Putin says Turkey 'will regret' shooting down of Russian bomber

Putin says Turkey 'will regret' shooting down of Russian bomber

MOSCOW - Reuters
Putin says Turkey will regret shooting down of Russian bomber

AP photo

Turkey will regret "more than once" about its shooting down of a Russian bomber jet near the Syrian-Turkish border, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Dec. 3. 

President Vladimir Putin said Turkey's shooting down of a Russian military jet was a “war crime” and that the Kremlin would punish Ankara with additional sanctions, signaling fallout from the incident would be long-lasting and serious. 

Putin, who made the comments during his annual state of the nation speech to his country's political elite on Dec. 3, said Russia would not forget the Nov. 24 incident and that he continued to regard it as a terrible betrayal. 

"We are not planning to engage in military saber-rattling [with Turkey]," said Putin, after asking for a moment's silence for the two Russian servicemen killed in the immediate aftermath of the incident, and for Russian victims of terrorism. 

"But if anyone thinks that having committed this awful war crime, the murder of our people, that they are going to get away with some measures concerning their tomatoes or some limits on construction and other sectors, they are sorely mistaken." 

Turkey would have cause to regret its actions "more than once," he said, promising Russia's retaliatory actions would be neither hysterical nor dangerous. 

In his aggressive remarks unusual in diplomatic tongue, Putin said "it appears that Allah decided to punish the ruling clique of Turkey by depriving them of wisdom and judgment."

Putin said Moscow’s anger over the incident was directed “at particular individuals” and not at the Turkish people.