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"The fighting will become even more intense, and (Syria) will lose tens of thousands and, perhaps, hundreds of thousands of civilians,'' he warned. "If such a price for the removal of the president seems acceptable to you, what can we do? We, of course, consider it absolutely unacceptable.''
Many Russian diplomats view this latest development as a major setback in the Syrian conflict, arguing that the newly recognized coalition does not adequately represent the political will of the Syrian people.
"Recognition of the Syrian opposition as ‘legitimate’ authorities by the ‘Friends of Syria’ gives up on any attempts to find a political solution. The only option now is war," Alexei Pushkov, the State Duma Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman, wrote on his Twitter account on Thursday.
Pushkov then hinted at what could transpire in the event that the militants resort to violence against Russian consulate officials and civilians in the region.
"Syrian militants have threatened to attack the embassies of Russia and Ukraine in Damascus to ‘take care of’ the Russians. The US sends special operations forces in such cases," he warned.
The Associated Press @AP
BREAKING: Russia's Foreign Ministry denies diplomat said Assad losing control of Syria
Al Arabiya English @AlArabiya_Eng
#BreakingNews: Head of NATO's Syria committee says President Bashar al-Assad will be forced out of power
Originally posted by pheonix358
Syria has two main allies, Russia and Iran.
Neither share a border with Syria. Even if they wanted to assist with troops it will prove very difficult.
I think that Syria may indeed fall. But, I can tell you this, Iran will not fall. Russia and Iran both have coasts on the Caspian Sea.
Caspian Sea Flotilla
This will be a natural corridor protected by naval units and by Air force units.
The problem for both Russia and Iran is getting forces to Syria and that involves major ship movements having to go the long way around. They cannot act swiftly. I think as far as Russia is concerned this is the last straw. The fall of Syria will be the red line drawn in the sand.
edit on 13/12/2012 by pheonix358 because: sp
Originally posted by Trajan
Originally posted by pheonix358
Syria has two main allies, Russia and Iran.
Neither share a border with Syria. Even if they wanted to assist with troops it will prove very difficult.
I think that Syria may indeed fall. But, I can tell you this, Iran will not fall. Russia and Iran both have coasts on the Caspian Sea.
Caspian Sea Flotilla
This will be a natural corridor protected by naval units and by Air force units.
The problem for both Russia and Iran is getting forces to Syria and that involves major ship movements having to go the long way around. They cannot act swiftly. I think as far as Russia is concerned this is the last straw. The fall of Syria will be the red line drawn in the sand.
edit on 13/12/2012 by pheonix358 because: sp
Iran already has over 15,000 Revolutionary Guards in Syria (more by now, probably) and Russia had recently deployed around 500 marines and 12 APC's into their Tartarus base to defend Russian citizens (Not too sure on the number tbh)
Syria haven't deployed their full military either. Syria has around 300,000 active units and 400,000 reserve forces. Even if half the reserves don't deploy, the Syrian Armed Forces will still number over 500,000 men.
Syria won't fall without Foreign Intervention, with Russia and Iran both backing them.
Also, Turkey (where the main NATO thrust will be from I think) borders both Iran AND Russia. They move against Syria, and their country will crumple under the attacks from the 12th most powerful country (Iran, - GlobalFirePower.com) and the 2nd most powerful nation (Russia, same website).