MOSCOW — Russia
sent warships to the eastern Mediterranean Sea on Tuesday, the Defense
Ministry announced, in what appeared to be preparation for a possible
evacuation of Russian citizens from Syria.
Russian officials began formulating plans during the summer for an
evacuation, but have delayed announcements, analysts say, to avoid
signaling a loss of confidence in President Bashar al-Assad, a longtime
strategic ally. Moscow staunchly opposes international intervention in
Syria and has blocked United Nations Security Council resolutions meant
to force Mr. Assad from power. Officials have repeatedly said that
Russia’s position has not changed.
However, Moscow has signaled in recent days that it sees Mr. Assad’s
forces losing ground, and that it is beginning to prepare for a chaotic
transition period. One immediate concern is the large number of Russian
citizens scattered across Syria, as a result of decades of intermarriage
and longstanding economic ties.
Late on Monday, Russian diplomats said that two Russian citizens had
been kidnapped by an armed group. The two Russians, evidently workers in
a privately owned steel factory, were seized as they traveled on a road
between Homs and Tartus and were held for ransom. An Italian citizen,
Mario Belluomo, was abducted with them, the Italian Foreign Ministry
said.
Then on Tuesday, the Russian Defense Ministry announced that a flotilla
of five ships — a destroyer, a tugboat, a tanker and two large landing
vessels — was being sent from Baltiysk, a port in the Baltic Sea, to
relieve ships that have been near Syria for months. At typical cruising
speeds for such vessels, the ships would arrive on station around the
beginning of January.
A naval official, speaking on the condition of anonymity as is
customary, told the Interfax news service that the ships were “on their
way to the coast of Syria for possible participation in the evacuation
of Russian citizens” to a Russian port on the Black Sea. The official
said that the mission had been planned swiftly but under total secrecy,
and that the timeline for the ships’ return to port “depends on the
development of the situation in Syria.”
Aleksandr I. Shumilin, a regional analyst and a foreign correspondent,
said that Russian leaders had avoided openly taking steps toward
evacuation until now, to avoid signaling that Russia was scaling back
its support for Mr. Assad, but that they also risked public anger if
Russians became targets of violence in Syria.
“It appears that some break has taken place, but whether that means a
change of policy, or a modification of policy, that’s hard to say,” said
Mr. Shumilin, who is head of the Middle East conflict analysis center
at the Russian Academy of Science’s Institute for Canada and the United
States. “The decision makers are now concentrating on humanitarian
questions, the protection of Russian citizens.”
The Syrian rebels have been moving aggressively around the capital,
Damascus, in recent weeks, and Mr. Assad’s forces have responded by
firing Scud missiles. On Tuesday, Syrian fighter jets bombed the Palestinian
refugee camp of Yarmouk for the second time this week, seeking to drive
back rebel forces that had moved in, The Associated Press reported.
Iran, Syria’s last ally in the region, appeared to remain firmly
committed to Mr. Assad. On Tuesday, Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir
Abdollahian of Iran told reporters in Moscow, “The Syrian Army and the
state machine are working smoothly.”
A planned visit by the president of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, to Ankara, the capital of Turkey, was suddenly canceled on Monday amid tensions between Iran and Turkey over NATO’s decision to deploy Patriot antimissile batteries on the Turkish border with Syria.
Iranian leaders, politicians and commanders of the Islamic Revolutionary
Guards Corps have denounced NATO’s decision on Dec. 4 to send six
batteries of American, German and Dutch Patriot systems to intercept any
Scud missiles that the embattled Syrian government may launch toward
Turkey.
Iran fears that NATO will use the batteries, which are staffed by about
1,000 soldiers and can also be used against aircraft, to set up a no-fly
zone and a rebel safe haven in northern Syria.
Iran’s top general, Hassan Firouzabadi, said at a meeting of senior
commanders on Saturday that the deployment was part of a Western plan to
start a “world war” and that Iran’s own ambitious missile program was
the real target.
“They signify concerns over Iran’s missiles and the presence of Russia
for defending Syria,” he said. “The sensible people in America, Turkey
and Europe must prevent this situation from getting out of control.”
The mobile Patriot systems could technically be used to intercept
Iranian as well as Syrian missiles. They are effective against missiles
at a range of about 12 miles, and against aircraft up to 100 miles.
Iran has threatened to fire missiles at Israel if its nuclear installations come under attack.
On Tuesday, Iran’s defense minister, Brig. Gen. Ahmad Vahidi, said
Israel was the winner in the Syrian conflict because it was witnessing
the destruction of an enemy — the Assad government — while the Syrian
people were being “manipulated” by “terrorists.”
Turkey’s foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, urged Iran to use its
political clout with Damascus to end the violence in Syria, instead of
making statements about the Patriot systems.
“Turkey and NATO have stressed over and over again that this system is
solely for defensive purposes,” Mr. Davutoglu told reporters. “Turkey
has the right to do what it wants in order to protect its territory. It
is time for Iran to give a clear message to the Syrian regime.”
No comments:
Post a Comment