Erdogan
to Putin: 'Let's Blame My Ambush of Your Plane on Your Deceased Pilot
Erdogan
offers Putin a way out of the conundrum - if only Putin agrees to
blame the Turkish ambush of Russian Su-24 on the 'negligence' of the
downed pilot, and Hero of the Russian Federation - things can go back
to normal again!
Vahap
Munyar
15
December, 2015
Relations
between Ankara and
Moscow must not be affected by a “mistake of a pilot,” Turkish
President Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan has
said, in another bid to smooth tensions following the Nov. 24 downing
of a Russian warplane
by Turkish jets.
“We
wouldn’t have wanted to come across such a [situation], but looking
from another perspective a mistake has been made in our sovereign
area. Who made this mistake? Not the manager, of course. It is the
pilots who were negligent and did not hear the warnings,” Erdoğan
told reporters aboard the presidential plane returning to Turkey from
the Turkmenistan capital Ashgabat.
He
was referring to the two pilots inside a Russian Su-24
warplane that was shot down by Turkish F-16 fighter jets after
violating Turkish airspace along the border with Syria.
Turkey
claims that it warned the warplane five times in 10 minutes and the
identity of the aircraft was not visible, but Moscow denies such
allegations and says its aircraft remained inside Syrian
airspace. Russia has
been conducting airstrikes in Syria since Sept. 30 in support of
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. A U.S.-led coalition made up of
more than 60 states to fight the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
(ISIL), another party in the already mixed geography, says Russia has
been targeting anti-Assad opposition groups.
Effect
on bilateral relations ‘saddening’
Stating
that Turkish pilots are obliged to take action within the rules of
engagement in such situations, Erdoğan said a “mistake” on
the Russian side
such not lead to such negative consequences on bilateral relations.
“An
incident that occurred due to the mistake of a pilot, who did not
listen to the warnings, should not affect the relations of two
nations, particularly not strategic relations. The effect of the
incident on bilateral relations really saddens us,” he added.
Since
the downing of the jet, Russia has
imposed a raft of economic sanctions on Turkey, particularly on
agricultural products imported from Turkey.
Erdoğan
said he held talks with the heads of states of countries that are
neighbors to or have close ties with Russia in
the region, stating that those states were also trying to help find a
solution to the crisis.
The
Turkish president was in Turkmenistan to attend an international
conference attended by a number of regional leaders with close ties
to both Moscow and Ankara.
Stating
that he held bilateral meetings with Turkmenistan President
Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov, Georgian President Giorgi Margvelashvili,
Iranian First Vice President Eshaq Jahangiri, and Pakistani Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif, Erdoğan said they had all asked what could be
done to solve the crisis.
“We
are not in favor of tension. We want to continue our strategic
partnership and relations with Russia in
the same way as we have up to now. We have worked together
successfully for the past 10 to 11 years. We want to continue this,”
he stated.
In
response to a question about whether any new message had come
from Russia that
had not been conveyed to the media, Erdoğan said “we are waiting,
let’s wait and see.”
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