The Pentagon has warned Syria
and Russia that the US is ready to shoot down their planes, which
Washington claims threaten American advisers in northern Syria.
The
warning came after US fighter jets tried to engage Syrian Arab Air
Force aircraft in Syria last week, but the showdown was avoided as
government planes left before the Americans arrived.
Pentagon
spokesman Captain Jeff Davis claimed on Friday the US fighters attempted
to intercept the Syrian planes to protect American advisers – a term
the US military often uses for its Special Operations Forces – working
with Kurdish forces after the Syrian government jets bombed the area.
On
Monday, another Pentagon spokesman, Peter Cook, said, "We would
continue to advise the Syrian regime to steer clear of those areas." Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook speaks to reporters on February 19, 2016. (Reuters photo)"We are going to defend our people on the ground, and do what we need to defend them," Cook told reporters.
"It's
not a no-fly zone," he said, adding that “the Syrian regime would be
wise to avoid areas where coalition forces have been operating."
When
asked about Russia, Cook said the US would also do the same with
Russian jets, which have been striking Daesh targets in Syria at the
country's request since last year.
"If they threaten US forces, we always have the right to defend our forces," Cook said. A
screen grab taken from footage provided by Russian Defense Ministry on
Nov. 2, 2015 shows a target hit during an air raid in Syria. (AP photo)Russia
launched its air offensive in Syria in September 2015. According to
analysts, the campaign has so far broken the backbone of Daesh and other
militants there, and has provided the Syrian government with an
opportunity to defeat the foreign-sponsored terrorist onslaught.
The
US and some of its Arab allies began their campaign in Syria
in September 2014 without any authorization from Damascus or a UN
mandate.
Since then, they have been carrying out airstrikes in the
war-torn country, but their air raids have done little to stop the
Takfiri group’s advances there. Smoke and flames rise over the Syrian town of Kobani after a coalition airstrike on Oct. 20, 2014. (Reuters photo)Davis
said Friday that two Syrian SU-24 attack planes attacked Kurdish forces
undergoing training with US Special Operations troops around the
northeastern city of Hasakah, but they had left by the time the American
jets arrived.
In response, the General Command of the Syrian Arab
Army said later in the day that Kurdish forces were "attacking state
institutions, stealing oil and cotton, obstructing exams, kidnapping
unarmed civilians and spreading chaos and instability.”
Since March 2011, Syria has been gripped by a foreign-backed militancy. Daesh terrorists still control parts of Syria and Iraq.
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