Saturday, December 5, 2015

U.S. Wants Everyone To Contribute More In The War Against The Islamic State, But Have Told Turkey To 'Hold Back'

A combination picture taken from video shows a war plane crashing in flames in a mountainous area in northern Syria after it was shot down by Turkish fighter jets near the Turkish-Syrian border November 24, 2015. Reuters/Reuters TV/Haberturk

Reuters: Exclusive: U.S. puts request for bigger Turkish air role on hold

Since Turkey shot down a Russian fighter jet last week, the United States has quietly put on hold a long-standing request for its NATO ally to play a more active role in the U.S.-led air war against Islamic State.

The move, disclosed to Reuters by a U.S. official, is aimed at allowing just enough time for heightened Turkey-Russia tensions to ease. Turkey has not flown any coalition air missions in Syria against Islamic State since the Nov. 24 incident, two U.S. officials said.

The pause is the latest complication over Turkey's role to have tested the patience of U.S. war planners, who want a more assertive Turkish contribution -- particularly in securing a section of border with Syria that is seen as a crucial supply route for Islamic State.

WNU editor: The U.S. knows that if Turkish fighter planes start to enter Syrian air space, it is a guarantee that they would then be shot down by Russian air-defences.

4 comments:

Si-vis-pasen- said...

I hope that the barbarian islamists nation of turkey will see that you can't enter in violation of Syrian sovereignty and say ,if you shoot down a warplane inside Siria is violation to Turkey sovereignty.

Anonymous said...

I hope they shoot down some turkish planes soon

Anonymous said...

Shoulder-Fired Surface-To-Air Missiles Spotted Aboard Russian Navy Ship In Turkish Strait

htthttp://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/shoulder-fired-surface-to-air-missiles-spotted-aboard-r-1746282521

Turkish-Russian relations are in the gutter since the downing of that attack jet, yet it is not exactly a relationship in which one party can just ignore the other. Both economies are intertwined and Russia has to pass through Turkey’s Bosphorus Strait in order to access the Mediterranean from the Black Sea. Turkey may have reminded Russia of this very recently, but it still does not explain why Russian sailors were donning shoulder-fired surface-air-missiles today during one of Russia’s amphibious ship’s transits.

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The ship shown in the photo is the Caesar Kunikov (BDK-64), one of the Black Sea Fleet’s Ropucha class landing ships. These vessels have been supporting Russia’s mission in Syria, moving troops, material and vehicles from Russia’s Black Sea ports to their dedicated port in Tartus, Syria.

As to why they would be pulling out man-portable air defense systems (MANPADS) during the transit by Istanbul is a total mystery. Sure the rhetoric has been hot between Russia and Turkey, but it is not as if Turkey would sink a Russian ship, especially one that it was escorting through its waters under the terms of the Montreux Convention.

Maybe there was some other perceived aerial threat that instigated this change in force protection. But surely if there were, the Turkish military would be on it, as that would threaten the stability of commerce using the strategic channel and any structure or vessel in and around Istanbul, the Bosphorus Strait and the Sea of Marmara, for that matter.

Russia is no stranger to applying MANPADS to military operations. They learned the hard way just how effective these weapons can be during their decade-long war in Afghanistan, where US-made Stingers brought down many Russian aircraft, turning the tide of the war. Twenty-five years later, the use of such weapons was the bane of the Ukrainian Air Force during the height of the fighting in eastern Ukraine. In the end they claimed many Ukrainian aircraft and aircrews.

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Maybe this show of force had something to do with the small fleet of NATO ships that are currently at anchor in Istanbul’s harbor. The destroyer USS Ross, along with three other NATO surface combatants, are said to entering the Black Sea soon. Combined, this will be the largest NATO force to enter the closed-in body of water since Russia’s invasion of Crimea almost two years ago.

The only thing that comes to mind is such a clear, albeit rudimentary line of aerial defense may have been put in place under concerns that an attempt may be made to board the ship via an aerial assault. This would be a dramatic and dangerous affair with no clear or known motive, but men on deck with MANPADS at the ready would certainly deter such an action.

We will keep you up to date as this mystery unfolds.

Si-vis-pasen- said...

Thanks for the Intel .
Anonymous