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POLITICS > Turkey sends Syria diplomatic note over jet

ANKARA / BRUSSELS - Reuters

Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu (R) leaves a meeting focused on Syria with army generals and other officials on Syria, in Ankara, on June 23, 2012. AP Photo

Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu (R) leaves a meeting focused on Syria with army generals and other officials on Syria, in Ankara, on June 23, 2012. AP Photo

Turkey has issued a diplomatic note to Syria over its downing of a Turkish warplane over the Mediterranean, asking Syria to find the perpetrators of the incident. 

"Turkey reserves its right to an official apology and compensation," the note said.

"We condemn the shooting of our airplane. We ask you to determine the perpetrators of the incident and inform us immediately," the note added. 
 
NATO envoys to meet Tuesday over downed Turkish jet


Envoys from NATO member states will meet on Tuesday after Turkey requested consultations over the downing of its military jet by Syria, a NATO spokeswoman said on Sunday.
 
"Turkey has requested consultations under article 4 of NATO's founding Washington Treaty. Under article 4, any ally can request consultations whenever, in the opinion of any of them, their territorial integrity, political independence or security is threatened," Oana Lungescu said.

"The NAC [North Atlantic Council] will meet on Tuesday at Turkey's request. We expect Turkey to make a presentation on the recent incident."

Turkey says to consult NATO allies over downed jet

Turkey said today Syria had shot down its military aircraft in international airspace on Friday without warning and declared it would formally consult its NATO allies on a reaction. Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, speaking some 48 hours after the jet was shot down near both countries' sea borders, told state broadcaster TRT the plane had been clearly marked as Turkish and dismissed Syria's earlier statement it had not known the plane belonged to Turkey.
 
He said the downed jet was unarmed and had been on a solo mission to test domestic radar systems and that the flight had no connection to the crisis in neighbouring Syria.
 
"Our plane was shot at a distance of 13 sea miles from Syria's border in international airspace," Davutoğlu said.
 
"According to the radar images, our plane lost contact with headquarters after it was hit and because the pilot lost control, it crashed into Syrian waters after making abnormal movements," he said.
 
"Throughout this entire period no warning was made to our plane."
 
The shooting down of the aircraft has added a further serious international dimension to the 16-month-old uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, that Turkey, along with other Western and Arab countries, has supported on the world diplomatic stage.
 
NATO Article Four

Davutoğlu said he would formally report the incident to the NATO military alliance this week under article four of its founding treaty, as well as to the U.N. Security Council.
 
"I have made instructions for a notification to be made within the framework of Article 4 at the NATO Council meeting in the upcoming week," Davutoğlu said.
 
"In addition, a notification will be made to the U.N. Security Council in light of the information we have regarding the background to this aggressive attitude," he said.
 
NATO's article four provides for states to "consult together whenever, in the opinion of any of them, the territorial integrity, political independence or security of any of the parties is threatened".
 
It stops short of the explicit mention of possible armed responses cited in article five.
 
A NATO spokeswoman said envoys from member states would meet on Tuesday following Turkey's request for consultations. 
 
Syria has said the plane was flying fast and low, just one kilometre off the Syrian coast when it was shot down. It had been tracked at first as an unidentified aircraft and its Turkish origin established later.
 
Davutoğlu dismissed Syria's explanation, saying the plane's identity was clear for all to see and said Damascus was transmitting "disinformation" to the Turkish public.
 
He said the downed jet had briefly crossed into Syrian airspace 15 minutes before it was shot down but had then also received no warning from Syria. He said such flights often cross into other countries' airspace.
 Davutoglu said the search for the missing pilots was continuing in coordination with the Syrian authorities, but said it could not be described as a joint operation.
 Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan would make a statement at his ruling party's meeting in parliament on Tuesday, the foreign minister added. He said Ankara had begun to implement its response to the incident, but gave no details of the plan. 
 British Foreign Minister William Hague condemned Syria's downing of the Turkish jet, calling it an "outrageous act".
 




June/24/2012

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dudu mohammed

6/24/2012 11:38:02 PM

nice move turkey but you need to keep it clean and neat

Gandalf thewhite

6/24/2012 4:19:44 PM

Border patrols by unarmed Turkish aircraft are a perfectly reasonable precautionary reponse to previous Syrian aggression. Similar missions must have been flown many times before. The next move is entirely up to Turkey - no one else will act unilaterally on their behalf. They could choose to do nothing, which shows the "trap" argument to be false. Since they are going to brief Nato under chapter 4 they want a more substantial response. But that's 100% their decision

Rimon Tree

6/24/2012 3:02:39 PM

@ Blue Dotterel Are you intending to tell me that the Turkish Gov is not smart enough to realize a NATO trap? If that is so you should urgently vote it off!

Gandalf thewhite

6/24/2012 2:38:44 PM

Consider the reaction if the British were to shoot down a Bear Foxtrot off Scotland - where they fly regularly. The Russians would consider it an act of war and rightly so. The shooting down of the Turkish reconnaissance plane is also an act of war. The Turkish government should react decisively but proportionately. A "strongly worded protest" won't do. Failure to act will result in further Syrian violations, much as South Korea found with the sinking of the Cheonan.

Ioannis F.

6/24/2012 1:47:53 PM

the jets were spying on cyprus national guard excersise and returning back...this is what they dont tell you

Blue Dotterel

6/24/2012 1:44:00 PM

Rimon, NATO set the trap. Who do you think Turkey's three stooges are working for?

MR Somalia

6/24/2012 1:42:14 PM

The IC should not listen to Turkey because it shares common border with Syria and plans to exploit the current Syria crisis to occupy or secede territories of Syria. A country with such interest should not be given the green light to hijack the Syrian cause. Its clear to everyone it already has interest in Syria and is destabilizing the country. Turkey wants to expand into Syria, Greece, Armenia and other regions including Bosnia..laying the grounds for another Ottoman style expansionism.

MR Somalia

6/24/2012 1:20:31 PM

Not sure why Turkey is behaving this way. Every day PKK kill dozens of Turkish soldiers, how come it keeps quiet about that but now its acting like it is already the world's leading superpower and Turkish scrap metals purchased from the US have more value than our holy Quran? Relax and just stop flying over Syrian airspace. Turkey will anger regional players including Gulf Arabs.

MR Somalia

6/24/2012 1:17:35 PM

Turkey is being used as a launch pad for another illegal war. The Europeans and US should be worried about recovering their economies and providing jobs for their citizens while acting like heroes in places no one wants them. America has more than 17 million people that are starving yet it acts like all is okay at home. Most of their cities have turned to resemble war zones just visit Philly, Detroit, Chi...Turkey is the new snitch replacing Pakistan in a new front.

Rimon Tree

6/24/2012 12:49:28 PM

Now it becomes clear (actually has always been) what PM and FM are up to! I dearly hope NATO dos not fall into that trap or the whole region will be set ablaze! I understand Turkeys wish to get rid of that conflict, but this is certainly not the right way to do it!
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