NATO: Patriot missile battery operational on Syrian border
updated 1:04 PM EST, Sat January 26, 2013
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: At least 96 killed on Saturday in Syria, the opposition says
- The missile battery is now operational in Turkey along the Syrian border
- It is the first of six planned missile batteries for Turkish cities
- A senior Iranian official says an attack on Syria would be seen as a strike on Iran
The other five batteries, which NATO says are to be for defensive purposes only, are expected to be in place in coming days.
NATO foreign ministers
decided in December to deploy the batteries after Syria launched Scud
missiles near the Turkish border. And in October, errant Syrian
artillery shells hit the Turkish border town of Akcakale.
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The missile battery that
is now operational is in the city of Adana. Patriot systems will also be
deployed to help protect the Turkish cities of Kahramanmaras and
Gaziantep, NATO said.
Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said this month that the missile batteries will stay only as long as there is a threat.
In Syria, at least 96
people were killed across the country Saturday, according to the Local
Coordination Committees for Syria, a network of opposition activists.
Thirty-seven of the deaths were in Aleppo province, 29 in Damascus and
its suburbs, and 18 in Homs province.
The group reported fierce
shelling by the regime in the Damascus suburbs. Injuries were reported
after aircraft dropped cluster bombs near Aleppo, the group said.
Also Saturday, a senior
Iranian official said an attack on Syria would be regarded as a strike
against Iran and its allies, according to the Mehr News Agency.
Ali Akbar Velayati, a
senior advisor to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran,
also praised Syria's logistical support for the Lebanese Shiite group
Hezbollah, which the United States lists as a terrorist organization.
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