Los Angeles Times

Russian war jet shot down over Syria

The pilot bailed out but was apparently killed by rebels fighting President Bashar Assad’s forces.

- By Nabih Bulos Bulos is a special correspond­ent.

BEIRUT — For more than two years, Russia’s warplanes have operated with relative impunity over Syria’s skies. But on Saturday, the downing of a Russian Sukhoi-25 jet was a reminder that Moscow’s involvemen­t in the civil war is not without cost.

The pilot had bailed out of the plane before it crashed over the northweste­rn Syrian province of Idlib, said the Russian Defense Ministry, landing in an area controlled by the Organizati­on for the Liberation of Syria, previously known as the Al Qaeda-affiliated Al Nusra Front.

Idlib, the primary redoubt of rebels fighting Syrian President Bashar Assad, has been the site of a Russian-backed government offensive since December. Areas of it have been designated as part of a deescalati­on zone.

The pilot was killed “while fighting against terrorists,” continued the statement, adding that preliminar­y informatio­n indicated the plane may have been downed by a portable air-defense system, or MANPADS, antiaircra­ft missiles the rebels have tried for years to obtain.

“The Russian center for reconcilia­tion of warring sides in Syria alongside the Turkish side, responsibl­e for the Idlib de-escalation zone, are taking steps to retrieve the Russian pilot’s body,” the ministry said, according to Russia’s Tass news agency.

Mahmoud Turkmani, a militant commander in the Organizati­on for the Liberation of Syria, claimed responsibi­lity for the downing, saying in a statement released to the group’s media channel that the aircraft was attacked while it was conducting a strike over the city of Saraqeb, about 10 miles southeast of Idlib.

“Let the invader criminals know that our skies are not a walk in the park for them,” Turkmani said. “They will not pass through it without paying the price.”

Another group, Jaish al Nasr, said it had shot down the plane using antiaircra­ft guns.

Pro-opposition activists on social media released multiple videos purporting to show the moment the plane was hit. It streaks past as the thuds of heavy machine-gun fire can be heard.

In one video, a missile is seen arcing upward toward the plane. Another video shows a flash near the craft’s tail. It continues to fly for a distance before descending toward the ground.

One clip depicted a jubilant crowd gathering around the burning wreckage, with the camera lingering over the red star insignia on the wing and the charred remains of a rocket pod.

There also were images purporting to show the pilot’s corpse, his head bloodied and people cheering when they identify him as Russian.

In the aftermath of the attack, Russian forces retaliated with “massive highprecis­ion weapons strikes” on the location where the missile was said to have been launched, said the Defense Ministry, adding that more than 30 militants from the Organizati­on for the Liberation of Syria had been killed.

Russian air support has been a vital component for the government’s anti-rebel campaigns, with Moscow’s interventi­on in the Syrian war in September 2015 widely seen as the moment the conflict turned in Damascus’ favor.

The killing comes almost two months after Russian President Vladimir Putin had declared victory in Syria. He had ordered a drawdown of forces.

Despite being deployed throughout the country, Russian troops have sustained relatively few casualties, with 46 soldiers killed since September 2015, according to a report by Tass.

Aircraft losses have been meager as well; Russian pilots do not have to contend with the aging airframes and low-precision weaponry that their Syrian counterpar­ts have faced, and which have made them vulnerable to rebel attacks.

But if a MANPADS attack is confirmed, it could signal a significan­t upgrade in the rebels’ arsenal.

For years, the opposition clamored to get surface-toair missiles to stop government airstrikes on opposition-held areas.

But Western government­s arrayed against Assad blocked the weapons, fearing they would fall into the hands of Islamist militant groups.

 ?? Omar Haj Kadour AFP/Getty Images ?? THE SUKHOI-25 JET went down over the northwest province of Idlib, a rebel stronghold. Two groups claimed they had shot it down.
Omar Haj Kadour AFP/Getty Images THE SUKHOI-25 JET went down over the northwest province of Idlib, a rebel stronghold. Two groups claimed they had shot it down.

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