Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Putin vows Turkey retaliatio­n

Russia’s leader says Turkey to face consequenc­es after downing warplane

- By Carol J. Williams and Jeremiah Bailey-Hoover Tribune Newspapers carol.williams@tribpub.com

The Russian president said there will be consequenc­es after shootdown of jet.

ISTANBUL, Turkey — Just as was feared when Russia intervened in the dysfunctio­nal effort to eradicate Islamic State militants two months ago, the vortex of geopolitic­al battles in Syria has drawn Cold War-era rivals into a deadly confrontat­ion with each other.

Three Russian airmen died Tuesday and a Russian SU-24 jet was shot out of the sky by Turkish F-16 fighter jets, the first known casualties in the Kremlin’s ranks since it sent air and naval forces and a 2,000strong ground contingent to Syria in September.

Russia says its mission is to fight Islamic State militants in Syria. But NATO member nations and allied Arab states that are also waging airstrikes against Islamic State charge that Russia’s bombings are directed at U.S.- and Europeanba­cked Syrian rebels fighting to oust President Bashar Assad, the Kremlin’s most important Middle East ally.

Among the rebel forces in the Russians’ gunsights are Syrian Turkmen, ethnic kin of the Turks who are among the fiercest opponents of Assad’s government and as such de facto enemies of Russia. Turkey had warned Moscow last week to cease attacks on the Syrian Turkmen, who hold territory near the Assad government’s shrinking stronghold around Latakia, on the Mediterran­ean Sea.

Turkish F-16 fighter jets patrolling the volatile coastal border area shot down the Russian warplane early Tuesday after it penetrated Turkish airspace and ignored repeated warnings to leave, the Turkish Armed Forces Command said in a statement. Both Russian pilots on board ejected but were killed by Syrian rebel fighters as they parachuted into the enemy territory they had been sent to attack, rebel sources told Turkish media.

A third Russian airman aboard an Mi-8 helicopter dispatched to look for the bailed pilots was killed when Syrian rebels fired on the search-and-rescue operation, forcing the chopper to land in neutral territory and evacuate the surviving crewmen.

The Kremlin condemned the attack, summoning a Turkish diplomat in Moscow to receive an official protest that called the shootdown “an unfriendly act.”

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov canceled a planned visit to Ankara on Wednesday, and Russian President Vladimir Putin warned that “serious consequenc­es” would follow.

“Neither our pilots nor our jet threatened the territory of Turkey,” Putin in- sisted, accusing Ankara of aiding Islamic State by secretly marketing the oil it extracts from occupied Iraqi territory. “The loss today is a stab in the back, carried out by the accom- plices of terrorists. I can’t describe it in any other way.”

President Barack Obama defended Turkey’s action and suggested that such unfortunat­e incidents could be avoided if Russia would focus on defeating Islamic State rather than attacking the rebels fighting to oust Assad.

“Turkey, like every country, has a right to defend its territory and its airspace,” Obama said at a news conference alongside French President Francois Hollande, who was visiting the White House on a mission to strengthen the multinatio­nal coalition taking on the extremist group also known as ISIL. “Our view from the start has been that Russia is welcome to be part of this broad-based coalition that we’ve set up. ... The challenge has been Russia’s focus on propping up Assad rather than focusing on ISIL.”

Obama urged Russia and Turkey to “step back” from the brink of an intensifyi­ng conflict.

At Turkey’s request, NATO convened an urgent meeting of allies to discuss the downing of the jet.

“Instead of immediatel­y getting in contact with us, as far as we know, the Turkish side immediatel­y turned to their partners from NATO to discuss this incident, as if we shot down their plane and not they ours,” Putin chided. He vowed to maintain Russia’s military engagement in Syria.

Tribune Newspapers’ Carol J. Williams reported from Los Angeles and special correspond­ent Jeremiah Bailey-Hoover from Istanbul. Tribune Newspapers’ W.J. Hennigan and Christi Parsons in Washington, and Sergei L. Loiko in Moscow, also contribute­d.

 ?? MAXIM SHIPENKOV/GETTY-AFP ?? Vladimir Putin called the deaths of three Russian airmen “a stab in the back, carried out by the accomplice­s of terrorists.”
MAXIM SHIPENKOV/GETTY-AFP Vladimir Putin called the deaths of three Russian airmen “a stab in the back, carried out by the accomplice­s of terrorists.”
 ?? HABERTURK TV CHANNEL ?? A warplane leaves a burning trail after it was attacked near the Turkish-Syrian border on Tuesday.
HABERTURK TV CHANNEL A warplane leaves a burning trail after it was attacked near the Turkish-Syrian border on Tuesday.

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