Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russia’s air might on display ahead of Syria talks

- VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Milos Krivokapic of The Associated Press.

HEMEIMEEM AIR BASE, Syria — Helicopter gunships sweep low around Russia’s air base on the Syrian coast, and air-defense missile systems tower at the base’s edge as warplanes take off one after another. The sound is deafening.

Russia’s heavy airstrikes in Syria continued Wednesday, days ahead of the scheduled start of talks on how to end one aspect of the country’s 5-year-old war, where government forces fight rebels and militants including the extremist Islamic State have seized substantia­l stretches of territory.

Even though the front line is dozens of miles away and the area around the base is tightly controlled, the Russian military methodical­ly patrols to make sure there is no ground threat. Two heavy transport planes were parked near the main terminal as soldiers toting assault rifles stood guard.

Since Russia started its bombing campaign in Syria on Sept. 30, its warplanes have flown 5,700 missions. The number is remarkable for a force composed of just a few dozen warplanes.

The Russian military took a group of Moscow-based reporters to the base Wednesday to see the operation. Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenko­v said that by the afternoon Russian warplanes had flown about 40 sorties, with each aircraft hitting three to five targets on a single run. In the early stages of the bombing campaign, planes struck only one target during each mission.

Since The Associated Press first visited the Hemeimeem base in October, the Russian military has put a second runway into service and has deployed powerful S-400 air defense weapons. Asked how long the Russian air campaign may last, Konashenko­v said only that Russia’s goal is to strike extremist infrastruc­ture in support of Syrian government troops.

“They have shown some good results in defeating terrorist groups,” he said.

The Russian military has insisted it is targeting the Islamic State and other extremists and has dismissed Western accusation­s that it is hitting moderate rebels fighting Syrian President Bashar Assad. Moscow also has rejected claims that its aircraft have hit civilians, insisting that all casualties have been at extremist-held facilities away from populated areas.

Konashenko­v said Syrian government forces backed by Russian airstrikes have retaken about 250 villages and towns from the extremists. He said each bombing target is verified through multiple intelligen­ce sources and every fifth target Russia hits is now chosen thanks to informatio­n from “patriotic” opposition forces.

Konashenko­v said one particular­ly successful strike was conducted Tuesday in Aleppo province, where a Russian Su34 bomber hit a meeting of extremist leaders.

Russian ordnance includes bunker-buster bombs capable of piercing 23 feet of rock to destroy undergroun­d facilities, Konashenko­v said. Some of the bombs are laser-guided, but all Russian warplanes at the base are equipped with a sophistica­ted targeting system, allowing them to use even regular bombs with pinpoint accuracy, he said.

British Defense Minister Michael Fallon on Wednesday again raised Western concerns about civilian deaths as a result of the Russian air- strikes.

“I am very concerned at the number of civilian casualties through the use of unguided munitions — seems to be several hundred casualties now,” he said in Paris during a meeting of Western defense ministers on how to combat the Islamic State. “We’ve seen Russian strikes on opposition forces, on towns and villages, particular­ly in the south of Syria, which is simply prolonging the Syrian war, propping up Assad and is actually delaying the day on which we can all unite and properly get Daesh [the Islamic State] out of Syria.”

Konashenko­v dismissed such claims as “slanderous lies.”

Across the tarmac, Russian soldiers loaded humanitari­an supplies onto a hulking Il-76 heavy transport plane to be parachuted over the Syrian city of Deir el-Zour, where government-held areas of the city have been blockaded by extremists for more than a year. The United Nations said living conditions there have deteriorat­ed significan­tly, with reports of up to 20 deaths because of malnutriti­on.

Konashenko­v said more than 50 metric tons of relief supplies have been delivered to Deir el-Zour in precisely targeted airdrops. The Syrian government controls the military airport in the city, and activists said the limited amount of aid that gets in typically goes to army officers and their friends who sell it on the black market.

The Syrian government and the opposition are to open talks Monday in Geneva. The negotiatio­ns are meant to pave the way for a political settlement for Syria, with a new constituti­on and elections in a year and a half.

But internatio­nal negotiator­s, including the United States and its allies and Assad’s backers, Russia and Iran, have failed to agree on which of the myriad Syrian militant groups should be part of the political talks.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met in Switzerlan­d on Wednesday to try to resolve the difference­s.

British Defense Minister Michael

Fallon on Wednesday again raised Western concerns about civilian deaths as a result of the Russian airstrikes.

 ?? AP/VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV ?? Russian airmen prepare humanitari­an supplies for loading on a transport plane Wednesday at Hemeimeem air base in Syria. The supplies were to be airdropped over the Syrian city of Deir el-Zour, where living conditions have deteriorat­ed as fighting drags...
AP/VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV Russian airmen prepare humanitari­an supplies for loading on a transport plane Wednesday at Hemeimeem air base in Syria. The supplies were to be airdropped over the Syrian city of Deir el-Zour, where living conditions have deteriorat­ed as fighting drags...
 ?? AP/VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV ?? A technician reports to a Russian pilot Wednesday at Syria’s Hemeimeem air base, letting him know his bomber is ready for a combat mission.
AP/VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV A technician reports to a Russian pilot Wednesday at Syria’s Hemeimeem air base, letting him know his bomber is ready for a combat mission.

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