Vladimir Putin claims incident was ‘a stab in the back’ while Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan says ‘everyone should respect the right of Turkey to
defend its borders’.
Nato and the United Nations called for calm on Tuesday night in the
wake of the shooting down of a Russian fighter jet by Turkish aircraft
that drew warnings of “serious consequences” from Vladimir Putin.
The Russian president described the incident over Turkey’s volatile
border with Syria the first time a Nato member state has shot down a
Russian warplane since the Korean war in the 1950s as a “stab in the
back by the accomplices of terrorists” and claimed the Russian plane, a
Su-24 bomber, had been downed inside Syria while in action against Chechen militants.
In signs of deepening divisions between the two countries, Russia
warned its citizens not to go on holiday in Turkey and its defence
ministry cut off contacts with its Turkish counterpart. On Tuesday
night, its general staff confirmed that one of the pilots of the downed
jet had been killed and a marine died while on a rescue mission. The
fate of the jet’s second pilot was unclear.
Speaking before a meeting with King Abdullah II of Jordan in Sochi,
Putin said: “Our military is doing heroic work against terrorism … but
the loss today is a stab in the back, carried out by the accomplices of
terrorists. I can’t describe it in any other way. We will never tolerate
such crimes like the one committed today.”
In Ankara, the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan,
summoned his top generals to an emergency national security meeting to
decide Turkey’s next step. The Turkish government said the Russian plane
had been warned 10 times to turn back as it approached the border, but
had still flown into Turkish airspace for a few seconds. Ankara stressed
the incident had followed a string of Russian incursions in recent
weeks.
“The reason why worse incidents have not taken place in the past
regarding Syria is the cool-headedness of Turkey,” Erdoğan said. “Nobody
should doubt that we made our best efforts to avoid this latest
incident. But everyone should respect the right of Turkey to defend its borders.”
The US president and Nato both backed the Turkish version of events.
Barack Obama said Turkey had a right to defend itself, while the Nato
secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, said “assessments we have got from
several allies are consistent with” the Turkish account.
Stoltenberg said Nato stood “in solidarity with Turkey” and its
territorial integrity, but called for “calm and de-escalation”, urging
Ankara and Moscow to maintain contacts. The UN secretary general Ban
Ki-moon called on “all relevant parties to take urgent measures with a
view to de-escalate the tensions”.
Ban’s spokesman, Stephane Dujarric, told reporters: “He hopes that a
credible and thorough review will clarify the events and help prevent
future recurrences.” Turkmen
militiamen in Syria claimed to have shot the pilots as they descended
on parachutes from the stricken Su-24 bomber. The Turkmen rebels, who
are supported by Ankara, broadcast a video of what appeared to be a dead
Russian pilot.
The rebels also posted footage appearing to show one of their
missiles destroying a helicopter while it was on the ground, which they
said was a Russian aircraft sent to rescue the downed Su-24 crew,
although it was not possible to verify the footage.
A Russian military spokesman later said one of the rescue helicopters
had been forced to make an emergency landing after being hit by fire
from the ground and a marine on board had been killed.
Within hours of the jet’s downing, the Russian foreign minister,
Sergei Lavrov, announced the first reprisal, warning Russian tourists
not to go to Turkey, a potentially significant loss of revenue for
Ankara. Lavrov compared the terrorist threat there to Egypt, where a
Russian airliner was brought down by a bomb earlier this month, and he
cancelled a planned trip to Ankara on Wednesday.
The Russian defence ministry said on its website
that it considered the “actions of the Turkish air force as an
unfriendly act”, adding that it was “designing a complex of measures
directed to respond such incidents”.
In his remarks, Putin complained in particular that Turkey had
contacted its Nato allies before getting in touch with Moscow, “as if we
shot down their plane and not they ours”.
Ankara summoned an emergency meeting of Nato ambassadors in the North
Atlantic Council on Tuesday evening to share information about the
shoot-down. However, the Turkish government stopped short of calling the
meeting under the article 4 of the alliance’s founding treaty, which
would have represented a more formal response to a threat to a member
state’s territorial integrity and security.
Turkey said one of its US-made F-16 fighters fired on the Russian
plane when it entered Turkish airspace after having been warned on its
approach to the Turkish border through a 13-mile no-fly zone inside
Syria it had declared in July.
In a letter to the British ambassador to the United Nations,
currently serving as the president of the UN security council, the
Turkish government wrote: “This morning, two Su-24 planes have
approached Turkish national airspace in Yayladaga/Hatay region. The
planes in question have been warned 10 times during a period of five
minutes via ‘emergency’ channels and asked to change their headings
south immediately.
Disregarding these warnings, both planes, at an
altitude of 19,000 feet violated Turkish airspace to a depth of 1.36
miles and 1.15 miles for 17 seconds from 9.24.05 local time. “Following the violation, plane 1 left Turkish national airspace.
Plane 2 was fired at while in Turkish national airspace by Turkish F-16s
performing air combat patrolling in that area in accordance with the
rules of engagement. Plane 2 crashed onto the Syrian side of the
Turkish-Syrian border.”
Turkey had complained about previous alleged incursions prompting a visit from a Russian military delegation and an apology for one of the incidents. Sinan Ulgen, a former Turkish diplomat who is now the chairman of the
Edam thinktank in Istanbul, said: “This was an incident in the making
for some time as we have had some near misses in the past few weeks
where Turkey did not fully implement its own rules of engagement.
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