Russia starts Syria drone surveillance
missions: U.S. officials
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[September 22, 2015]
By Phil Stewart
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Russia has started
flying drone aircraft on surveillance missions in Syria, U.S. officials
said on Monday, in what appeared to be Moscow's first military air
operations there since staging a rapid buildup at a Syrian air base.
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The beginning of Russian drone flights underscored the risks of
U.S.-led coalition planes and Russian aircraft operating within
Syria's limited airspace, without agreeing on coordination or
objectives in Syria's civil war.
The former Cold War foes have a common adversary in Islamic State
militants in Syria. But Washington opposes Moscow's support for
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, seeing him as a driving force in
the four-and-a-half year-long civil war.
The Pentagon declined comment at a news briefing when asked about
the Reuters report on Russian drones, saying it could not discuss
intelligence matters. But it said the U.S. Department of Defense was
"keenly aware" of what was happening on the ground in Syria.
The White House acknowledged that Moscow's intentions were unclear
and that the prospect of deepening Russian military backing for
Assad was troubling.
"We've made clear both in public and in private that doubling down
on supporting Assad is a losing bet," said White House spokesman
Josh Earnest.
One U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the
number of fixed-wing, piloted Russian aircraft stationed at the air
base near Latakia, an Assad stronghold, had also grown dramatically
in recent days.
That included Russia's positioning of a dozen "Fencer"
advanced-attack aircraft and a dozen "Frogfoot" jets, used for close
air support. Those were in addition to Russia's first deployment of
fighter jets last week.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said over the weekend the United
States welcomed Russia's involvement in tackling Islamic State
militants in Syria. But he said a worsening refugee crisis
highlighted the need to find a compromise that could also lead to
political change in the country.
Syria's civil war has killed an estimated 250,000 people, and many
continue to flee their homes, with 4 million refugees and another
7.6 million displaced inside the country.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has pledged to continue military
support for Assad, assistance that Russia says is in line with
international law.
It was also unclear whether Moscow might eventually target
opposition fighters that the United States supports in Syria, seeing
them as equal threats to Assad as Islamic State fighters.
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U.S. and Russian defense chiefs agreed on Friday to explore ways to
avoid accidental interactions, also known as "deconfliction" in
military parlance. But those discussions were described as only at
their inception.
It was unclear whether the U.S.-Russian talks might gain added
urgency, now that Moscow has started drone flights.
Russia's drone operations appeared to be staged out of the air base
near Latakia, officials said.
Two U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said it was
not immediately clear how many Russian drone aircraft were operating
or the scope of their missions.
At the State Department, spokesman John Kirby acknowledged concerns
over the kind of Russian hardware being sent to Syria, saying it
added to questions about whether Moscow's aim was mostly to battle
Islamic State or to "prop up the Assad regime."
Meanwhile, Israel and Russia agreed to coordinate military actions
over Syria in order to avoid accidentally trading fire. Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said after talks in Moscow with
Putin that they had "agreed on a mechanism to prevent such
misunderstandings."
(Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe and Grant McCool)
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