US says Russian attack helicopters on way to Syria
U.S. says Russian attack helicopters on way to Syria
updated 1:06 PM EDT, Wed June 13, 2012
At a Washington think
tank on Tuesday, Clinton said, "We are concerned about the latest
information we have that there are attack helicopters on the way from
Russia to Syria, which will escalate the conflict quite dramatically."
Clinton said the United
States has repeatedly asked Russia to stop arms shipments to President
Bashar al-Assad's regime, but Russia has said that anything it is
sending is not being used against the public unrest.
"That's patently untrue," Clinton said before making the accusation about the helicopter shipments.
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Clinton's comments were made at the Brookings Institution, where she was speaking alongside Israeli President Shimon Peres.
Intelligence officials refused to comment on Clinton's assertion. The Russian Embassy in Washington also would not comment.
But the Russian
state-controlled arms trader Rosoboronexport said the firm will fulfill
its arms contract with Syria, the state-owned RIA Novosti news agency
said.
"No one can ever accuse
Russia of violating the rules of armaments trade set by the
international community," Rosoboronexport Deputy CEO Igor Sevastyanov
said when asked about Russia's supply of mobile gun and missile air
defense systems to Syria, RIA Novosti said.
Sevastyanov added, "The contract was signed long ago, and we supply armaments that are self-defense rather than attack weapons."
Although a Pentagon
spokesman was unaware of a Russian helicopter shipment to Syria, Capt.
John Kirby told reporters Tuesday that al-Assad forces have been using
helicopter gunships against their own people, calling the attacks
"intolerable, unacceptable and just further evidence of the degree to
which they are willing to kill their own people for twisted ends."
On Monday, State
Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland called the helicopter attacks on
civilians a "new horrific tactic" that "constitutes a very serious
escalation" of the conflict.
Russia has been the
long-time principal supplier of arms to Syria since the days when it was
the Soviet Union. The weapons sales have more than doubled in recent
years. According to Congressional Research Service, Russia sold Syria
$4.7 billion in arms from 2007 to 2010, compared with $2.1 billion from
2003 to 2006.
Nuland said the
international community continues to press Russia to discontinue the
weapons sales. "We are all making the point in the international
community that they are on the wrong side with regard to this -- this
set of issues. We've had people in Moscow in the last week making these
points again and we will continue to do so," Nuland said.
Earlier this month,
Clinton said the continued supply of arms from Russia has strengthened
the al-Assad regime, despite denials by Russian President Vladimir Putin
that any munitions it was providing to Syria were being used against
its own people.
The Obama administration
is also being criticized for its relationship with a Russian arms
broker that is a major supplier of weapons to Syria.
Sen. John Cornyn,
R-Texas, sent a letter to Defense Secretary Leon Panetta on Monday,
criticizing the Department of Defense's decision to award an Army
contract to Rosoboronexport to buy helicopters for the Afghanistan
military. "I remain deeply troubled that the DoD would knowingly do
business with a firm that has enabled mass atrocities in Syria," Cornyn
wrote. "Such actions by Rosoboronexport warrant the renewal of U.S.
sanctions against it, not a billion dollar DoD contract." Cornyn asked
for an audit of the Pentagon's contract with the Russian company.
Human Rights First also
issued a statement saying the Army contract with Rosoboronexport is "out
of step" with U.S. policy to stop atrocities in Syria and called on the
American government to bar any U.S. entities, including contractors,
from doing business with the company.
End quote from:
http://www.cnn.com/2012/06/12/world/russia-helicopters/index.html
The really sad thing about all this is I think if you actually asked the Russian people whether they wanted attack helicopters in Syria massacring women and babies they would roundly say "No!"
So, maybe someone could promise that Russia could get it's Naval port which is what it really wants anyway in Syria and just let the Assad Government fall like Qaddhafi's did.
But, since the world is much more complicated than this we may be looking at the same kind of thing that started World War I or something like that. However, because of nuclear weapons the major powers can't let that happen. However, that means this will be another Rwanda massacre only with AK47's, shoulder fired rocket launchers and attack helicopters. This is really sick and getting sicker by the day!
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