a speech to take note of...
Putin accuses Turkish leadership of ‘aiding terror’
Putin accuses Turkish leadership of ‘aiding terror’
Russian
President Vladimir Putin lashed out at “part of the leadership in
Turkey" during his annual address to the parliament, accusing
Ankara of having trade ties with terrorist groups in Syria and Iraq.
He also promised more sanctions for Turkey over downing of the
Russian jet.
Putin said Russia still cannot comprehend why the
downing of the plane happened.
“We were prepared to cooperate with Turkey
on most sensitive issues and go further than their allies. Allah
knows why they did it. Apparently Allah decided to punish the ruling
clique in Turkey by taking their sanity,” Putin said.
Putin stressed that Moscow’s anger over the
incident is directed at particular individuals and not at the Turkish
people.
“We have many friends in Turkey,”
he said. “They should know that we do not equate them and
part of the current Turkish leadership, which holds a direct
responsibility for the deaths of our troops in Syria,” he
said.
He added that the killing of Russian officers
would have long-term consequences for those responsible.
“We will not forget this aid to terrorists.
We have always considered betrayal the worst and most shameful act.
Let those in Turkey know it who shot our pilots in the back, who
hypocritically tries to justify themselves and their actions and
cover up the crimes of terrorists,” he said.
Putin said Russia would not resort to
saber-rattling to respond to the Turkish actions, but neither would
it limit itself to the economic sanctions it imposed since the
incident.
The incident with the Russian Su-24 bomber shot
down by Turkish warplanes near the Turkish-Syrian border has greatly
deteriorated relations between the two countries. Turkey insists it
acted in response to a brief violation of its airspace and was
justified in using lethal force. Russia insists no violation took
place and has accused Turkey of supporting terrorists in Syria.
The downing of the bomber resulted in the deaths
of two Russian troops, who were the first combat losses during the
two month-long Syrian campaign. The pilot of the downed plane was
killed by a pro-Turkish militant group as he was parachuting to the
ground. A marine was killed by militants when a helicopter dispatched
to rescue the bomber crew came under fire from the ground.
Putin’s address started with a minute’s
silence to commemorate the two troops. The widows of the dead
Russians were present at the event.
Putin stressed that the Russian operation in
Syria is aimed first and foremost at preventing fighters who went to
the Middle East from Russia and its neighboring countries from
returning home and bringing the threat of terrorist attacks to
Russian soil.
"They are getting money, weapons,
gathering strength. If they get stronger, winning there, they will
inevitably come here to sow fear and hatred, blast, kill and torture
people," Putin said.
Putin called on all nations that have pledged to
fight terrorism to join forces and abandon the notion that terrorist
groups can be used for country’s own goals. He stressed that the
rise of terrorism in the Middle East over the last few years was
caused to a large degree by foreign meddling.
“Some countries in the Middle East and North
Africa, which used to be stable and relatively prosperous – Iraq,
Libya, Syria – have turned into zones of chaos and anarchy that
pose a threat to entire world,” Putin said.
“We know why it happened. We know who wanted
to oust unwanted regimes, and rudely impose their own rules. They
triggered hostilities, destroyed statehoods, set people against each
other and simply washed their hands [of the situation] – giving way
to radicals, extremists and terrorists.”
Russia’s lost thousands of lives over two
decades of terrorist attacks and is still not safe from terrorist
attacks, as evidenced by the bombings in Volgograd in 2014 and the
bombing of a Russian passenger plane in Egypt in October, Putin
reminded.
“Breaking the bandits’ back took
us almost 10 years,” he said. “We practically
pushed the terrorists out of Russia, but we are still engaged in a
fierce fight against the remainder of the gangs. This evil still
comes back occasionally.”
Putin said the rise of jihadists in the Middle
East in our time is not unlike the rise of Nazism in the mid-20th
century, and that the world should learn from the mistakes of the
past, when a failure to act in time resulted in the loss of millions
of lives.
“We are facing a destructive barbaric
ideology again and we have no right to allow those new obscurants to
achieve their goals. We have to abandon all differences, create a
single fist, a single anti-terrorist front, which would act in
accordance with the international law and under the aegis of the
United Nations,” he said.
Putin was speaking on Thursday before the Federal
Assembly, a joint session of the two chambers of the Russian
parliament, plus regional governors and the cabinet. The annual
address is a traditional key policy report of the executive, which
focuses on domestic politics rather than international relations.
‘Business as usual’ with Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan is now over, Sergey Ivanov, the head of Putin’s
office, confirmed to RT after the Russian president’s address:
“Yes, it is definitely over. But
fighting terrorism is ‘business as usual’, as the Russian
president said,” Ivanov said.
The Turkish leadership “must acknowledge
that a tragic mistake was committed and to beg for [forgiveness], or
this leadership will not play any significant role in bilateral
relations between Russia and Turkey. We will not be able to have any
ties with Turkey under this leadership if it doesn’t change its
attitude,” Konstantin Kosachev, the chair of the State Duma
Committee for Foreign Relations, told RT.
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