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Britain, Turkey urge Russia to change its strategy in Syria

By AFP - Oct 05,2015 - Last updated at Oct 05,2015

A man rests on pillows and cushions to be transported to another place in Tariq Al Bab neighbourhood of Aleppo, Syria, Sunday (Reuters photo)

DAMASCUS — Syrian President Bashar Assad warned the success of Russia's military intervention in his war-torn country was vital for the entire Middle East, as Moscow ramped up its bombing campaign Sunday.

Russian raids against what Moscow says are Daesh targets took place for a fifth day despite accusations in the West that the strikes are mainly targeting moderate opponents of the regime.

"The alliance between Russia, Syria, Iraq and Iran must succeed or else the whole region will be destroyed," Assad said in an interview broadcast by Iranian state television.

"The chances of success for this coalition are great and not insignificant," he added.

Russia said it had dropped concrete-buster munitions on new Daesh targets and destroyed command posts, storehouses and other infrastructure.

"From the air base of Hmeimim, the Russian aviation group is continuing to ramp up air strikes using high-precision missiles against the ISIS [Daesh] facilities in Syria," said the defence ministry, referring to Daesh.

Western and Gulf countries insist Assad must step down after presiding over more than four years of a civil war that has killed more than 240,000 people.

"If the solution was me stepping down I would not hesitate," a defiant Assad said in the interview.

Washington accuses Russia of seeking to buttress Assad and of targeting Western-backed moderate opposition and Daesh fighters alike.

British Prime Minister David Cameron urged Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday to "change direction" in Syria and recognise that Assad must be replaced.

"Tragically, what has happened is that most of the Russian air strikes, as far as we have been able to see so far, have been in parts of Syria not controlled by ISIL [Daesh] but by other opponents of the regime," Cameron told the BBC.

 

'What's the difference?' 

 

Putin's spokesman challenged the West's distinction between jihadist and other Islamist rebel groups.

Putin, who met the leaders of France and Germany in Paris on Friday, had "expressed a lively interest in the subject and asked what the difference between the moderate opposition and the immoderate opposition is", Dmitry Peskov said on television late Saturday.

"So far, no one really has managed to explain what the moderate opposition is."

Moscow is keen to turn the tables on the United States, suggesting it is Washington and its allies that often hit the wrong targets.

"When the conversation has turned to this, our president remembered," Peskov said of the Paris talks.

"He also remembered the wedding in Yemen and so on," Peskov added, referring to an alleged air strike that killed more than 130 people and for which a Saudi-led anti-rebel coalition denied responsibility.

An apparent US air strike on an Afghan hospital that killed 19 people on Saturday is also expected to play into the Kremlin's hands.

US President Barack Obama called Russia's dramatic intervention a "recipe for disaster", but pledged Washington would not be drawn into a proxy war.

 

'Grave mistake' 

 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, one of Assad's fiercest critics, reiterated his call for Moscow to change its strategy.

"The steps Russia is taking and the bombing campaign in Syria is unacceptable in any way for Turkey," Erdogan said.

"Unfortunately, Russia is making a grave mistake."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that while "military efforts" were needed in Syria, they would not be enough to end the bloodshed.

"We need a political process, which has had difficulties getting under way," she said on radio.

Putin has said Moscow needs to hunt down Daesh militants before they cross into Russia, which has a large Muslim population.

Moscow said on Sunday that over the past 24 hours its jets had made 20 sorties against 10 Daesh targets.

But the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based monitoring group, said that "warplanes, believed to be Russian, carried out many strikes against two villages in the north of Homs province".

One person was killed and others wounded, it said. Another six civilians were killed in apparent Russian strikes in Idlib, the observatory said on Saturday. 

Russia denies its strikes have led to civilian casualties and has instead hailed the results of the first three days of bombing, referring to "panic" among militants.

 

Raids ordered by Moscow are reported to have hit areas controlled by moderate groups and prompted a claim by US Senator John McCain that Russian jets had killed rebels trained and funded by the CIA. 

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