The Star Malaysia

Steering clear of Russian military

Pentagon avoids hitting Assad’s ally

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Washington: President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has made clear it sees Moscow as complicit in the latest suspected chemical weapons attack in Syria, but Pentagon planners are taking pains to avoid hitting Russian military assets.

A clash – intentiona­l or otherwise – between the West and Russia in Syria could have disastrous consequenc­es that could quickly flip the seven-year-old conflict in a new and dangerous direction.

According to Gen Joe Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the strikes hit three targets related to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s chemical weapons programme – a scientific research centre near Damascus, a weapons storage facility west of Homs and a third location that contained both a command post and an equipment storage facility in the same area.

These targets appeared to steer well clear of any Russian military personnel or equipment.

“With regard to the Russian concerns, we specifical­ly identified these targets to mitigate the risk of Russian forces being involved,” Dunford said.

In his prime-time address announcing the strikes, Trump accused Russian President Vladimir Putin and his government of failing to guarantee a 2013 deal that was supposed to rid Assad of his chemical weapons.

But Dunford and Defence Secretary Jim Mattis stressed that the strikes were not intended to pull America deeper into Syria’s war.

“The targets tonight again were specifical­ly designed to degrade the Syrian war machine’s ability to create chemical weapons and to set that back,” Mattis said.

“There were no attempts to broaden or expand that target set.”

Dunford noted that the US military did not coordinate any targets or any plans with the Russians ahead of the strikes, but he said a long-standing “deconflict­ion” line was used to tell Moscow the areas where the Americans, French and British would be conducting operations.

Communicat­ion on the line is a near-daily occurrence designed to stop mishaps as a US-led coalition conducts an air war against the Islamic State group while Russia pursues its own goal of propping up Assad.

But Moscow hardly needed a heads-up that military action was coming.

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump tweeted that “nice and new and ‘smart!’” missiles would be coming Syria’s way, and that Russia should “get ready”.

He vacillated the next day after being criticised for telegraphi­ng war plans, the very thing he had blasted his predecesso­r Barack Obama for, and insisted that no final decision had been made.

“Our relationsh­ip with Russia is worse now than it has ever been, and that includes the Cold War,” Trump tweeted on Wednesday.

Russia’s ambassador to the United States, Anatoly Antonov, warned of unspecifie­d repercussi­ons after the strikes.

“We warned that such actions will not be left without consequenc­es. All responsibi­lity for them rests with Washington, London and Paris,” he said.

“Insulting the President of Russia is unacceptab­le and inadmissib­le.” — AFP

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