Russian gains in Syria at risk from rebel attacks
SYRIA: Just weeks after Russian President Vladimir Putin declared victory in Syria, Russian military outposts in the country have come under rebel attacks that are challenging Moscow’s gains.
Russian bases located in Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s Alawite heartland had been immune to rebel raids since Moscow launched its campaign in Syria in September 2015. But drone attacks and mortar and rocket shelling in recent days has broken the calm.
The incursions have raised doubts about the sustainability of the Assad government’s recent victories and Moscow’s ability to protect its assets in the country.
A drone raid on Sunday was unusually massive, involving 13 of the aircraft equipped with satellite navigation and launched from a distance of up to 100km away, according to the Russian Defence Ministry. It said seven of the drones were shot down by air defence systems and the other six forced to land.
While the ministry said the attack caused no damage to the Hemeimeem air base in the province of Latakia and the naval outpost in the Syrian port of Tartus, it marked the first time the militants used drones against Russian assets on such a large scale.
No-one has claimed responsibility for the attacks.
Without directly blaming any specific country, the Russian military said the necessary data and capability for the attacks could only have been obtained ‘‘from one of the countries that possesses know-how in satellite navigation’' – a statement that appeared to be directed at the United States.
It also noted a ‘‘strange coincidence’' of a US military intelligence plane flying over the Mediterranean near the two Russian bases at the moment of the attack.
Russian lawmakers skipped decorum, bluntly accusing the US of sponsoring the drone attack. ‘‘That action wouldn’t have been possible without involvement of American structures,’' said Gennady Zyuganov, head of the Communist Party and a member of the lower house.
Dmitry Sablin, a lawmaker who co-ordinates parliamentary links with Syria, said the attack was even bigger than the Russian military acknowledged, involving 31 drones.
The Pentagon strongly denied any involvement. ‘‘Any suggestion that US or coalition forces played a role in an attack on a Russian base is without any basis in fact and is utterly irresponsible,’' said Major Adrian Rankine-Galloway, a Pentagon spokesman.
The Russian and the US militaries have maintained regular contacts to avoid conflict between their forces in Syria. In recent months, however, the Russian military brass has become increasingly critical of the US role in Syria, accusing it of protecting militants who can carry out future battles against Assad – a claim the US has angrily denied.
The drone attack also raised tensions between Russia and Turkey. Moscow and Ankara have backed opposite sides in the conflict, but they struck a deal last year to set up de-escalation zones, which also involved Iran, another Assad backer. – AP