The Borneo Post

Russia warns US after Syrian warplane downed

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BEIRUT: Russia on Monday warned it would track US-led coalition aircraft in Syria as potential ‘ targets’ and halted a military hotline with Washington after US forces downed a Syrian jet.

T he United States moved quickly to contain an escalation, with a top general saying it would work to relaunch the “deconflict­ion” hotline establishe­d in 2015.

The downing of the jet and Russia’s response came as the USled coalition and allied fighters battle to oust the Islamic State ( IS) jihadist group from its Syrian bastion Raqa.

Analysts say neither Washington nor President Bashar al-Assad’s regime appear to be seeking further confrontat­ion, although the risks remain high in Syria’s increasing­ly crowded battlefiel­ds and airspace.

“Any flying objects, including planes and drones of the internatio­nal coalition, discovered west of the Euphrates River will be tracked as aerial targets by Russia’s air defences on and above ground,” said Russia’s defence ministry.

It said Washington had failed to use the hotline – a vital incidentpr­evention tool – before downing the plane near Raqa.

“We will work diplomatic­ally and militarily in the coming hours to re- establish deconflict­ion,” said US General Joe Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, referring to the hotline.

Pentagon spokesman, Major Adrian Rankine Galloway, said the US had taken “prudent measures to re-position aircraft over Syria” to ensure the safety of pilots.

The jet was downed on Sunday evening after regime forces targeted the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, an alliance of Arab and Kurdish fighters

We will work diplomatic­ally and militarily in the coming hours to re-establish deconflict­ion.

battling IS.

An American F/A-18E Super Hornet shot down the Syrian SU-22 as it ‘dropped bombs near SDF fighters’ south of the town of Tabqa, said the US-led coalition.

Russia’s defence minister said the pilot ejected ‘above IScontroll­ed territorie­s’ and that his fate was unknown.

The coalition said Syrian troops attacked SDF fighters near Tabqa, south of Raqa, wounding several and chasing them out of the town.

It said the warplane was targeted in line with the ‘rules of engagement’.

Damascus and its ally Moscow condemned the ‘aggression’.

The Syrian army said the plane was hit while on a mission against IS jihadists and warned of “the grave consequenc­es of this flagrant aggression”.

Russia’s deputy foreign minister Sergei Ryabkov said it was a “continuati­on of America’s line to disregard the norms of internatio­nal law”.

“What is this if not an act of aggression?”

It was the latest skirmish between the coalition and regime forces in the increasing­ly tense and crowded space in Syria’s north and east.

Backed by the coalition, SDF forces entered Raqa for the first time two weeks ago, after months of fierce fighting, and have seized four neighbourh­oods.

The Syrian army is not involved in the offensive, and has instead turned its focus further east to the largely IS-held, oil-rich province of Deir Ezzor.

Pro-regime forces are moving on three fronts, south of Raqa, through the Badia desert region in central Syria, and along the eastern border.

The advance have created tensions, particular­ly along Syria’s border, where the US and its allies are training an anti-IS force at the Al-Tanaf garrison.

Earlier this month, the coalition fired on pro-regime ground forces who approached the garrison and shot down a pro-regime armed drone.

Russia threatened to scrap the hotline after an April 7 US cruise missile strike on a Syrian regime airbase in retaliatio­n for a suspected chemical weapons attack that killed dozens of civilians.

Sam Heller, a Syria expert at The Century Foundation think-tank, said the regime was provoking confrontat­ions, but neither side appeared to want a major escalation. — AFP

US General Joe Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

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 ??  ?? File photo show a US Navy F/A-18E Super Hornet launches from the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Dwight D Eisenhower in the Mediterran­ean Sea. — Reuters photo
File photo show a US Navy F/A-18E Super Hornet launches from the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Dwight D Eisenhower in the Mediterran­ean Sea. — Reuters photo

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