US worries over Russian missile system ---US official
Russia's announcement it is deploying its most hi-tech air
defense system to its base in Syria is raising "significant concerns"
for the US military, a United States official said Wednesday.
Russia says it is sending S-400 anti-aircraft missiles to
Latakia in northwestern Syria, in a move that comes after Turkey shot down a
Russian fighter jet in the increasingly crowded air space along the border on
Tuesday, reports AFP.
The S-400 missiles have a range of about 400 kilometers (250
miles), posing a potential threat to US-led coalition planes, and adding yet
another dangerous element to an already volatile mix of competing military
interests in Syria.
"It's a capable weapons system that poses a significant
threat to anyone," a US official speaking on condition of anonymity told
AFP. "There are significant concerns related to air operations in
Syria."
The United States has for more than a year been leading a
coalition that has flown more than 8,000 bombing runs against Islamic State
targets in Syria and Iraq.
Russia, too, is dropping bombs in Syria but these are mainly
in different parts of the country from where US and coalition planes are
flying.
Russia and the US-led coalition have agreed on a set of
guidelines aimed at ensuring pilots stay out of each other's way, but the
prospect of batteries of Russian anti-aircraft missiles arriving in Syria is
nonetheless raising eyebrows in the Pentagon.
Another US official, also speaking anonymously, said the
S-400s "shouldn't" affect coalition flights.
"We are not going to interfere with (the Russians')
operations and they are not going to interfere with ours. There's no reason for
us to be targeting each other," the official said.
He also noted that Russia in the past week has delivered
more than 30 T-90 and T-72 tanks to Latakia. It was not clear if these were for
use by the Russian military or will be provided to forces loyal to President
Bashar al-Assad.
On Tuesday, Turkey shot down a Russian aircraft along the
Syrian border, and rebels killed one of the pilots as he parachuted down after
ejecting from the plane.
A Russian rescue helicopter was also destroyed by rebels,
who apparently used a US-made TOW missile.
The prospect that Syrian rebels used US weaponry to kill a
Russian further raises concerns that the Syria conflict could devolve into a
proxy war.
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