Was The U.S. Involved In The Turkish Attack
Against The Russian Jet?
By Moon Of Alabama
Erdogan criticized Syria harshly on Tuesday for
shooting down the Turkish fighter jet, saying: "Even if
the plane was in their airspace for a few seconds, that is no
excuse to attack."
"It was clear that this plane was not an
aggressive plane. Still it was shot down," he said.Turkey
hardens military position after Syria downs jet June 27,
2012
A violation of one to two kilometers is
accepted as "natural" given the
speed of aircraft, the statement [by the the General Staff]
said. This year's violations of Turkish airspace lasted between
20 seconds and nine minutes, which showed "airspace
violations can be resolved by warning and interceptions,"
the statement said.
Turkey could have downed 114 planes for airspace violations:
Army June 25, 2012
Turkish fighter jets and military helicopters
have dramatically increased their incursions into Greek
airspace, according to a study based on data from the Greek
military, forcing the cash-strapped Greek air force to respond.
Turkey buzzes weakened Greece - In growing numbers Ankara’s
fighter jets test Greek territorial claims. - July 23, 2015
November 25, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - Turkey also regularly
violates Iraq's airspace by flying bombing attacks against Kurds
in north Iraq.
All this provides that yesterday's incident in
which Turkey shot down a Russian jet was not a case of an ordinary
airspace violation but a deliberate act to take down a Russian
plane. The surviving co-pilot of the Russian jet
insists that it neither flew through Turkish airspace nor was
warned of an imminent attack. As I
wrote yesterday:
This then was not legitimate air-defense
but an ambush.
I am not the only one who came to that conclusion.
Deep inside a McClatchy
piece a "western" diplomat sees it as an "orchestrated" event:
One Western diplomat based in Iraq, but with
extensive experience in Syria and Turkey, called the incident
“brazenly orchestrated and inevitable,” but asked that the
identification of his country not be used in the statement.
The Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov also came to
that
conclusion:
The downing of a Russian warplane in Syria by
Turkey appears to be a pre-planned provocation, the Russian
Foreign Minister said. Ankara failed to communicate with Russia
over the incident, he added.
“We have serious doubts that this act
was unintentional. It looks very much like a preplanned
provocation,” Lavrov said, citing Turkey’s failure to
maintain proper communication with Russia, the abundance of
footage of the incident and other evidence.
Several NATO ambassadors will have had the same
though when they
admonished Ankara over the act:
"There are other ways of dealing with these kinds
of incidents," said one diplomat who declined to be named.
The attack on the Russian plane was preconceived
on November 22 when a security summit was held with the Turkish
government under Prime Minister Davutoğlu and the Turkish Armed
Forces. Davutoğlu personally
gave the order to shoot down Russian planes. This, Turkey says,
was necessary to stop Russian bombing of "Turkmen" in north Syria's
Latakia near the Turkish border.
Many of the "Syrian Turkmen" fighting against the
Syrian people are from Central Asia and
part of the terrorist groups of Jabhat al-Nusra, Ansar Al Shams,
Jabhat Ansar Ad Din and Ahrar al Shams. Uighurs smuggled in from
China and fighting under the "Turkistan Islamist Party" label even
advertise their ‘little jihadists’ children training camps in
the area. The few real Syrian Turkmen work, as even the BBC
admits,
together with al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups. Their leader and
spokesman, one Alparslan Celik,
is a Turkish citizen from Elazığ.
The Turkish claim of defending "Turkmen"
in Syria is a sham. It is defending
mostly foreign Islamist terrorists.
Whoever planned the ambush on the Russian jet
miscalculated the reaction. NATO will not come to Turkey's help over
this or the next such incident. NATO countries
know that the Russian plane was hit within Syria. Russia will
not be scared into drawing back. Instead it massively
increased the bombing of targets in that area:
At least 12 air strikes hit Latakia's northern
countryside as pro-government forces clashed with fighters from
al Qaeda's Nusra Front and Turkmen insurgents in the Jabal Akrad
and Jabal Turkman areas, the British-based Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights said.
A Turkmen commander said missiles fired from
Russian warships in the Mediterranean were also hitting the
area, as well as heavy artillery shelling.
Russian jets also
bombed
insurgency supply trucks (video) in al-Qaeda controlled
Azaz, north of
Aleppo and just some two kilometers from the Turkish border. They
also bombed the Bab al-Hawa border crossing to Turkey. That is a big
FU to Erdogan.
The Russian missile cruiser Moskva with its
extensive air defense systems is now covering the area. Russia will
officially deploy two S-400 air defense systems to cover all of
north-west Syria and southern Turkey. Russia also has lots of
electronic wizardry it can (and will) apply. The preparation of
additional airfields is ongoing. There will be no outward military
revenge against Turkey unless it crosses into Syria. The "safe zone"
within Syria Erdogan dreams of would have to be won by defeating
Russian forces.
