Thursday, 28 June 2012

Turkey strengthens air defence at Syrian border - state TV

Turkish military trucks carry missile batteries on June 28, 2012 in the center of Hatay. Turkey is sending missile batteries and army vehicles to the border with Syria as a "security corridor", almost a week after the Syrian downing of a Turkish military jet, media reports said. There was no official confirmation of the reported military moves.

Turkish officials have confirmed deploying anti-aircraft batteries in the area close to the border with Syria. This is the reply to Syria downing a Turkish reconnaissance aircraft in country’s territorial waters and the shooting at another plane.

­Turkish state TV reports 30 military trucks, including air-defense systems in Hatay province bordering Syria.

Turkish state-run Anatolia news agency has reported armored vehicles have also been advancing to Sanliurfa, a province that protrudes into Syrian territory. The agency insists military garrisons along the Turkish-Syrian border are been beefed up with additional personnel.

The incident that downed a Turkish aircraft has put relations between Ankara and Damascus on a knife edge. Turkey insist its fighter jet entered Syrian aerospace by mistake and only briefly, refusing to accept it was shoot down over Syrian territorial waters. Syria insists it has violated nothing and presented part of aircraft’s tail pierced with anti-aircraft shells.

Reportedly, the Turkish aircraft could have been taken down by an anti-aircraft gun system. Such systems have a range limited to a few kilometers. If this information is correct, Turkish claims about the plane been downed outside Syria’s 12 miles (22 kilometers) territorial waters are questionable.

Ankara warned Damascus to keep its troops out of the border regions to avoid confrontation. On Wednesday Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zoebi said that probably Syrian air defense have mistaken the Turkish plane for an Israeli one. Both Turkey and Israel use American made fighter jets. The Minister said Damascus does "not want a crisis between Turkey and Syria."

Since the beginning of the Syrian conflict 16 months ago Ankara has repeatedly called on Syrian President Bashar Assad to step down. Turkey claims it is looking after up to 33,000 Syrian refugees who have fled the fighting between government troops and the opposition Free Syrian Army.

It is also alleged Turkey is a haven for members of the Syrian armed opposition. The militants are reportedly using Turkish territory to regroup and be armed by CIA officers who are present at Turkish-Syrian border. It’s alleged the officers are collecting intelligence data and distributing firearms to those groups of Syrian rebels they consider “clean”, by not having links with terrorist organizations like Al-Qaeda.

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