Russia has launched missiles at targets in Syria from warships in the
Caspian Sea in the first major combined assault across the air and
ground in Moscow's escalating campaign in the war-torn country.
The missiles were aimed at Isis targets, according to the Kremlin.
They were deployed as Russia's ally, Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad, started a ground offensive in rebel-held areas where jihadists
from the so-called Islamic State are thought not to have a presence.
The Russian Defence Minister Sergei
Shoigu said on Russian television that 26 missile strikes were launched
on Wednesday from four warships, destroying all 11 intended targets, in
an attack which adds a new level of complexity and violence to the
Syrian conflict.
A warship of the Caspian Flotilla launching missiles from the deployment area in the south-western Caspian Sea
Launched from the Caspian sea, which lies between countries including Russia, Azerbaijan and Iran, the missiles flew approximately 1,400km (900miles), according to a Russian officer.
Mr Shoigu said no strikes were targeted at civilian areas.
Andrei Kartapolov, of the Russian
General Staff, later told Russian news agencies that Moscow had attacked
using warships in order to cast the “over unpopulated areas”.
Russia missile strikes from Caspian Sea
Dramatic footage of the missiles being launched and lighting up the night sky were broadcast on Russian television.
A military source quoted by Syrian state
television said that Russian ships targeted 11 Isis positions in Raqqa,
Aleppo, and Idlib, destroying bomb factories, command posts, weapon
supply depots, and "terrorist training centres".
The announcements were met with deep
scepticism, as Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet DavutoÄŸlu claimed only two
out of 57 Russian air strikes in Syria hit Isis targets.
The rest, he said, targeted ‘moderate opposition groups’, according to the Daily Sabah.
Describing Russia's strategy "tragically
flawed", US Defence Secretary Ash Carter he once again accused Moscow
of deviating from its pledge to only target Isis. The Russian defence
ministry hit back by launching the same accusation at the US air force.
A source from British military told The Independent that one in 20 missiles have struck Isis targets.
However, President Vladmir Putin
later said it was too early to address the results of Russian military
actions in Syria, and ordered Mr Shoigu to continue co-operating with
the US, Turkey Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Iran on the conflict.
Moscow
unexpectedly started an air campaign in Syria in late September,
assuring that it would only target Isis. However, it is feared that the
Russian military is also attacking groups opposed to Mr Assad's
government, who the UN has accused of carrying out war crimes against
its own Syrian citizens.
Russia's action, largely aimed
at central and north-western Syria which are the gateways to Mr Assad’s
Damascan strongholds, appeared to have given Mr Assad's government
confidence to regain lost ground.
Some commentators have taken an apocalyptic view of what lies ahead.
Pavel Felgenhauer, an independent
military analyst in Moscow, forecast “ right now they are just softening
up the opposition. Then will come the ground offensive, it will be us
in the air and Syria, Iran and Hezbullah on the ground. It’s going to be
a terrible bloodbath, tens of thousands will be killed and the
consequences for Europe will be even more refugees.”
Under
the cover of Russian airstrikes on Wednesday, the Syrian army and
allied fighters carried out ground attacks on insurgent positions.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said a
government offensive began on four fronts early on Wednesday in the
north-western provinces of Idlib and neighbouring Hama.
Observatory director Rami Abdurrahman described it as “the most intense fighting in months.”
The group, which has a network of
activists in Syria, said that government forces are focusing on the town
of Morek, on the highway which connects Damascus with the northern city
of Aleppo which has been under rebel control since 2012.
A total of 37 Russian air raids have
taken place in the area since Moscow launched its operation a week ago,
according to the observatory. Two helicopters believed to be Russian
were seen flying at a low atltitude in Morek. However it remains unclear
whether they were owned by the Syrian army as it has Russian-made
helicopters in its arsenal.
Major Jamil al-Saleh the leader of the Tajummu Alezzah US-backed rebel group, also confirmed the ground offensive but said it had come from three fronts, including Latamneh, north of the Hama province.
Matthew Rycroft, the UK's
UN ambassador said Russia suport for Mr Assad Syria will merely
strengthen Isis, and force much of Syria's Sunni population “into the
arms” of the extremist group.
He added that anyone who has looked at a map of where the Russian
military has targeted will see that thei strikes are largely “are
against what we consider the moderate opposition to Assad, the very
people that we need to be part of the future of Syria”.
The missiles launched from the Caspian sea came a day after Mr Shoigu said that Russia
had called on foreign military attaches to supply Moscow with
intelligence on Isis positions, as a US-led coaltion carries out
separate missions in Syria and Iraq.
Mr Shoigu also said Russia was prepared to a document with the US to coordinate actions in Syria.
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