Friday, October 2, 2015

Russia strikes ISIS stronghold Raqqa in Syria, US-led coalition warns of escalation


Russia strikes ISIS stronghold Raqqa in Syria, US-led coalition warns of escalation
This photo uploaded on a jihadist website shows
ISIS extremists waving their black flag and riding
 vehicles in Syria’s Raqqa, which has become the de
facto capital of the group
.PARIS: Russia said on Friday it had bombed the Islamic State stronghold of Raqqa for the first time as President Vladimir Putin faced mounting criticism from western and Gulf leaders over his military campaign in support of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. 

Moscow countered that it had hit "an Islamic State (ISIS) training camp" and a command post in air strikes on Thursday near the jihadist bastion as the US-led coalition urged Russia to stop attacking Syrian opposition forces, saying it risked escalating the four-year civil war. 

"These military actions constitute a further escalation and will only fuel more extremism and radicalization," seven countries including Turkey, Saudi Arabia and the United States said in a statement. "We call on the Russian Federation to immediately cease its attacks on the Syrian opposition and civilians," it added. 

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said Thursday Moscow had targeted ISIS, the al-Qaida affiliate al-Nusra Front and "other terrorist groups". However, Turkey and several of its western allies have claimed that they instead hit moderate groups fighting Assad's regime. 


Russia's defence ministry said its latest air strikes had put an "ISIS command point out of action and the infrastructure used to train terrorists was completely destroyed," the ministry said. 

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group, said at least 12 ISIS jihadists from the Islamic State group were killed in the Raqqa attack. 

Putin held talks in Paris on Friday with the leaders of France and Germany, the first time he has met western leaders since Russia began its dramatic intervention in the Syrian conflict. 

Western nations including France say they are prepared to discuss a political solution with elements of the Syrian regime, but insist Assad must leave power. Putin, on the other hand, says Assad — Russia's long term ally — should stay. 

As many as 250,000 people have been killed in the multi-sided conflict, with four million more forced to flee the country.

 

A French diplomatic source said Putin and French President Francois Hollande had "tried to find common ground on their opinions on the political transition". 

Ahead of the talks, a Putin ally and senior lawmaker said the campaign of Russian air strikes will last for three to four months and will increase in intensity. 

"There is always a risk of getting bogged down but in Moscow they're talking about three to four months of operations," Alexei Pushkov, the head of the foreign affairs committee of Russia's lower house of parliament, told France's Europe 1 radio. Pushkov said more than 2,500 air strikes by the US-led coalition in Syria had failed to inflict significant damage on ISIS, but Russia's campaign would be more intensive. 

"I think it's the intensity that is important. The US-led coalition has pretended to bomb Daesh (a pejorative Arabic term for Islamic State) for a year, without results. If you do it in a more efficient way, I think you'll see results," he said. 

Pushkov refuted suggestions from western nations that Russian planes were mainly bombing rebel groups opposed to Assad. "The main target are the Daesh groups situated closest to Damascus," Pushkov insisted. 

Russia's defence ministry said its second day of bombing had hit five ISIS targets, including a command post in northwest Idlib province. However, a Syrian security source said Thursday the strikes had targeted Islamist rebels that fiercely oppose ISIS, and US-backed rebel group Suqur al-Jabal said Russian warplanes attacked its training camp in Idlib. 

Lavrov insisted Moscow was targeting the same terror groups as the US-led coalition, including ISIS and al-Qaida's Syrian affiliate the al-Nusra Front. 

"If it acts like a terrorist, if it walks like a terrorist, if it fights like a terrorist, it's a terrorist, right?" he said at the UN on Thursday. 

With the danger growing that Russian and US planes could collide or even engage militarily in the skies above Syria, the Pentagon and Russian officials held what the Americans said were "cordial and professional" discussions on Thursday in a bid to avoid accidents. 

The US-led coalition has been targeting ISIS for about a year and is carrying out near-daily air strikes in Syria. 

ISIS has taken advantage of the chaos to seize territory across Syria and Iraq, which it rules under its own brutal interpretation of Islamic law, and has recruited thousands of foreign jihadists to its cause. 

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