Gulf News

Putin lashes out at Turkish ‘ruling gang’

KERRY SAYS DAESH CAN BE DEFEATED ‘IN MONTHS’ IF COOPERATIO­N COMES ABOUT

- By Ilya Arkhipov, Olga Tanas and Henry Meyer

Russian President Vladimir Putin raised the temperatur­e in an increasing­ly bitter dispute with Turkey over the downing of a Russian warplane last week, saying the country’s “ruling gang” has lost reason as he threatened more punitive measures following economic sanctions.

“Only Allah knows why they did this,” Putin said yesterday in his annual state-ofthe-nation address, drawing applause from his audience at the Kremlin. “And it seems that Allah decided to punish the ruling gang in Turkey by stripping it of common sense and reason.” Repeating accusation­s that Turkey is making money from Daesh’s oil trade, Putin vowed that Russia “won’t forget those who shot our pilots in the back”.

Putin showed no signs of backing down from his conflict with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the worst confrontat­ion between Russia and a member of Nato since the Cold War.

‘A very long memory’

Daesh has claimed responsibi­lity for killing 224 people by blowing up a Russian tourist plane over Egypt in October and the Paris attacks last month that left 130 people dead. “Erdogan has a very long memory and the relationsh­ip will struggle to recover from this,” Timothy Ash, a credit strategist at Nomura Internatio­nal Plc in London, said. “The religious angle being used by Putin is unlikely to go down well in the region, where Erdogan is still seen as a defender of the Sunni faith.”

On his part, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey had proof that Moscow was involved in illegal oil trade with Daesh in Syria, countering Russian allegation­s that Ankara was importing oil from the terrorists.

‘Immoral’ Russian claims

“We have the proof in our hands. We will reveal it to the world,” the Turkish leader said in a televised speech in Ankara. Erdogan labelled as “immoral” Russian claims that his family was involved in alleged oil dealings with Daesh.

The top diplomats of Turkey and Russia were set to meet yesterday for the first time since Ankara shot down one of Moscow’s warplanes, as dozens of foreign ministers gathered in Belgrade for the annual ministeria­l council of the Organisati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe (OSCE).

US Secretary of State John Kerry meanwhile said that defeating Daesh won’t be possible without finding troops to fight on the ground, calling for a political transition in Syria that would allow “all nations” to fight the group together.

“If we get political transition in place, we empower every nation and every entity to come together, the Syrian army together with the opposition, together with all the surroundin­g countries, together with Russia, with the US and others to go and fight Daesh,” Kerry said. “Just imagine how quickly can the scourge be eliminated, in a matter of literally months, if we are able to secure that kind of political resolution.”

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