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POST TIME: 11 October, 2016 00:00 00 AM
Russia eyes permanent naval base in Syria
AFP

Russia eyes permanent naval base in Syria

Sailors from Russia's nuclear-powered "Pyotr Veliky" missile cruiser line up on parade in Syria's Mediterranean port of Tartus. RT File photo

AFP, MOSCOW: Russia’s defence ministry said Monday that the country was poised to transform its naval facility in the Syrian port city of Tartus into a permanent base.
“In Syria we will have a permanent naval base in Tartus,” Russian news agencies quoted deputy defence minister Nikolai Pankov as saying.
The announcement represents the latest move by Moscow to bolster its forces in Syria as tensions with the West have surged over Russia’s bombing campaign in support of President Bashar al-Assad.
The defence ministry said last week it had deployed its S-300 air defence missile system to Tartus and warned Washington it would halt any attempted US strikes in Syria.
Moscow also sent three missile ships to reinforce its naval forces off the coast of the conflict-wracked nation.
Pankov did not provide a timeline for turning the Tartus naval facility—which dates back to the Soviet era—into a permanent base.
He said the main purpose of the S-300s was to protect the Tartus naval facility.
Russian lawmakers on Friday ratified a deal with Syria on its “indefinite” deployment of air forces to the country, a move seen as paving the way for its jets to stay long-term.
The deal, signed between Moscow and Damascus in August 2015, allowed Russia to establish its Hmeimim airbase to launch operations last year.
Tensions have soared since Washington pulled the plug on talks with Moscow aimed at reviving a Syria truce deal, citing Russia’s brutal bombing campaign.
Russia on Saturday vetoed a UN draft resolution on stopping Russian and Syrian regime air strikes on the war-ravaged city of Aleppo, with the United States calling for a war crimes probe into the carnage.
Meanwhile, Syrian government forces kept up their blistering assault on rebel-held eastern Aleppo after a divided UN Security Council failed to agree on a truce to save the war-battered city.
Regime forces and their allies were advancing street by street in the eastern sector, which has been out of government hands since 2012.“Clashes on the ground as well as fierce air strikes went on all night and are continuing Sunday, especially in the Sheikh Said district” of eastern Aleppo, said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.