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Damascus needs to ‘pay’ for an attack on a Turkish military jet in international waters amid growing world pressure for action against Syria

Before announcing Turkey’s roadmap over Syria’s downing of a Turkish jet, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan visits main opposition leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu and other opposition leaders to inform them about the attack, in a rarely seen move in Turkish politics. AA photo

Before announcing Turkey’s roadmap over Syria’s downing of a Turkish jet, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan visits main opposition leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu and other opposition leaders to inform them about the attack, in a rarely seen move in Turkish politics. AA photo

Turkey has found out that the order to down a Turkish jet was given by the Bashar al-Assad administration, while a ranking Turkish source said the Syrian regime “should pay” for the attack.

According to radar traces provided by the chief of General Staff, the Turkish F4 was downed 13 nautical miles off the Syrian coast in international waters but crashed in Syrian territorial waters. The graphics underline that the Turkish jet unintentionally violated Syrian airspace at 11.42 for five minutes, only 16 minutes before contact was lost with the jet. At 11.44 Turkish radars informed the jet that it entered into Syrian airspace and told it to leave as soon as possible.

There are serious indicators that the political order to down the Turkish jet came from Damascus in light of Turkish intelligence’s interception of 16 minutes of radio communication between Syrian military officials. The radio communication also shows that Syrian officials knew perfectly that the plane had a Turkish flag. A ranking Turkish source said Syria should pay for shooting down a Turkish military plane, adding Turkey would stay within the boundaries of international law. But all options are on the table, and yesterday’s meetings between Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and opposition leaders are an indicator of that, the source said.

Breaking its silence about the incident yesterday, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu provided detailed information on how the incident took place and accused of Syria misinforming the international community.

“It was a routine training flight and undertaking a national radar system test in respect of national security over recent developments on the Mediterranean coast. Our plane was unarmed and was performing a solo flight. Its flight was not whatsoever in a hostile one. To consider this flight as a threat is either an indication of bad intentions or amateurishness,” Davutoğlu said.

NATO to meet tomorrow

Syrians were aware of such flights, Davutoğlu added, underlining that the mission and identification codes were not hidden. “The Syrians knew full well that it was a Turkish military plane and the nature of its mission,” he said. “We are walking on a very thin line. It’s a very hard process. We will take definitive steps but will not be acting impulsively. Our acts will be within the boundaries of international law,” Davutoğlu said.

He also said Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan would introduce Turkey’s final position on Syria in a speech tomorrow after discussing the matter at a Cabinet meeting today. “Turkey is not a country making sudden and unrestrained reactions,” the minister said, adding that Ankara would act on the basis of international law reserving all its rights. “No one should try to test the capacity of Turkey.”
The Turkish foreign minister said the government was acting in the framework of an action plan the implementation of which would be scheduled along a certain timeline. In the first phase, Turkey launched a massive campaign to rightly inform the international community, in a move to challenge Syrian assertions that the incident took place in Syrian airspace. As a member of the NATO, Turkey called the alliance for a meeting under Article 4 of the NATO treaty on Tuesday. This article stipulates consultative meetings if any member country thinks that its territorial integrity, political independence or security is under threat. Turkey will make a comprehensive representation of the incident at the meeting, to be held at the level of permanent representatives.

Protest note issued against Syria

Likewise Turkey is also planning to bring this issue before the United Nations. The Turkish Foreign Ministry already sent letters to the term presidents of both the U.N. General Assembly and Security Council. Ambassadors from the Arab League, European Union and NATO countries were invited to the Foreign Ministry on June 24 for detailed information on how the incident occurred.

In the meantime, Turkey issued a strongly worded note of protest against Syria on June 23. The note was delivered to Syria’s consul general based in Istanbul and accused Damascus of aggression against Turkey, the Hürriyet Daily News has learned. It also underlined that it reserved its rights to compensation in the light of international law.

According to the diplomats, Iran would play a key role in this process to convince Syria to issue a formal apology and pay compensation to Turkey. In a phone conversation with Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akhbar Salahi, Davutoğlu requested support from Tehran. He also asked Salehi and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to provide any additional information they have. Russia has a naval base in northern Syria. The Turkish foreign minister said this attack against a Turkish jet demonstrated that the instability inside Syria had begun to spread to the region but that Ankara was not linking the two issues.

