Vladimir Putin has vowed Russia’s military will “immediately
destroy” any target threatening them in Syria, representing a strong warning to
Turkey following its shooting down of a Russian warplane at the Syrian border.
Speaking at a meeting with senior commanders in Moscow,
Putin said the military should respond with full force to any “further
provocations”, adding that additional aircraft and air defence weapons have
been sent to the Russian base near Latakia. “I order you to act in the toughest way,” the Russian president said. “Any targets threatening the Russian groups of forces or our land infrastructure should be immediately destroyed.”
At least 50 dead after Isis truck-bomb attacks in
Kurdish-controlled Syria
In continuing violence, Islamic State claimed responsibility
for a triple suicide truck bombing that killed 50 to 60 Kurds in Tell Tamer in
the Hasaka area of northern Syria, while the UN said it was sending its senior
relief official, Stephen O’Brien, to Damascus to examine the deteriorating
humanitarian situation.
The downing of the Russian bomber by a Turkish fighter jet
on 24 November, the first time a Nato member shot down a Russian plane in more
than half a century, has badly strained relations between Moscow and Ankara.
Turkey said it downed the plane after it violated its
airspace for 17 seconds despite repeated warnings. Russia has insisted the
plane remained in Syrian airspace. Putin denounced the Turkish action as a
“treacherous stab in the back”.
Putin said Russian military action in Syria was essential to
protect Russia from extremists based there, adding that fending off that threat
is the main goal of the air campaign he launched on 30 September. The campaign
took advantage of western disarray and galvanised efforts to end the
four-and-a-half-year war.
Putin said Russian action supporting the Syrian army had
helped change the situation on the ground. He said Russia was also helping some
units of the opposition Free Syrian Army, which were fighting “terrorists” in
Syria, providing air cover and supplying them with weapons.
Western countries say Russian air attacks have in fact
targeted rebels fighting President Bashar al-Assad far more than Isis,
reinforcing the impression that Moscow’s main goal is to bolster its
long-standing ally in Damascus.
The US and Britain have meanwhile welcomed agreement by
Syrian opposition groups to hold talks with Assad in the new year. But the
Syrians are still insisting he stands down at once – in the face of strong
resistance from Russia and Iran, the president’s closest allies.
Three days of talks in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, produced a
statement by 116 representatives of both political and armed factions backing
negotiations. That keeps diplomacy on track along with military operations
against Isis, in line with the UN-backed strategy laid down in Vienna last
month.
John Kerry, the US secretary of state, welcomed the Riyadh
agreement by what he called “an extremely diverse group of Syrians” who created
a negotiating body to represent them. The last talks between the Syrian
government and opposition groups were in Geneva in January 2014 and got
nowhere. Kerry admitted, however, that there were still some “kinks” to be
ironed out. Isis is the enemy but Assad is the problem
Editorial: President Assad wants to persuade the world that
there are only two sides in Syria: the Isis side and his side. The dictator’s
opponents don’t accept this. Nor should the west
The opposition reiterated the demand that Assad step down at
the start of a transition process. It also committed to preserving Syrian state
institutions. By contrast, the US, UK and other western countries have
signalled that Assad could remain in power for an unspecified period during the
transition.
Ahrar al-Sham, one of the biggest armed Islamist groups,
which is backed by Turkey, walked out before the Riyadh meeting ended, though
it did sign the statement. It objected to the role given to the Damascus-based
group, the National Coordination Body for Democratic Change, which is tolerated
by Assad.
The talks excluded Isis and Jabhat al-Nusra, the Syrian
affiliate of al-Qaida and an important fighting force, as well as
representatives of Syrian Kurdish groups.
Opposition groups such as the mainstream Syrian National
Coalition are under pressure from armed rebels on the ground, who often dismiss
exiled politicians as out of touch or too influenced by their western or Arab
Gulf sponsors.
Philip Hammond, the British foreign secretary, called the
Riyadh agreement an important step ahead of new international talks on Syria in
New York next week, following up on what diplomats call the Vienna process. The
Syrian negotiations are due to be held in the first half of January.
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