US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter said Thursday Russia
will soon begin to suffer casualties after dramatically
expanding its military support for long-time ally, Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad.
“This will have consequences for Russia itself which is
rightly fearful of attacks … in coming days, the Russians
will begin to suffer from casualties,” Carter said at a NATO
defence ministers meeting in Brussels dominated by the
Syrian crisis.
The secretary told reporters that Russia was backing the
wrong horse in Syria and urged President Vladimir Putin to
sign up to the US programme of a future without Assad.
Worse still, Moscow was reckless in its military
commitment, risking clashes with US and other planes
targeting Islamic State (IS) jihadists in Syria.
“They have shot cruise missiles from a ship in the Caspian
Sea without warning; they have come within just a few miles
(kilometres) of one of our unmanned aerial vehicles,” Carter
said.
“They have initiated a joint ground offensive with the
Syrian regime, shattering the facade that they are there to
fight ISIL,” he added, using another name for Islamic State.
Damascus announced Thursday it had launched a “vast
offensive” to wrest back territory from rebel forces the day
after Russia launched a series of unprecedented cruise
missile attacks from ships in the Caspian Sea.
NATO diplomatic sources said Moscow had given no
advance warning of the missile strikes which came as a
complete surprise.
A Syrian general said the Russian intervention had
weakened IS and other opponents of Assad but Washington
says that more than 90 percent of Moscow’s strikes have
targeted the moderate opposition backed by the West.
Russia has justified its intervention in Syria as part of global
efforts to fight “terrorists” and also to target Russian
jihadists who may one day attack their own country.


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