The Sentinel-Record

US: Several Russian cruise missiles landed in Iran

- ROBERT BURNS

WASHINGTON — As many as four of the 26 long- range cruise missiles that Russia said it fired at Syrian targets landed instead in Iran, U. S. defense officials said Thursday.

The officials said it’s unclear whether the errant missiles, launched from Russian ships in the Caspian Sea, caused any significan­t damage in Iran. Both the Russian government and state- run Iranian media accused the United States of inaccurate or deliberate­ly deceptive statements.

Three U. S. officials said four missiles went off course. The officials were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The Russian government said Wednesday it launched 26 cruise missiles, hitting targets in north and northweste­rn Syrian provinces. It made no mention of any missiles going astray, suggesting that the operation was fully successful. The missiles’ intended flight paths took them over Iran and Iraq.

On Thursday, the Russian Ministry of Defense employed a little sarcasm in its denial.

“However unpleasant and ‘ unexpected’ it may be for our colleagues at the Pentagon and Langley ( CIA’s Virginia headquarte­rs) about yesterday’s attacks by high- accuracy weapons on the ( Islamic State) infrastruc­ture in Syria — all the same, all rockets fired from ships found their targets,” said a ministry spokesman, Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenko­v.

Iranian government officials could not immediatel­y be reached for comment, but the semi- official Fars news agency on Thursday said Western news reports about missiles going astray amounted to U. S. “psychologi­cal warfare” against Russia’s interventi­on in Syria. An earlier report by Fars on Wednesday quoted Iraj Saghafi, acting governor of Takab in northweste­rn Iran, saying an explosion heard in the region was “possibly related to work in a nearby rock quarry.”

The cruise missile attack in Syria was part of an expanding Russian military campaign that has deepened the divide between Moscow and Washington over how to approach the Syrian civil war and the presence there of Islamic State fighters.

Secretary of State John Kerry spoke Thursday by telephone with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov for about a half- hour, focusing primarily on Syria and Ukraine, State Department spokesman John Kirby told reporters. Kerry voiced concern that the “prepondera­nce of targets” being struck by Russian military forces in Syria aren’t related to the Islamic State. Kerry told his counterpar­t that the U. S. was prepared to hold further discussion­s with Russia to avoid misunderst­andings while both countries undertake missions in Syrian airspace, according to Kirby.

Kirby wouldn’t discuss reports of Russian cruise missiles landing in Iran, but said such evidence would only reinforce the need for the U. S., Russia and others to “deconflict” their various military efforts in Syria.

The talks, he said, also encompasse­d the importance of advancing a political transition away from Syrian President Bashar Assad and toward a new government.

The Russian cruise missile strikes have added a new layer of uncertaint­y to efforts by the Pentagon to ensure the safety of U. S. and coalition pilots who are flying daily in Syria airspace. Russia also is flying attack and reconnaiss­ance missions over Syria.

Russia says its interventi­on is aimed at helping the Syrian government defeat the Islamic State group, but local activists and U. S. officials say the strikes have also targeted Westernbac­ked rebels and have had the effect of propping up the Assad government.

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