Sunday, February 04, 2018

Russia Strikes Back as Syrian Rebels Take Credit for Shooting Down Fighter Jet, Killing Pilot
By Erin Cunningham and Louisa Loveluck
Washington Post
February 3 at 8:12 PM

ISTANBUL — Syria’s former al-Qaeda affiliate claimed responsibility Saturday for the downing of a Russian warplane in northern Syria, apparently using a surface-to-air missile to target the aircraft.

The pilot was killed after he ejected and exchanged gunfire with militants on the ground, the Russian Defense Ministry and a monitoring group said.

Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, a powerful rebel alliance that publicly split from al-Qaeda last year, said it had used a shoulder-fired weapon to down the Su-25 fighter jet as it flew low over the opposition-held town of Saraqeb.

That claim was echoed by Russia’s Interfax news agency, quoting the Defense Ministry, as well as the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The incident could raise tensions between Russia and Turkey, which is monitoring a ­“de-escalation zone” in the northern province of Idlib as part of an agreement made during Syrian peace talks in the Kazakh capital, Astana.

It also raises questions about the source of the apparent “man-portable air-defense system,” or MANPADS, a shoulder-fired weapon for which Syria’s rebels have repeatedly pleaded from their international backers. The United States has been strongly opposed, fearing that antiaircraft weapons could fall into the hands of the country’s extremist groups.

State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said any allegation that the United States has provided MANPAD missiles in Syria was untrue, and she denied that U.S. equipment was used in shooting down the Russian plane.

“The United States has never provided MANPAD missiles to any group in Syria, and we are deeply concerned that such weapons are being used,” she said.

Saraqeb has come under heavy bombardment from Russian and Syrian warplanes in recent days as pro-government forces try to recapture a strategic highway linking Damascus to Aleppo. The White Helmets civil defense group said Saturday seven civilians had been killed in at least 25 strikes on largely residential areas, some of them using barrel bombs.

In the hours after the Russian jet was downed, Moscow also claimed to have killed more than 30 militants in the area, Interfax reported. The agency quoted the Defense Ministry as saying it used “precision-guided weapons” to carry out the strike, but without giving details.

The use of MANPADS in a province where Turkish forces are nominally present could also anger Russia. The two countries have improved ties and cooperated in Syria in recent months, but relations hit an all-time low in 2015 when Turkey, a longtime supporter of the country’s rebels, shot down a Russian warplane inside Syria.

Turkey set up observation points in Idlib last year, ostensibly to monitor the fighting between the rebels and government forces, but it has also been accused of fostering closer ties with HTS.
Moscow entered Syria’s civil war in 2015 on the side of President Bashar al-Assad. And its intervention turned the tide of the brutal war, allowing Syria’s government to recapture the city of Aleppo from the rebels and beat back militants in other parts of the country.

But Idlib remains under militant control, and HTS exercises significant influence even over areas it does not formally hold.

“Mahmoud Turkmani, the military commander of the HTS air defence battalion, managed to shoot down a military plane by an anti-aircraft MANPADS in the sky of Saraqeb in the Idlib countryside in late afternoon today,” Ebaa News, the unofficial media outlet used by HTS, reported Saturday.

“That is the least revenge we can offer to our people, and those occupiers should know that our sky is not a picnic,” the commander reportedly said.

Idlib is also home to more than a million displaced people from around Syria, and renewed fighting has pushed close to a quarter-million residents to flee again since mid-December, cramming into ­already-packed houses and tented settlements across the region.

Despite repeated appeals to their international backers, rebel groups in Syria have never had a sustained supply of MANPADS. But they have occasionally used weapons captured from the battlefield. Rebels have shot down Syrian fighter jets and other Russian military aircraft. In August 2016, a Russian transport helicopter was shot down over Saraqeb, killing all five people aboard.

Videos circulating online showed the alleged crash site of the fighter jet in Saraqeb, which the United Nations said has recently suffered “heavy shelling and aerial bombardment.” According to the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, an airstrike on a potato market there last week killed at least 16 people, and the town’s hospital also was attacked.

Russia and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights each said the pilot on Saturday was killed after exchanging fire with the rebels.

He communicated that he had ejected from the aircraft in an area held by HTS but later “died in a fight with the terrorists,” Russia’s Defense Ministry said. The ministry also said it was working with Turkey to bring the pilot’s body home.

Syria’s war has raged for seven years, and half a million people have been killed. The conflict has sucked in world powers — such as Russia but also the United States and Iran.

Loveluck reported from Kilis, Turkey. Zakaria Zakaria in Kilis and Andrew Roth and Anton Troianovski in Moscow contributed to this report.

Erin Cunningham is an Istanbul-based correspondent for The Post, covering conflict and political turmoil across the Middle East.  Follow @erinmcunningham
Louisa Loveluck is a reporter in the Post's Beirut bureau, focusing on Syria. 

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