Posted on 02/28/2020 6:52:17 PM PST by Zhang Fei
Ankaras official death toll stood at 33 on the morning of Feb. 28, with 60 other troops wounded, among them 16 with serious injuries. It was still unclear whether any soldiers could be still trapped under the rubble. According to unconfirmed information obtained by Al-Monitor, the actual death toll is somewhere between 50 and 55.
What caused Russia to react so violently and provocatively while a Russian delegation was holding talks in Ankara in a bid to ease the tensions in Idlib?
The battlefield had grown highly explosive since Feb. 20, when two Turkish tank crewmen were killed in an air raid on Turkish M60 Sabre tanks in southern Idlib. The situation escalated further on Feb. 25-26, when amid ongoing operations by Syrian government forces, backed by Russian airpower, in southern Idlib SNA forces, supported by the Turkish military, launched a counterattack in the Nayrab-Saraqeb area, taking control of Nayrab and marching on to Saraqeb, which lies at the junction of the strategic M4 and M5 highways, while managing to block the M5 at several points only days after the road had been reopened.
Things came to a head on the morning of Feb. 27, when according to Russian media, Russian aircraft flying over southern Idlib became the target of intensive fire from man-portable air-defense systems, known as MANPADS, from Turkish military outposts in the area. Simultaneously, MANPADS and drone attacks reportedly threatened the Khmeimim base, Russias key military facility in Syria. Russian sources, contacted by Al-Monitor, claim that more than 15 MANPADS attacks, carried out directly by Turkish troops, targeted Russian and Syrian jets conducting air raids in southern Idlib after 1 p.m. that day. Some Russian aircraft allegedly suffered damage as they maneuvered to escape the fire. As the attacks on the planes and the Khmeimim
(Excerpt) Read more at al-monitor.com ...
Give war a chance
Thing is, they don’t *need* them. They have an unrestricted license to make FIM-92 Stingers and are still cranking them out by the thousand.
S400 batteries have yet to down a single plane. The “kill switch” is the Russian trainers - the turks cannot operate them independently for at least another year if then.
Ok, thanks. I do know that Israel doesn’t look forward to having to deal with them.
[Ok, thanks. I do know that Israel doesnt look forward to having to deal with them.]
“By the 80s, they were routinely racking up victories against Syrian aircraft and SAMs alike in Lebanon, and brushing aside their infantry and armor.”
I also remember the 82 war in Lebanon. The Russian S200s there got hammered by Israel...EXCEPT when manned by Russians (as opposed to Syrians) - for those, Israel still prevailed, but did lose planes in the process.
[I also remember the 82 war in Lebanon. The Russian S200s there got hammered by Israel...EXCEPT when manned by Russians (as opposed to Syrians) - for those, Israel still prevailed, but did lose planes in the process.]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disappearance_of_Ron_Arad
Turkey right now is a USSR of 1941 minus manpower and heavy industry. Erdogan purged everyone who are smart in the military years ago.
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