No
new S-300 supplies planned after Russia finalizes standing Syrian
weapons contracts - Lavrov
Russia
is not planning to supply Syria with any weapons beyond the current
contracts that are nearing completion, Russian Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov said refuting speculations that Moscow was going to
sell S-300 air defense systems to Damascus.
10
May, 2013
“Russia
does not plan to sell,” Lavrov told reporters on being asked on
S-300 air defense systems rumors. He stressed that Russia has only
been fulfilling contracts that have already been signed with Syria
for defensive weapons.
On
Thursday the White House urged Russia not to sell weapons to Syria,
saying that such assistance to Damascus is "particularly
destabilizing to the region."
“I
think we’ve made it crystal clear we would prefer that Russia was
not supplying assistance ” to the Syrian regime in its war against
opposition forces, US Secretary of State John Kerry said in Rome
Thursday.
The
warning from the US came a day after the Wall Street Journal reported
that Israel had informed the Obama administration about Moscow’s
alleged plans to transfer S-300 missile batteries to Syrian security
forces, possibly as early as this summer.
Kerry
did not directly respond to the report, but said the United States
has repeatedly opposed arms deals in the past.
He
reiterated the US position against transfers of missile systems to
Syria because of the possible threat to Israel.
According
to the report, Israel informed the US that Syria made payments on a
2010 deal to buy four batteries from Russia for $900 million. That
included six launchers and 144 missiles, each with a range of 125
miles (200 kilometers).
Despite
repeated accusations it has tried to deliver military equipment to
Syria, Moscow mantains that it is only fulfilling contracts that are
already signed, which are for defensive weapons.
Speaking
to German media in Hannover in April, Russian President Vladimir
Putin responded to the allegations, saying that Russia only “supplies
the legitimate regime... This is not prohibited by international
law.”
Russian
Foreign Minister Lavrov has also insisted that Russia has no plans to
sign any further military contracts with Syria, and now only honors
old contracts, many of which date back to the Soviet era.
Following
an incident in which a Russian ship was intercepted carrying
helicopters for Damascus, then-US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
slammed Russia for sending “combat” helicopters to the Syrian
government, but later the statement was retracted, with the US
acknowledging they were “old helicopters” refurbished under
previous contracts.
Russia
and the US have been in a deadlock over the Syrian conflict and thus far
failed to agree on an approach to resolve the two-year long crisis in
the war-torn country. While Washington insists that Assad and his
regime must step down, Moscow maintains that only the Syrian people
should decide and foreign interference should not be the determining
factor. Russia insists that only direct talks between parties
involved in the conflict – the government and the opposition –
can bring an end to the fighting, which according to the UN has
claimed lives of more than 70,000 people.
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