scorecard
  1. Home
  2. Military & Defense
  3. Syria reportedly shoots down a Russian plane on accident while fending off an Israeli missile strike

Syria reportedly shoots down a Russian plane on accident while fending off an Israeli missile strike

David Choi   

Syria reportedly shoots down a Russian plane on accident while fending off an Israeli missile strike
Defense2 min read

syria missile strike

Hassan Ammar/AP Photo

Damascus skies erupt with surface-to-air missile fire as the US launches an attack on Syria targeting different parts of the Syrian capital, April 14, 2018.

  • US military officials believe Syrian forces accidentally shot down a Russian aircraft, according to a CNN report.
  • Russia also announced it had lost contact with an IL-20 aircraft carrying 14 service members.
  • Syrian forces reportedly responded to a number of Israeli missiles that were launched towards the city of Latakia, when it accidentally shot the Russian maritime patrol aircraft.

  • Syria, Russia's ally in a prolonged proxy war in the region, previously claimed its air defenses "intercepted a number" of the missiles headed towards the city.

US military officials believe Syrian forces accidentally shot down a Russian aircraft, according to a CNN report published on Monday.

Syrian anti-aircraft artillery reportedly responded to a number of Israeli missiles that were launched towards the coastal city of Latakia when it accidentally shot the Russian maritime patrol aircraft, according to a US military official cited in the report.

Syria, Russia's ally in a prolonged proxy war in the region, claimed its air defenses "intercepted a number" of the missiles headed toward the city, Reuters reported on Monday, citing state-media.

Russia's defense ministry also announced it had lost contact with an IL-20 aircraft carrying 14 service members, Syria's state-run media reported. Russia's presence in Latakia includes a large naval base, which was reportedly under attack by an unclaimed missile strike that Syria alleges to have come from Israel.

Although Israeli Defense Forces also declined to comment on the missile strikes, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that his country will be "taking action to prevent our enemies from arming themselves with advanced weaponry."

Russia and the Syrian regime have previously boasted about their air defense capabilities. After an airstrike in which US and its allies fired over 100 missiles towards suspected chemical weapons facilities in April, Russian forces claimed the "high-effectiveness" of Russian-supplied weapons and "excellent training of Syrian servicemen" had shot down 71 missiles.

Russia's claim was contradicted by US reports that said Syria's air defenses were "largely ineffective" in response to its "precise and overwhelming" strikes.

"The Syrian response was remarkably ineffective in all domains," US Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie said at the time.

READ MORE ARTICLES ON


Advertisement

Advertisement