Russia builds up Syria airbase in setback for United States policy
Russia builds up Syria airbase in setback for United States policy
Published: 12:16 pm Sep 27, 2015
Damascus, September 26 Moscow pressed its military buildup at a new airbase in Syria today, as Washington admitted that rebels it trained handed ammunition and equipment to al-Qaeda in a fresh setback for US policy. A decades-long backer of the Damascus regime, Moscow has remained a steadfast supporter of President Bashar al-Assad throughout four and a half years of war that have left more than 240,000 people dead. Its recent deployment of its own troops and warplanes to Syria, combined with new arms deliveries to Assad’s armed forces, appear to have prompted a significant shift in international efforts to end the conflict. On Monday, Russian President Vladimir Putin will meet his US counterpart President Barack Obama on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly meeting in New York. Today was the 15th straight day that Russian transport aircraft had flown in troops and equipment to the Hmeimim base in Latakia province on the Mediterranean coast, a military source told AFP on condition of anonymity. “For the past two weeks and again today a Russian cargo plane has landed every morning at Hmeimim,” the source said, adding that they all had fighter escorts. At least some of the cargo was then unloaded and transported out of the airport, the source said. US satellites have recorded increased activity by Russian forces at the base inside the Bassel al-Assad civil and military airport. On Wednesday, the Syrian army used Russian-delivered drones for the first time, a security source in Damascus said. Washington and NATO say that recent spottings of helicopters, bombers, ground attack aircraft, tanks and soldiers prove that Russia is building an airbase in Latakia, the Assad regime’s coastal heartland. Russian military aircraft have conducted reconnaissance flights over Syria but not yet launched any strikes, the Pentagon said. One senior Syrian official called Russia’s military involvement a “turning point”. Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah, which has fought alongside Assad’s forces, said new Russian military support would “affect the evolution of the ongoing battle in Syria.” The US has said it “could find areas of cooperation” with Russia if Moscow were to join the fight against the Islamic State jihadist group. Moscow’s intervention comes with Washington’s own policy for fighting IS in Syria in increasing disarray. The United States has a $500-million programme to train and equip vetted moderates recruited from among the rebels fighting Assad’s forces but it has faced repeated setbacks. In a shock admission on Friday, the Pentagon said that a group of US-trained rebels had handed over ammunition and equipment to al-Qaeda’s Syria affiliate, the Al-Nusra Front, purportedly in exchange for safe passage.