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News ID: 35757
Publish Date : 18 January 2017 - 21:05

Russia, Turkey in First Joint Airstrikes in Syria



MOSCOW (Dispatches) -- Russia said on Wednesday its warplanes had joined forces with Turkish jets for the first time on Wednesday to target Daesh militants holding the town of al-Bab in northern Syria, evidence of increasingly close cooperation between Moscow and Ankara.
Russia and Turkey are the main organizers of a new round of Syrian peace talks due to take place in Kazakhstan on Jan. 23 and have set aside their differences over the political fate of President Bashar al-Assad to try to forge a wider Syria deal.
Moscow backs Assad, while Ankara has diluted its demands for the Syrian leader to urgently step down as part of what some sources say is a backroom deal aimed at dividing Syria into informal zones of regional power influence.
Lieutenant-General Sergei Rudskoi, a senior Russian Defense Ministry official, said that nine Russian jets and eight Turkish war planes had together struck targets in al-Bab, which is located around 40 km (25 miles) northeast of Aleppo.
"Today the Russian and Turkish air forces are conducting their first joint air operation to strike Islamic State in the suburbs of al-Bab," Rudskoi said.
"The assessment of the initial results ... showed the strikes were highly effective."
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan wants Turkish-backed rebels to capture al-Bab to prevent Kurdish militias from doing so. Rudskoi claimed the joint mission had been conducted in agreement with the Syrian government.
He said the Russian air force was also providing air support to Syrian government troops trying to fight off a Daesh assault around the town of Deir al-Zor.
The town's civilian population could be massacred if Daesh took Deir al-Zor, he said.
Russian jets were also backing a Syrian army offensive near the town of Palmyra, said Rudskoi, who added that Daesh militants were planning to blow up more of the ancient city's historical monuments.
"We have received information, confirmed by several sources, that a large amount of explosives has been brought into the Palmyra area and that the terrorists plan on destroying the city's world-class historical legacy," he said.
Significant numbers of Daesh terrorists fleeing Mosul in neighboring Iraq were streaming into Syria "almost unobstructed," Rudskoi said.