington.
It had previously
been reported that an agreement might see Assad temporarily remain
president while a provisional government was formed with
representatives of the opposition. Peskov reiterated Russia’s
support for Assad, but didn’t address the issue of military aid.
“For now no one
can clearly explain what could be the alternative to the current
legitimate Syrian government in terms of the country’s security,
the struggle against the spread of the Islamic State, the unity of
the country,” Peskov told journalists.
More than 240,000
people have been killed in Syria since the conflict began in 2011,
and swaths of the country have fallen under the control of Isis.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário