The Daily Telegraph

Reports:

- By Alec Luhn in Moscow, Ben Riley-smith in Washington, and Raf Sanchez in Jerusalem

RUSSIA last night boasted that it was practising shooting down missiles as parliament­ary hardliners demanded a military response to any US air strike on Syria. The Russian defence ministry said that naval jets from its Pacific fleet had conducted exercises to “intercept and destroy a low-flying long-range cruise missile”.

Two former Russian officers turned politician­s called on the Kremlin to use military force should Donald Trump approve an attack on the Syrian regime.

Meanwhile, the US president was under growing pressure from his own senators to follow through on tough rhetoric over the Syrian chemical attack. Lindsey Graham, the Republican senator from South Carolina, said that failing to approve a military response would be “the biggest mistake of his presidency”. Leading Western countries yesterday debated how to punish Bashar al-assad, the Syrian president, for a suspected chemical attack that killed at least 60 Syrians, including children, on Saturday.

Britain, France and the United States were all co-ordinating over possible action after issuing hard-hitting comments about the attack on Douma, the last rebel-held town in Eastern Ghouta.

The Syrian regime and its Iranian and Russian backers have all denied chemical weapons were used in the attack. A spokesman for Vladimir Putin yesterday insisted that Moscow would continue trying to solve the Syria crisis through talks.

He said Russia would be “actively working in the diplomatic theatre” despite America’s claims over chemical weapons use. However, Russian hawks were pushing for a tougher stance. Senator Frants Klintsevic­h, a former colonel in Russia’s vaunted paratroope­r forces, said that “Russia should shoot down these Tomahawks” if a US destroyer off the Syrian coast launches cruise missiles.

Vladimir Shamanov, the head of the defence committee in parliament, said at a meeting of the ruling United Russia party that Moscow would respond to “illicit actions” in Syria and take “military measures if necessary”.

He added: “We won’t let the Americans hammer nails on someone else’s anvil.” There were also reports about Russia’s military activity ahead of a possible air strike from America, though the details remained unclear.

NBC News reported that the Russian military has been jamming US drones over Syria, “seriously affecting” American military operations. The French magazine Le Point reported that a Russian warplane this weekend flew over a French warship at low altitude in the eastern Mediterran­ean.

The Turkish newspaper Hurriyet reported that four Russian jets had buzzed the US destroyer Donald Cook, which Russian media reported had come within 100km (62 miles) of the Russia’s Syria airbase, but a Pentagon spokespers­on denied this to state news agency TASS.

Analysts expressed doubt that Russia’s top-of-the-line S-400 surface-toair missile could take down American Tomahawk cruise missiles.

Alexander Golts, an independen­t analyst, said: “Last year they were writing that these missiles flew high and for the S-400 they were too far to hit.”

On Tuesday joint war games between Russian and Belarusian paratroope­rs entered their “active phase” near Brest, including live fire exercises, the Belarusian defence ministry said.

In America, Mr Trump was under pressure from Republican­s to follow through on his weekend tweets, when the president warned there would be a “big price to pay” for the chemical attack. Mr Graham called on Mr Assad to be a target for any air strike. He told CNN: “I would go after all the infrastruc­ture around his air capability.

“I would hit his intelligen­ce services who are complicit in war crimes. I would make Assad a target because I think he’s a war criminal.” However, in the battered Damascus suburb of Douma, the site of Saturday’s alleged chemical weapons attack, exhausted residents expressed little enthusiasm for the prospect of US air strikes. Many of the area’s residents were preparing to be evacuated under a deal struck between rebel factions and regime forces.

“It’s too late. A million Syrians are dead and millions more are refugees,” said one man, who asked to be identified as Abu Bashir. “They want to give Assad a light slap to protect their honour and then let him continue killing the rest of the Free Syrians.”

“We don’t rely on Trump,” said Haitham, who asked that his surname was not published. “Trump is not a genuine fighter. The genuine fighter is Putin, who is defending the regime by all available means. If Trump hits the regime it is just to embarrass Putin.”

‘It’s too late. A million Syrians are dead and millions more are refugees’

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