Times of Oman

Russia to supply Syria S-300 air defence after jet downing

Russia, which fights in Syria to support the government, has said Syria shot the IL-20 surveillan­ce plane down by mistake shortly after Israeli jets hit a nearby target

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MOSCOW: Russia announced on Monday it will supply an S-300 surface-to-air missile system to Syria in two weeks against strong Israeli objections, a week after Moscow blamed Israel for indirectly causing the downing of a Russian military plane in Syria.

Last week’s crash, which killed 15 Russian service members, had forced Moscow to take “adequate retaliator­y measures to increase the safety of Russian military fighting internatio­nal terrorism in Syria,” Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said on Monday in a televised address.

“A modern S-300 air defence missile system will be transferre­d to the Syrian armed forces within two weeks,” he said.

The system will “significan­tly increase the Syrian army’s combat capabiliti­es,” he said.

Russia, which fights in Syria to support the government, has said Syria shot the IL-20 surveillan­ce plane down by mistake shortly after Israeli jets hit a nearby target.

Russia blamed Israel for creating dangerous conditions that caused the crash.

Israel, which has struck Syria scores of times during the sevenyear war, said after the incident that it would work to improve “deconflict­ion” of its missions with Russian forces, but would not halt them.

It has long lobbied Moscow not to provide the S-300 to Syria. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalist­s on a conference call that the decision to supply the weapons was “not directed at any third country”.

“Russia needs to increase safety of its military and it should be clear for everyone,” he said.

But he also repeated Moscow’s accusation­s that Israel was to blame for the crash: “No doubt that according to our military experts, deliberate action by Israeli pilots was the reason for the tragedy and this cannot but harm our (Russia-Israeli) ties.”

Syrian President Bashar Al Assad’s office explicitly linked the Russian decision to supply the weapons to the air crash: “President Putin held Israel responsibl­e for bring down the plane and informed President Assad that Russia will develop Syria’s air defence systems,” the Syrian presidency said.

Shoigu said Russia will equip Syrian anti-aircraft units with Russian tracking and guidance systems in order to identify Russian aircraft.

Russia in April had hinted that it would supply the S-300 to Assad’s government despite Israeli objections.

The missile system, originally developed by the Soviet military, but since modernised and available in several versions with different capabiliti­es, fires missiles from trucks and is designed to shoot down military aircraft and short- and medium-range ballistic missiles.

 ?? Photo — Reuters/Stefan Wermuth/File ?? BREAKTHROU­GH: A model of an Anopheles mosquito at the Natural History Museum, in London, September 8, 2009.
Photo — Reuters/Stefan Wermuth/File BREAKTHROU­GH: A model of an Anopheles mosquito at the Natural History Museum, in London, September 8, 2009.
 ?? — Reuters/Sergey Pivovarov ?? SHOT DOWN: A Russian Il-20 reconnaiss­ance aircraft taxis across the tarmac at Central military airport in Rostov-on-Don, Russia December 14, 2010.
— Reuters/Sergey Pivovarov SHOT DOWN: A Russian Il-20 reconnaiss­ance aircraft taxis across the tarmac at Central military airport in Rostov-on-Don, Russia December 14, 2010.

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