Syrian rebels claim they shot down jet

  • Article by: RIMA MARROUCH and CAROL , J. WILLIAMS
  • Updated: August 13, 2012 - 10:37 PM

If true, it raises questions about Syria's ability to control its airspace.

hide

Syrians inspected a hole made by a government airstrike in the town of Marea, about 20 miles north of Aleppo on Monday The battle for Aleppo is considered key in the country’s raging civil war.

Photo: Khalil Hamra, Associated Press

CameraStar Tribune photo galleries

Cameraview larger

  • share

    email

BEIRUT -- Syrian rebels claimed Monday that they had shot down a government fighter jet and captured its pilot, and videos posted on an exiled opposition website purported to show the Russian-made MIG-23 struck by machine-gun fire and engulfed in flames.

The Syrian Arab News Agency, however, claimed the warplane crashed due to "technical problems" during a training mission and that a government search operation was under way to locate and rescue the pilot.

The London-based rebel group that posted two videos on YouTube, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, identified the pilot as Col. Mohammed Suleiman. One of the video clips showed a grizzled man of about 50 in a sweat-stained blue shirt surrounded by armed rebels said to be holding him after he was captured in Mohsen, in eastern Dair Alzour Province.

If the rebels' claims are true, the downing of the MIG would represent a dramatic turn in the 17-month-old rebellion against Syrian President Bashar Assad. The embattled regime has used its air power against rebels as fighting has intensified around the key government strongholds of Aleppo and Damascus, and the small arms and limited rocket launchers in the rebels' possession previously had not proved a deterrent against aircraft.

A successful ground-to-air strike against a government warplane would also suggest that the rebels have acquired more sophisticated weaponry, likely from Persian Gulf countries including Saudi Arabia and Qatar that oppose Assad and have vowed to assist the rebels in ousting Assad and his minority Shiite Muslim-aligned Alawite regime.

In the first video posted by the rebels, machine-gun fire can be heard as the MIG soars overhead, then shouts of "Allahu Akbar!" (God is great) as the jet is apparently struck, bursts into flames and plummets.

The video reportedly was shot by an activist group called Revolutionary Youth on the Euphrates Land. The group claimed on its Facebook page that the plane was shot with a 14.5-millimeter machine gun by rebels from the Grandsons of Mohammed Brigade.

"Syrian rebel morale is high, but now it is an air battle. If that wasn't the case, we would have won long ago," said Massoud Akko, a Kurdish activist who served in a government air defense unit a few years ago.

Another rebel fighter with the Al Ghab Brigade in Hama, who identified himself only by the nickname Abu Ali, said the opposition forces recently raided government ammunition depots and acquired some antiaircraft missiles, "but it is still not enough. The situation has improved but we are fighting a whole army," he told the Los Angeles Times in an interview via Skype.

The pan-Arab news agency Al Arabiya posted the video of the exploding jet on its website, as well as a report that the captured pilot said he was being treated well in rebel custody and that he appealed to other Assad loyalists to abandon the regime.

Meanwhile, the Al-Jazeera news agency reported from an area of intense fighting near Aleppo, Syria's largest and most economically significant city, that rebels were trying to block the road to the coastal Latakia area.

  • related content

  • This image purports to show a Syrian plane coming down after catching fire over the eastern province of Dair Al-Zour.

  • Egypt's balance of power shifts to Morsi

    Monday August 13, 2012

    President may have reached a deal with a new generation of military brass.

  • get related content delivered to your inbox

  • manage my email subscriptions
  • share

    email

ADVERTISEMENT

Connect with twitterConnect with facebookConnect with Google+Connect with PinterestConnect with PinterestConnect with RssfeedConnect with email newsletters

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

 
Close