Russia's
President Vladimir Putin yesterday defended its arms trade against criticisms
over its dealings with Syria, insisting only the United Nations could dictate
restrictions on arms sales.
Putin
defended Russia's right to trade weapons with whomever it wanted, without
mentioning Syria but in an apparent reaction to recent attacks from the West
over supplies to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime.
"We
operate on the premise that the only basis for limiting weapons supplies to any
country is UN Security Council sanctions," Putin said as he opened a
government meeting on military-technical cooperation.
"In
all other cases, no one can on any pretext dictate to Russia or any other state
with whom and how it should trade," he said, according to a transcript on
the Kremlin website.
This
week Turkey accused Russia of delivering "war equipment" to the
Syrian government on board a Syrian plane, after the Turkish authorities forced
the plane to land last week and seized the suspect cargo.
Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the cargo contained radar equipment and was
being delivered legally, demanding that it be returned to its rightful owners.
However
the incident led the US State Department to label Russia's Syria policy as
"morally bankrupt".
Putin
stood by Russia's current military-technical cooperation with Syria, which
falls outside of UN sanctions.
"One-sided
or collective bans and restrictions outside the framework of the UN Security
Council, especially ones that are politically motivated, are not norms of
international law," he said.
"We
intend to continue to develop such cooperation and carry out absolutely all the
obligations we take on." Russia has infuriated Turkey and its Western
allies by refusing to halt military cooperation with Syria, an ally dating back
to Soviet times, despite the raging conflict in which activists say more than
32,000 people have died since March 2011.
Moscow
has defiantly refused to take sides against Assad, and has slammed the West and
Turkey for making clear their support for the rebels battling his regime.
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