The Russian military claims to have destroyed “most” of Isis’s
ammunition and heavy weapons after days of intensive air strikes across
Syria.
The extraordinary claims, which have been met with scepticism from
experts, were accompanied by a series of videos showing attacks on
targets by Su-24 and -24M bombers.
According to the ministry, at least 86 Isis targets were hit during
88 separate sorties over 24 hours on Monday and Tuesday. Russia said it
carried out more than 100 air missions in Syria over the weekend.
“Russian air strikes resulted in the elimination of the majority of
ISIS ammunition, heavy vehicles and equipment,” the Russian defence
ministry said in a statement, adding that ammunition depots, vehicles,
explosive plants and field camps were among the targets.
Srdja Trifkovic, a Serbian-American foreign affairs expert and editor
with Chronicles magazine, told Russa Today: “The Russians with Syrian
boots on the ground have done more to degrade Isis in less than 10 days
than the US did in more than a year of its half-hearted campaign.”
Charlie Winter, a senior researcher for the anti-extremism think-tank Quilliam, said reports on the ground of Isis territorial gains “run contrary to Russia’s claims”.
“I highly doubt that even the Russians, who will be party to much of Assad intelligence, know where the “majority of ISIS ammunition, heavy vehicles and equipment” is located,” Mr Winter told The Independent.
He described Vladimir Putin’s intervention in Syria as an attempt to “contest the monopoly” of the West’s “War on Terror”, and described the defence ministry’s statement as “propagandising to this end”.
Dr Andreas Krieg, an expert on the Middle East from King’s College’s Department of Defence Studies, said the positions Russia had said it was targeting "have been in the hands of moderate rebels for months now" - not Isis.
"They also do not have the precision strike capability that Western air forces have," he said. "These claims that Isis has been significantly weakened are either highly exaggerated or wrong."
Russia began launching air strikes in Syria on 30 September, allowing Syrian government forces to carry out a multi-pronged ground assault.
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