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Russia Killed 28,000 Militants in Syria, Third of All Daesh Forces

Russia Killed 28,000 Militants in Syria, Third of All Daesh Forces
folder_openEurope... access_time7 years ago
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Since Moscow started its air operation in Syria on September 30 last year, the Russian Air Force had eliminated over a third of Daesh [Arabic acronym for "ISIS" / "ISIL"] fighters in the country, the deputy head of Russia's top security body revealed.

Russia Killed 28,000 Militants in Syria, Third of All Daesh Forces

"We estimate that at the beginning of our operation Al-Nusra Front and "ISIS" possessed about 80,000 fighters, of whom 28,000 [35 percent] have already been eliminated. This is [the result of] our actions together with the Syrian Army," Evgeny Lukyanov said at the VII international security summit being held in Grozny, the capital of Russia's Chechen Republic.

"Well, the [US-led anti-terrorist] coalition eliminated an additional 5,000 in two years," Lukyanov added.

"There were people predicting that it [Russia's anti-terrorist operation in Syria] would result in another Afghanistan or something like that. That would never be. There are only limited military plans," Lukyanov said, stressing that Syrians "must solve their issues for themselves."

The principle task of the Russian operation in Syria has been to force the sides to start a political dialogue, the Russian Security Council's top official stressed.

"Otherwise this [war] would have no end in sight."
"A deal is needed, and arrangements must be made through compromise," Lukyanov added.

The war in Syria has witnessed a turning point, Lukyanov also said.

"Only those politically motivated could deny that fact or interpret it differently."

However, judging by the reaction of certain parties on the Syrian battlefield and the aggressive actions of intransigent opposition, "they would like very much to wreck the settlement process."

The forces that oppose the peace process would do anything to torpedo attempts to mend the tensions, Lukyanov noted.

He noted that over 100 Syrian settlements had already recognized the armistice and are observing it.

Another sign of relief in Syria is Russia's withdrawal of most of its contingent and military aircraft, the Security Council official pointed out, stressing that the Russian military is "busy conducting an assessment of the situation."

While 59 armed groups had joined the reconciliation process in Syria, which began on February 27 with the introduction of a ceasefire, terrorist factions like Daesh and particularly al-Nusra Front continue their efforts to regain ground. The city of Aleppo, once a major stronghold of terrorists, remains a hot spot of al-Nusra activities.

The ceasefire does not apply to internationally-recognized terror groups such as Daesh and al-Nusra Front, which means airstrikes can be delivered against their outposts.

On Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and US Secretary of State John Kerry discussed via phone the possibility of joining forces to carry out attacks on militant groups breaking the ceasefire in Syria, the Russian Foreign Ministry reported. No conclusion on the potential joint effort was reached.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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