u s s ia n p l a n e sh o o td o w n Three months ago Russia sent planes,
attack helicopters and soldiers to
Syria. Vladimir Putin, Russia’s
president, declared that these forces
would support Syria’s president, B a
shir al-Assad, and his country’s army.
Currently, the Syrian army is fighting
against several opposition groups as
well as the Islamic State (IS).
On 24th November two Russian
Su-24 bomber planes were attacking
an opposition group in north west
Syria. The planes were flying very
close to the Syrian-Turkish border.
Two Turkish fighter je t aircraft were
close by. A missile fired by a Turkish
plane hit one o f the Russian bomb
ers. It burst into flames. The Russian
pilot and his navigator ejected from
the plane. Their parachutes opened
and they began to float down to the
ground. Soon afterwards the dam
aged Russian plane crashed inside
Syria and exploded.
The Russian airmen landed in dif
ferent places. Fighters from the oppo
sition group shot and killed the pilot
before he reached the ground. Rus
sian rescue helicopters took o ff from
a military base in Syria. They set out
to search for the Russian airmen. The
gunmen from the opposition group
fired at one helicopter and killed a
soldier on board. This helicopter was
forced to make an emergency land
ing. Later, soldiers from the Syrian
army managed to find the surviving
Russian airman and rescue him.
Russian Su-24 b o m b e r warplane, s im ila r to the one sh o t down b y Turkish fig h ter je t aircraft The shooting down o f the Russian
plane has caused a big argument be
tween Russia and Turkey. Soon after
the incident M r Putin spoke on R us
sian television. He was very angry.
M r Putin accused Turkey o f ‘commit
ting a crime’. Turkish officials insist
ed that the Russian planes crossed the
Syrian-Turkish border into Turkish
airspace. The Turkish pilots said that
they had warned the Russian planes
to change course ten times. However,
they also admitted that the Russian
bomber had flown inside Turkish air
space for only 17 seconds.
Russian air force officials insisted
that their planes were at least one
kilometre (0.6 miles) from the bor
der. The airman who survived the
attack was navigating the plane. He
claimed that he and the pilot had not
received any warnings from the Turk
ish j et planes. He also insisted that his
plane had not crossed the border.
Turkey is also involved in the
Syrian War. Like Russia, it opposes
the IS. However, it refuses to sup
port Syria’s president. It also backs
some of the opposition groups