Russian
warships gathering off Syria waters to deter West: Report
Russian
Black Sea Navy ships are pictured in Sevastopol bay on July 28,
2011.
6
January, 2013
Russian
warships are being deployed off the Syrian coast in the Mediterranean
Sea to deter any military intervention by the Western states in the
Arab country, a report says.
Citing
a Russian diplomat, The Sunday Times said that Russia has sent five
landing ships, carrying military vehicles and hundreds of marines, as
well as combat vessels in the eastern Mediterranean recently.
“Russia
should be prepared for any developments, as it believes the situation
in Syria might reach its peak before Easter,” the Times quoted the
diplomatic source as saying on condition of anonymity.
The
diplomat added that the presence of the Russian marines near the
Syrian waters will deter “the West from deploying ground forces”
in Syria to help militants fighting the government forces.
Russia,
however, says the ships have been deployed to participate in a drill
to "improve the management, maintenance and testing of the
interaction of naval forces.”
Last
month, Russia sent a warship carrying a marines unit to Syria's
Mediterranean port of Tartus, where Moscow has a naval base.
Citing
military sources, Russian media reported on December 30 that the
Novocherkassk landing ship left the port of Novorossiisk in the Black
Sea and is due to arrive at Tartus in the early days of January.
Two
other warships, the Azov and Nikolai Filchenkov, have also reportedly
been dispatched to Syria from Russian naval bases since December 29.
In
Mid-December, Russia's Defense Ministry announced that a fleet of
Russian warships had been sent from the Baltic port of Baltiysk to
the Mediterranean Sea near the Syrian waters.
It
said the flotilla includes the frigate Yaroslav Mudry, the landing
ships Kaliningrad and Alexander Shabalin, as well as two other
vessels.
Russia,
a key ally of Syria, has a small naval maintenance facility at Tartus
port.
This
is while, the US on Friday began to deploy troops and equipment to
Turkey to oversee the deployment of US and European Patriot
surface-to-air missile batteries to the Turkish-Syrian border.
Syria,
Russia and Iran say the deployments could spark an eventual military
action by NATO.
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