The 4.5 million Russian tourists who visited
Turkey this year will not come again. Turkish business in Russia,
mostly in the building industry and agricultural products, will
shrink to nearly zero. That the scheming to take down a Russian air
plane may have negative consequences for Turkey suddenly also dawned
to Davutoğlu who now
pretends that we wants to make nice again:
Turkey is not aiming to escalate tension with
Russia, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu said Nov. 25,
echoing President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan following the downing of
a SU-24 Russian jet the previous day.
“Russia is our friend and neighbor. Our
bilateral communication channels are open. But our security, as
for every friendly country, should be based on the principle of
respect under international law. It’s normal to protect our
national airspace,” Davutoğlu said, addressing party members in
parliament.
And it is normal for Russia to defend its ally
Syria. Against all enemies. By all means.
But back to Turkey's motive. The way this is
played one might believe that this was a indeed a lonely Turkish
idea to defend its immediate interests in Syria - the "Turkmen" as
well as the oil business Erdogan's son has with the Islamic State.
But there is also a bigger game going on and it is
likely that Erdogan has
a new contract and Obama's backing for this escalation. James
Winnefeld, the deputy chief of General Staff of the U.S. military,
was in Ankara when the incident happened. The cooperation
between U.S. and Turkish military and especially the air forces is
quite tight. It is hard to believe that there was no communication
about what was prepared to happen.
After the Islamic State attack in France President
Hollande attempted to create a global coalition against IS which
would include Russia and Iran as well as the U.S. led anti-ISIS
block. But such a coalition, which makes a lot of sense, would have
to agree to leave Syria alone and to help Syrian ground forces to
effectively fight the Islamic State. It does not make sense to
destroy the Syrian state and to just hope that the outcome would be
something better than an emboldened IS or AlQaeda ruling in
Damascus. That outcome is certainly not in Europe's interest. But a
global coalition is not in U.S. or Turkish interests. It would end
their common plans and efforts to overthrow the Syrian government
and to install a "Sunni" state in Syria and Iraq as a Turkish
protectorate.
The Russian jet incident decreased the likelihood
of such a coalition. Holland, visiting Washington yesterday, had to
pull back with his plan and was again degraded to parrot Obama's
"Assad must go" nonsense. Obama feels
emboldened and now pushes to widen the conflict in Syria:
The Obama administration is using the current
moment of extreme anger and anxiety in Europe to press allies
for sharp increases in their contributions to the fight against
the Islamic State. Suggestions include more strike aircraft,
more intelligence-sharing, more training and equipment for local
fighters, and deployment of their own special operations
forces.
...
While new contributions would be added to anti-Islamic State
campaigns across the board, the attention is clearly on Syria,
marking a shift in what began as an “Iraq first” focus when
Obama authorized airstrikes in the region last fall.
...
Obama, speaking beside Hollande on Tuesday, restated his
insistence that Assad is part of the problem, not the solution,
and that he must go.
The Obama administration is also preparing to
install the Turkish dream of a "safe zone" between Aleppo and the
Turkish border north of it.
Among several coalition priorities in Syria, the
United States has begun a series of airstrikes in an area known
as the “Mar’a line,” named for a town north of Aleppo in the
northwest. There, a 60-mile stretch to the Euphrates River in
the east is the only remaining part of the Syria-Turkey border
under Islamic State control.
The administration had delayed beginning
operations in the area because U.S. aircraft were needed in
operations farther east, and it has been uncertain that local
opposition forces would be able to hold the territory if it
could be cleared with airstrikes.
The increased Russian air defense and the likely
increase of its deployed planes will make those "safe zone" plans
impossible.
But Obama, in my conclusion, still wants to drag
NATO into Syria and wants to assemble enough forces "against ISIS"
to be able to overwhelm the Syrian government and its Russian
protectors. If that does not work he at least hopes to give Russia
the Afghanistan like "quagmire" in Syria he and other U.S. officials
promised. The again
increasing tensions with U.S. proxy Ukraine only help in that
regard.
But there is even more to that plan. Just by
chance (not) the NYT op-ed pages launch a trial balloon today for
the
creation of a Sunni state in east Syria and west Iraq. But that
(Islamic) State is already there and the "containment" strategy
Obama practices towards it guarantees that it will fester.
Obama continues his immensely destructive policies
in the Middle East with zero regard to the all the bad outcomes
these are likely to have for the people there as well as for Europe.
One again wonders if all these action follow from sheer incompetence
or from some devilish, ingenious strategic planning.
http://www.moonofalabama.org/