Turkey
accuses Russia of supplying Syria with munitions
Turkish
prime minister's claims contradict Russian denial that plane forced
to land in Ankara was carrying military equipment
11
October, 2012
Turkey's
prime minister, Recep Tayipp Erdogan, has accused Russia of directly
supplying munitions to the Syrian government, after Turkish jets
intercepted a plane en route from Moscow to Damascus.
Russia
had earlier flatly denied that the Syrian plane, which was forced to
land in Ankara
Ankara, was carrying any
military equipment. But Erdogan told reporters:
"These were
equipment and ammunition that were being sent from a Russian agency …
to the Syrian defence ministry," the Associated Press reported.
"Their examination is continuing and the necessary [action] will
follow."
Erdogan's
comments clearly implied that he was accusing Moscow of lying.
Earlier,
in angry exchanges, Russia had accused the Turkish authorities of
endangering Russian lives when the Syrian Air Airbus was intercepted
by Turkish F16 fighter jets on Wednesday evening.
Turkish
media reports said cargo confiscated from the plane before it was
allowed to leave Ankara included radios, antennae and equipment
"thought to be missile parts". Syria immediately condemned
the Turkish action as piracy.
Turkey
said previously that it had received an intelligence tip-off that the
plane had illegal cargo on board. Erdogan warned last year that
Turkey would be willing to take measures to "stop and
confiscate" any shipment of military supplies, by air or sea, to
Syria in contravention of its own unilateral embargo.
The
incident underlines sharp and growing disagreements over the crisis –
the bloodiest of the Arab spring – which Syrian opposition
activists say has cost 30,000 lives in the last 19 months. On a new
and alarming front, Turkey and Syria have traded artillery fire
several times over their border in the past week.
Diplomats
said Turkey was flexing its muscles after Russia refused to condemn
Syria at the United Nations last week when mortar shells fired by the
Syrian army killed five civilians in a Turkish border village.
Birol
Akgün, of Ankara's Institute of Strategic Thinking, told Zaman
newspaper: "This is a signal to both Syria and third parties,
such as Russia and Iran."
Russia
is Syria's closest ally and has supplied it with weapons as well as
providing diplomatic and political cover in the UN security council.
Turkey has called for President Bashar al-Assad to step down and has
allowed limited supplies of weapons to be delivered across the border
to the Syrian rebels.
Syria
protested that the Airbus passengers were in a "very bad
psychological state". One of them, a Syrian aviation official,
alleged that Turkish officials pointed guns at crew and handcuffed
passengers.
"We
had no cargo on that aeroplane," Vyacheslav Davidenko, spokesman
for Russia's state arms export company Rosoboronexport, told Reuters.
"We always deliver our weapons in full compliance with
international norms. Sending weapons on a passenger aeroplane breaks
about every law there is," he said.
Russian
and Chinese objections mean there are no international arms sanctions
in force against Syria. Moscow has balked at western pressure to cut
co-operation with or pressure the Syrian regime and has made several
unsuccessful attempts to deliver renovated helicopters. One shipment
was sent back as it rounded the coast of Scotland in the summer.
"Russia
is not interested in escalating the conflict in Syria," said
Ruslan Aliyev, an analyst at the Centre for Analysis of Strategies
and Technologies, a Moscow-based consultancy with links to Russia's
defence community. "Secretly delivering weapons to Syria would
put at risk Russia's image and reputation and [Vladimir] Putin's
personal reputation. No Russian leader would go on such a risky
venture."
Assad
sought to calm tensions with Ankara, describing Syria and Turkey as
brothers in an interview published on Thursday. He insisted Turkey
had "no reason to go to war" over the cross-border clashes.
"We should work on this issue together," he told the
left-leaning Turkish newspaper Aydinlik. "In times like this,
countries should correct their mistakes by talking to each other."
Inside
Syria, meanwhile, battles continued in Idlib province, near the
Turkish border, as rebels sought to consolidate control of a
strategic town on the main north-south highway. Rebels said they
captured Maaret al-Numan on Wednesday. The British-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said clashes continued after rebels
attacked a military convoy and nearby checkpoints. The Syrian
Revolution General Commission reported 47 deaths in Idlib, Deraa,
Damascus and Homs.

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