Russian parliamentary gives Putin the right to deploy troops in Syria
Putin wins parliamentary backing for air strikes in Syria
President
Vladimir Putin on Wednesday secured parliament's unanimous backing to
launch air strikes against Islamic State militants in Syria, paving the
way for imminent Russian military intervention in its closest Middle
East ally.Russia
has already sent military experts to a recently established center in
Baghdad that is coordinating air strikes and ground troops in Syria, a
Russian official told Reuters on Wednesday.
The Russian Defense Ministry said the center is used to share information on possible air strikes in Syria.
Putin's
spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, declined to say when Russian air strikes
would begin or whether they had already occurred. But Russia has been
steadily building up its forces in Syria and U.S. officials say such
strikes could start any time.
A
U.S.-led coalition has already been bombing Islamic State in Iraq and
Syria. France announced at the weekend that it had launched its first
air strikes in Syria.
Sergei
Ivanov, the Kremlin's chief-of-staff, said parliament had backed
military action by 162 votes to zero after President Bashar al-Assad
asked for Russian military assistance to help fight Islamic State and
other rebel groups.
"We're talking
specifically about Syria and we are not talking about achieving foreign
policy goals or about satisfying our ambitions ... but exclusively about
the national interests of the Russian Federation," said Ivanov.
MILITARY ACTION:
Russian military action would not be open-ended, he added.
"The
operations of the Russian air force can not of course go on
indefinitely and will be subject to clearly prescribed time frames."
He declined to say which aircraft would be used and when.
Approval
to use force from the Federation Council, the upper house of
parliament, did not mean Russian ground forces would be engaged in
conflict, he said.
"As our
president has already said, the use of ground troops has been ruled out.
The military aim of our operations will be exclusively to provide air
support to Syrian government forces in their struggle against ISIS
(Islamic State)."
Putin's spokesman, Peskov, said the decision
meant Russia would be practically the only country in Syria to be
conducting operations "on a legitimate basis" and at the request of "the
legitimate president of Syria".
The
last time the Russian parliament granted Putin the right to deploy
troops abroad, a technical requirement under Russian law, Moscow seized
Crimea from Ukraine last year.
Analysts
said Putin needed to get parliament's backing to ensure that any
military operation was legal under the terms of the Russian
constitution.
"If there will be a
united coalition which I doubt, or in the end two coalitions -- one
American and one Russian -- they will have to coordinate their actions,"
Ivan Konovalov, a military expert, told Reuters.
"For Russian forces to operate there legitimately ... a law was needed."
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