When Vladimir 
Putin announced the withdrawal of most of Russia's military contingent 
from Syria there was an expectation that the Yauza, a Russian naval 
icebreaker and one of the mission's main supply vessels, would return 
home to its Arctic Ocean port. Instead,
 three days after Putin's March 14 declaration, the Yauza, part of the 
"Syrian Express", the nickname given to the ships that have kept Russian
 forces supplied, left the Russian Black Sea port of Novorossiysk for 
Tartous, Russia's naval facility in Syria. Whatever it was carrying was heavy; it sat so low in the water that its load line was barely visible. Its
 movements and those of other Russian ships in the two weeks since 
Putin's announcement of a partial withdrawal suggest Moscow has in fact 
shipped more equipment and supplies to Syria than it has brought back in
 the same period, a Reuters analysis shows. It
 is not known what the ships were carrying or how much equipment has 
been flown out in giant cargo planes accompanying returning war planes.  But
 the movements - while only a partial snapshot - suggest Russia is 
working intensely to maintain its military infrastructure in Syria and 
to supply the Syrian army so that it can scale up again swiftly if need 
be.   Putin has not detailed what 
would prompt such a move, but any perceived threat to Russia's bases in 
Syria or any sign that President Bashar al-Assad, Moscow's closest 
Middle East ally, was in peril would be likely to trigger a powerful 
return.    Russia operates an air 
base in Hmeymim and a naval facility at Tartous. Putin has said Russia 
will keep both and that they will need to be well protected.  "Since
 the main part of the force de facto stayed there, there is no reason to
 reduce the traffic," said Mikhail Barabanov, a senior research fellow 
at the Moscow-based CAST military think tank. "Supplies for the Syrian 
army remain significant as well."  Moscow has not revealed the size of its force in Syria, nor has it given details of its partial withdrawal. Reuters
 has calculated that around half of Russia's fixed-wing strike force 
based in Syria flew out of the country in the days after the partial 
draw down was made public. The precise number of planes Russia had was 
secret, but analysis suggested it had about 36 fixed-wing military jets 
there.   On Monday, state TV showed three heavy attack helicopters being flown out of Syria along with some support staff.  NAVAL FIREPOWER But
 an examination of shipping data, official information, tips from 
maritime security sources and photographs from bloggers of Russian ships
 passing the Bosphorus strait en route from the Black Sea to the 
Mediterranean, shows no signs that the "Syrian Express" is being wound 
down. A Reuters analysis of the 
same data shows Russia is also likely to have replaced any warships that
 have left the Mediterranean with new ones, ensuring its naval firepower
 there remains undiminished. That means its ships are within easy reach 
of Syria's coast and can protect cargo vessels. It also gives Moscow the
 option of firing cruise missiles from the sea. Russia
 appears to have more than a dozen military vessels in the 
Mediterranean, including the Zeleniy Dol warship equipped with 
terrain-hugging Kalibr cruise missiles which are accurate to within 
three meters, according to Russian state media and the database of 
Bosphorus Naval News, a Turkish online project. Moscow is likely to maintain that strength, said CAST's Barabanov. "Russia
 doesn't have too many ships that it can keep in the Mediterranean. The 
role of the force was to ensure the activity of the 'Syrian Express' and
 to demonstrate it to the West and, later, to Turkey." The Russian 
defense ministry did not reply to questions about what the Russian navy 
was doing in the Mediterranean or whether there were plans to reduce its
 presence. Russia's military ships 
and most auxiliary vessels are not shown in publicly available 
databases. But most of its ships are seen and photographed when they 
pass the Bosphorus on their way from Russia to the Mediterranean or vice
 versa.  In most cases it is impossible to track military shipments to destination ports however, meaning data is only partial. LOW IN THE WATER Since
 Moscow began to scale back in Syria, Russia has sent two landing ships,
 which are typically used to transport troops and armor - the Caesar 
Kunikov and the Saratov - to the Mediterranean along with the Yauza, an 
auxiliary cargo vessel. The Saratov
 looked loaded when it passed the strait on Thursday going south toward 
Syria. Its load line was visibly lower than on March 14 when it was 
photographed going the other way, toward Russia.  At the same time, 
two warships - the Alexander Otrakovsky and the Minsk - and the 
Dvinitsa-50, an auxiliary vessel, were photographed by Turkish bloggers 
passing the Bosphorus en route back to Russia. At least two of the returning ships, the Alexander Otrakovsky and the Dvinitsa-50, looked unloaded on their way back.  Photographs
 show that the Otrakovsky, a large landing ship, sat higher in the water
 on its return to Russia compared to March 2 when it crossed the strait 
in the other direction. It was not clear if it carried troops or 
equipment. The load line of the 
Dvinitsa-50 was also high above the water when it was photographed in 
the Bosphorus on March 20 on its way back to Russia. It
 seems unlikely that Russian troops or equipment were on board any of 
the returning ships. None of them looked like they had heavy cargo 
onboard. Non-military cargo traffic between Russia and Syria also shows no signs of flagging.  Four cargo ships involved in the supply operation called at Syria in the two weeks before Putin announced the draw down.  A
 fifth, the Alexander Tkachenko, a Russian ferry, previously 
photographed with military trucks onboard, probably called there too.   Reuters
 shipping database showed it was approaching Syria, but then suddenly 
disappeared for a few days before re-appearing en route back to Russia. 
The only explanation for this is that it turned off its transponders for
 that period for some reason.      Five cargo ships, including an oil tanker, arrived in Syria in the two weeks following Putin's announcement.
Russia, despite draw down, shipping more to Syria than removing
 
				
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
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