Russia has evacuated
all military personnel from its small naval base in Syria, Russian news
organizations reported Wednesday.
The base, at Tartus
on the Mediterranean, has been Russia’s only foothold in the Middle East.
Although it is a minor facility, its importance has grown as Russia continues to support the
regime of President Bashar al-Assad in its war
against rebel forces.
A 16-ship Russian naval task force in the eastern Mediterranean remains on post, reports said. Cyprus
has made its ports available to the Russian fleet if needed.
Word that Russian
forces had pulled out of Syria first came in an interview with Mikhail
Bogdanov, the deputy foreign minister, published in the al-Hayat newspaper on June 21. Russian newspapers and agencies reported Wednesday
that they had confirmed the evacuation with unnamed personnel in Russia’s
military and Foreign Ministry.
“We have neither
servicemen nor civilians in Syria anymore,” the newspaper Vedemosti reported,
quoting an unnamed Defense Ministry employee. “Or Russian military instructors
assigned to units of the Syrian regular army, for that matter.”
Russia’s withdrawal
of troops comes despite the fact that the port city of Tartus — a government
stronghold and home to a large community of Alawites, the sect to which Assad
belongs — has remained relatively unscathed by the violence that has convulsed
Syria’s other major cities.
The government has
tightened its grip on the area as Assad’s forces push to secure territory that
connects government-held coastal areas with the capital, Damascus. The
rebel-held town of Tal Kalakh, about 15 miles southeast of Tartus, fell under complete
government control Tuesday, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights.
A person with knowledge of the
decision told Russia’s RT television channel that the withdrawal reflected concerns about the risks posed by
the ongoing civil war, as well as the fear of an incident involving the Russian
military that could have larger consequences.
In his interview with
al-Hayat, Bogdanov strove to minimize the base’s importance.
“I lived in Syria for
10 years and visited this location many times when we had an actual military
presence there,” he was quoted as saying. “We never, at any time, had a real
military base in Tartus. This is a maintenance center for ships that pass
through the Mediterranean, a technical center. There is not even a deep dock
that allows ships to approach, refuel or undergo repairs. This center has no
military or strategic significance.”
No ships have called
at Tartus since April, Vedemosti reported.
Russia has been
flying its citizens out of Syria all spring. Bogdanov said about 30,000
Russians live scattered throughout the country, some in rebel-held areas. On
Wednesday, 128 Russians and citizens of other former Soviet republics left on
planes that had delivered what was described as humanitarian supplies the day
before, the Interfax news agency reported.
The 27-month-long
conflict has now claimed more than 100,000 lives, the Observatory announced
Wednesday. Meanwhile, Assad’s forces, backed by militants from the Lebanese
Shiite movement Hezbollah, have made creeping gains in recent months.
The fall of Tal
Kalakh follows the seizure of the town of Qusair, close to the Lebanese border,
and further chokes rebel supply lines from neighboring countries.
The rebels have made
desperate pleas for the United States to follow through on its decision to arm
the rebels, following evidence of chemical weapons use, the “red line” for the
Obama administration. Britain and the United States have notified the United
Nations of 10 different incidents of alleged chemical weapons use by the Syrian
government, a U.N. diplomat told the Associated Press on Wednesday, speaking on
the condition of anonymity because the incidents have not been publicly
divulged.
Given the government
gains, the Russian decision to pull out of Tartus might represent a calculation
about potential intervention, either from the United States over chemical
weapons use or from Israel, which has said it will strike if advanced
surface-to-air missiles arrive on Syrian soil, according to Andrew Tabler, a
senior fellow at the Washington Institute.
“It would explain
something that otherwise seems counterintuitive,” he said. “If the regime is
doing well you don’t close your base.”
The news of the
pullout comes as Russian and U.S. diplomats have been meeting to try to arrange
a new peace conference on Syria. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Secretary
of State John F. Kerry are to discuss the conference when they meet next week
in Brunei.
It does not appear
that the pullout from Tartus will interfere with the delivery of air-defense
and anti-ship missiles by Russia to Syria. Bogdanov again defended the
shipments of arms as legal and part of an existing contract. Asked when the
deliveries would begin, he replied that that was a decision for the “supreme
command.”
Vladimir Yevseyev of
the Institute of World Economy and International Relations told Vedemosti that
Russian civilian specialists could be left in Syria to maintain weapons after
they are delivered. The missiles would not be of much use against the rebels,
military analysts say, but they would change the balance of forces in the
Middle East, boosting Syria’s defensive capability against Israel.
State Department
spokeswoman Jennifer Psaki said the United States would not speculate on the
reasons for the Russian move but added, “As we have said many times before, the
situation on the ground has grown worse and more dangerous with the influx of
foreign fighters from Iran and Hizbollah.”
Karen DeYoung,
traveling with Kerry, and Loveday Morris in Beirut contributed to this report.
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