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Turkey warns it would respond decisively to Syria downing its aircraft

Surenas

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Turkey warns it would respond decisively to Syria downing its aircraft

Syria said the Turkish fighter jet was flying low, well inside Syrian territorial waters when it was shot down.


Syria shot down a Turkish warplane over the Mediterranean on Friday and Ankara warned it would respond decisively to the incident that threatened to open a new international dimension in the 16-month revolt against Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Syria said the Turkish aircraft was flying low, well inside Syrian territorial waters when it was shot down.

With the second biggest army in NATO, a force hardened by nearly 30 years of fighting Kurdish rebels, Turkey would be a formidable foe for the Syrian army which is already struggling to put down a 16-month-old revolt.

But Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's initial comments and subsequent statement on the downing of the F-4 jet were measured in tone. He said Turkish and Syrian forces were working together to search for the two missing crew of the aircraft.

"As a result of information obtained from the evaluation of our concerned institutions and from within the joint search and rescue operations with Syria, it is understood that our plane was brought down by Syria," Erdogan's office said in a statement.

"Turkey will present its final stance after the incident has been fully brought to light and decisively take the necessary steps," the office said after a two-hour emergency meeting between prime minister, the chief of general staff, the defense, interior and foreign ministers, the head of national intelligence and the commander of the air force.

Turkish media had reported earlier that Syria had apologized for the incident, but Erdogan made no mention of any apology.

Violence raged unabated inside Syria, which appears to be sliding into a sectarian-tinged civil war pitting majority Sunni Muslims against Assad's minority Alawite sect. Turkey fears the fighting if unchecked could unleash a flood of refugees over its own border and ignite regional sectarian conflict.

Ankara, which had drawn close to Syria before the uprising against Assad, turned against the Syrian leader when he responded violently to pro-democracy protests inspired by popular upheavals elsewhere in the Arab world. Turkey now gives refuge to the rebel Free Syrian Army on its frontier with Syria.

Erdogan, whose enmity with Assad has assumed a strongly personal nature, gave no hint what action he might contemplate.

A statement by the Syrian military said the Turkish plane was flying low, just one kilometer off the Syrian coast, when it was hit by anti-aircraft fire. The plane fell in Syrian waters 10 -kms (seven miles) west of the village of Um al-Touyour.

"The navy of the two countries have established contact. Syrian naval vessels are participating along with the Turkish side in the search operation for the missing pilots," it said.

Syria has some of the most sophisticated air defenses in the Middle East, supplied by Russia.

Turkish state television interviewed witnesses on the country's Mediterranean coast, near the Syrian border, who said they saw two low-flying fighter jets pass overhead in the morning in the direction of Syrian waters but only one return.

Ankara has previously floated the possibility of setting up some kind of safe haven or humanitarian corridor inside Syria, which would entail military intervention, but has said it would undertake no such action without UN Security Council approval.

Turkey has said however that Assad must go.

Turkey hosts about 32,000 Syrian refugees and allows the rebel Syrian Free Army to operate from its territory. The opposition Syrian National Council meets in Istanbul.

It was unclear why the Syrians had shot down the aircraft, which, having left a base in Malatya, was flying close to a corridor linking Turkey with Turkish forces on Northern Cyprus.

"The Syrian military may have taken a calculated gamble by downing the Turkish plane, which could boost the morale of Assad's loyalists after increased defections from the military we have seen," Yasser Saadeldine, a prominent pro-opposition Syrian political commentator, said.

"A Turkish retaliation would fit into the fantasy he (Assad) is peddling that the uprising is a foreign conspiracy."

Russia and China, Assad's strongest backers abroad, have fiercely opposed any outside interference in the Syrian crisis, saying envoy Kofi Annan's peace plan is the only way forward.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said after talks with his Syrian counterpart that he had urged Syria to "do a lot more" to implement Annan's U.N.-backed proposals, but that foreign countries must also press rebels to stop the violence.

Lavrov said the Syrian authorities were ready to withdraw troops from cities "simultaneously" with rebels. A Syrian military pullback and a ceasefire were key elements in Annan's six-point peace plan, most of which remains a dead letter.

"Destructive competition"

Annan hit out at some countries he said had taken national initiatives that risked unleashing "destructive competition".

He told a news conference in Geneva that he wanted states with influence on both sides of the conflict to be involved in the peace process, including Iran, Assad's closest ally.

The UN-Arab League envoy was speaking a week before a planned Syria crisis meeting that is in doubt because of Western objections to the Islamic Republic's participation.

Rebels killed at least 25 members of a mainly Alawite pro-Assad militia, and in a separate incident troops turned heavy machineguns on opposition demonstrators in the northern city of Aleppo, killing 10, opposition activists said.

