Russia warns US against IS strikes in Syria


(MENAFN- The Peninsula)  Russia said yesterday that unilateral US airstrikes on Islamic State (IS) in Syria would be a crude violation of international law.

"The US President has directly announced the possibility of strikes by American armed forces against positions of the Islamic State in Syria without the consent of its legal government," said Alexander Lukashevich, a spokesman for the Russian foreign ministry.

"In the absence of an appropriate decision of the UN Security Council, such a step would become an act of aggression, a crude violation of the norms of international law," Lukashevich said in televised remarks.

On Wednesday Barack Obama said he was ready to launch air strikes on Islamic State fighters in Syria, expanding the campaign already undertaken against the jihadists in Iraq.

Lukashevich said Moscow welcomed the fact that Washington had acknowledged the threat from the radical Islamists.

"Better late than never, as they say," he said. But he accused the United States of "double standards" over its support for the opposition in Syria.

"While on the one hand helping the Iraq government to confront Islamist militants, Obama is once more asking Congress for $500m to support the Syrian armed opposition, which as a whole is little different from the radicals in the Islamic State," Lukashevich said. US Secretary of State John Kerry is to fly to Ankara today for urgent talks after Turkey refused to allow a US-led coalition to use its air bases to attack jihadists in neighbouring Iraq and Syria.

Turkey, Washington's key ally in the region and the only Muslim member of the core 10-nation coalition against the Islamic State, is also refusing to take part in combat operations against the militants, a government official said yesterday. Kerry will meet with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and its new prime minister Ahmet Davutoglu today in the hope of shoring up support for air strikes.

But on the eve of the visit, a Turkish official said, "Turkey will not be involved in any armed operation but will entirely concentrate on humanitarian operations."

"Incirlik will be used only for logistical purposes and humanitarian assistance", said the source, referring to a southern air base used for Nato operations in Iraq.

The decision echoes Turkey's refusal to act as a launch pad for the US invasion to oust Saddam Hussein in 2003, which triggered a crisis between the allies.

Turkey - and in particular the former foreign policy chief Davutoglu - has come under fire for indirectly encouraging the formation of the Islamic State because of its support of Islamist opponents of Syrian President Bashar Al Assad, and its loose control of its borders. But Ankara vehemently denies its strategy has backfired.

Kerry - who had talks in Saudi Arabia yesterday - is on a regional tour to drum up support from 10 key Arab nations and Turkey, following President Barack Obama's announcement of an offensive against Islamic State jihadists that will include air strikes in Syria.

The Turkish foreign ministry confirmed that Kerry would meet all of Turkey's key decision makers. "In these meetings, bilateral, regional and global issues on our joint agenda, as well as opportunities for further developing our relations and cooperation will be elaborated on," it said in a statement.

Turkey itself a victim

After a lightning advance, IS militants now control swathes of Iraq and much of northern Syria along the Turkish border.

Turkey sees itself a victim of the IS with militants holding 49 Turks hostage, including diplomats and children, abducted from the Turkish consulate in Mosul in Iraq on June 11. Ankara is therefore reluctant to take a stronger role in the coalition, fearful of aggravating the hostage situation.

"Our hands and arms are tied because of the hostages," the official said. "Turkey will not take part in any combat mission, nor supply weapons." US Secretary of Defence Chuck Hagel held closed-door talks with Turkish officials in Ankara on Monday where the government raised fears that weapons sent by Western countries to forces fighting IS in Iraq could end up in the hands of Kurdish separatist rebels.

The Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), branded a terrorist organisation by Turkey and its Western allies, has joined forces with other Kurdish units in the US-backed operation to halt the advance of IS militants in Syria and Iraq. "We have ongoing concerns which were conveyed to Hagel," the source said. Turkey's role in stopping the flow of foreign fighters to Syria and Iraq has also come under spotlight, but the official said the West had to share intelligence that would allow for their capture. "Turkey is a country that receives 35 million tourists annually," the official said.

"Unless the West shares intelligence, we cannot send back anyone just because we don't like their appearance. Intelligence sharing is our number-one priority." Turkey has thus far deported 850 foreign fighters since 2011, according to the official who strongly rebutted criticisms that Turkey was failing to secure its porous border with Syria and Iraq. "The West's Syria policy has collapsed and Turkey is being portrayed as a scapegoat," the official said. "It is a long, mountainous border which makes it difficult to protect. If we could we would prevent PKK fighters in Iraq from penetrating into Turkish soil."

Turkey has stepped up border security with surveillance towers, thermal cameras and night-vision systems, according to the official.


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