Syria: Accident, not assault

“Syria was merely exercising its right and sovereign duty and defense,” Syrian foreign ministry spokesman Jihad Makdissi was quoted as saying yesterday in Al-Watan, a pro-government daily. “There is no enmity between Syria and Turkey, but political tension (exists) between the two countries.” “What happened was an accident and not an assault as some like to say, because the plane was shot while it was in Syrian airspace and flew over Syrian territorial waters,” Makdissi said.

June/25/2012

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Mister Brown

6/25/2012 9:23:50 PM

if i was mr. erdogan i would retail this with war! because this syrian acts are a declaration of war. i would declare war on syria and invade that country with tanks and infantry after bombing it. a blitzkrieg movement would have success within 14 days. by promising russia to declare their bases as neutral and to allow the russians to occupy parts of the coastline and giving them the assurance that russia wouldnt loose any influence there after a change of the government, russia could accept it

Ed Frias Ed Frias

6/25/2012 8:49:41 PM

Chas, because if Turkey attacks Syria, it might bring Russia into this war to help their ally Assad. Thats why Turkey is being very deliberate.

Aslam Benli

6/25/2012 6:13:00 PM

They just opened fire against a Turkish rescue plane. Mr. Erdoğan must teach Mr. Bashar al-Assad to show respect. I agree with Vedos: If Turkey lets this attack go with no response, it will send a clear signal to Syria that Turkey and thus NATO are bluffing, and we all know what happened when Syria believed NATO was bluffing before, mass attacks on Syrian civilians. Turkey MUST show a strong hand. They might pay for the plane, but how are they going to pay for Turkish lives and blood?

Thessalonian

6/25/2012 3:38:41 PM

ilker avni wrote, "Turkey will teach Assad a lesson,we will swallow up Syria like a kebab..." Turks better be careful before swallowing things like Syria. It may cause you a case of severe Russian indigestion. Regards

US Observer

6/25/2012 3:36:11 PM

@ ilker, of your statement, I have no doubt. I understand Turkey's superiority militarily. You do need to read what Somalia said again though; he was saying Turkey is the aggressor and Syria the victim of Turkish provocation.

US Observer

6/25/2012 2:06:50 PM

Appeasement is not a successful long term strategy, in fact, appeasement is what led to 9/11 in the U.S. and allowed global terrorism to expand as it did. Look at Iran and N Korea. All the sanctions and embargos are worthless. Nations still deal with Iran for oil and still send food to N. Korea. We are the fools in their eyes. Watch what happens to the Syrian people the next few weeks if there is no reaction. NATO needs to establish a buffer and have a presence there.

ilker avni

6/25/2012 1:51:04 PM

@ US Observer Turkey will teach Assad a lesson,we will swallow up Syria like a kebab,one army general said it would take less than three days to take Syria without any nato help. If a little nation like israel can defeat the Syrians twice then it will be a slice of cake even for Turkey.@Somalia at last you managed to post some sense your right the aggressor is Syria and they will pay.Time for the mehmets to shine they marching boots and sharpen they baynets.

Hasan Halis Altun

6/25/2012 1:33:00 PM

I think there is a problem about news....Turks has "never accept money" and anything like this...you have to pay this with your blood İf you wont pay Turks gets this themselve...Please look Turks History!Also this is same for Turkish PM.In past He said we had to be good relations with our neighbor countries and he solved more problems with them but nowadays especially he makes problems with neighbors nobady understand his political lines...and I am sure that also he has to pay these at election

Rimon Tree

6/25/2012 10:00:44 AM

Joke of the day: “Turkey is not a country making sudden and unrestrained reactions,” Actually she is known just for that!

vedos mick

6/25/2012 7:56:50 AM

If Turkey lets this attack go with no response, it will send a clear signal to Syria that Turkey and thus NATO are bluffing, and we all know what happened when Syria believed NATO was bluffing before, mass attacks on Syrian civilians. Turkey MUST show a strong hand at this critical juncture or risk embolding the Assad regime all the more.
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