"Armed terrorist groups committed a brutal massacre against 25 citizens in Darat Azzah," state TV reported, saying more were missing from the village in Aleppo province.

Several men covered in blood and piled on top of each other on a roadside, some in army fatigues and some in t-shirts, could be seen in a video link sent by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, apparently showing the aftermath of the same incident.

The British-based opposition watchdog said 26 men believed to be pro-Assad "Shabbiha" militiamen had been killed.

Assad's foes have accused troops and Shabbiha militiamen of perpetrating many abuses against civilians, including mass killings, in the uprising that began in March last year with peaceful protests against four decades of Assad family rule.

In Aleppo, Syria's business hub, thousands of demonstrators were marching toward the central Saadallah al-Jabiri Square when four armoured vehicles fired on them, activists told Reuters by telephone. Two of them said they were speaking from Aleppo.

"The wounded were taken to houses and are trapped there. They cannot be transported to hospitals because troops and Shabbiha are surrounding the neighborhood," one of them said.

Aleppo, along with central Damascus, had stayed relatively quiet in the early months of the revolt that engulfed many other provincial cities, but unrest has gradually spread there too.

Activist video footage showed a large crowd of protesters, some draped in revolutionary flags, running along a street as heavy gunfire cracked out. Another video showed a man whose chest was covered in blood being dragged along the road.

Turkey warns it would respond decisively to Syria downing its aircraft - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
 
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It's a US Ploy to engage Turkey & Syria in the War. Once, it is accomplished they'll counter Iran!
 
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It's a US Ploy to engage Turkey & Syria in the War. Once, it is accomplished they'll counter Iran!
It's a Turkish ploy to get a forward base to the south. Once it's accomplished we'll counter Israel!

Don't be a superstitious idiot, If US could get approval of UN security council they would take iran out of action however they want. Syria isn't a threat to anyone with it's meager military.
 
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Is Israel a peace of cake that you think you can easily eat?
 
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The aircraft was flying low and at high speed, the Syrians feared the worst and opened fire.

The Turkish response is controlled. Both sides are 'playing down' the event.

Remember the response to MV Marmara?

Hope the pilots are safe.
 
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Thəorətic Muslim;3092463 said:
The aircraft was flying low and at high speed, the Syrians feared the worst and opened fire.

The Turkish response is controlled. Both sides are 'playing down' the event.

Remember the response to MV Marmara?

Hope the pilots are safe.
Government don't have the luxure of ignoring this event. They know, either they come up with a bold decision or people will not forgive their cowardice. B*tching around will not help, something must be done.
 
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Usually where necessary and where Judgement is right I side with one or the Other Allay.

Downing Turkish Air Force Fighter Jet means Turkey violated Syrian Air Space which is actively at War with NATO/US/Regional Counterparts medelling in its affairs, for the lone fact everyone wants to invade Syria thus downing is no big deal it comes for violation a sovereign country's air space.

We would all hope Pilot is safe and safely returns Home.
 
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Anyways the heat will be off from Iran for some days..

Wait, was there any heat at all ?
 
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IF and when we do respond Suriyan All *** Moron supporters will be crying over their "fate" just as the moronic and equally bankrupt/corrupt Cypriots have been for the past 40 odd years. Remember the idiotic little nation of Cyprus also gambled on the protection of a foreign power who they believed would protect them from the Turks (when they started killing Turks or people who we believe we have a natural bond with).

Yes I am drawing parallels between Suriye/Cyprus and Russia/Greece respectively & if anyone thinks Russia is going to invade a major almost equally armed (on parallel - conventional weapons) NATO state just to protect a crumbling Suriye then they need to take their tin foil hats of and have a real good hard look at the situation.

Sigh... Arabs on pay of AssHats have been blaming their little civil war on the Turks for some time now, I guess these former subjects of ours truly miss the Turkish slap.
 
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Government don't have the luxure of ignoring this event. They know, either they come up with a bold decision or people will not forgive their cowardice. B*tching around will not help, something must be done.

They will. The govt will respond with another press conference of the Syrian Opposition.

The Opposition will make another statement of how they are more united and present a "policy" of how they will better Syria.

The govt will carry out covert ops.

Nothing is forgiven. Even among friends.
 
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This fagot bashar should be assassinated by some turkish/arab commandos or intellegence agency if they really are concerned
about innocent syrians. And russia and Iran if they want to keep their influence in syria should kick out bashar and install someone new. Just too many people have been killed by this fagot and zionist yankis are grinning and exploiting the situation while
surrounding muslim countries are acting as idiots.
 
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Turkey have to make sure that al-assad's loyals feel sorry for downing your aircraft. :sniper: ,
 
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