(Reuters) - After
allowing the United States to use its air space to bomb Islamic State
fighters for six months, the Syrian army appears to have imposed a "red
line" by shooting down a U.S. drone over territory of critical
importance to Damascus. The U.S. military has said it lost contact with one of its drones over northwest Syria but has not given the cause of the incident over Latakia province - part of the western region of Syria where Damascus has been consolidating state control. Two
U.S. officials, speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity,
acknowledged the Predator drone was likely shot down, although the
investigation continues. A
Syrian army source said the aircraft was shot down over government-held
territory in an area free from Islamic State, the jihadist group that
has been facing near daily bombardment by U.S.-led warplanes on the
other side of the country. "Our
air defense brought it down with a rocket," the military source told
Reuters. "The plane was American-made, was brought down coming from the
sea, and the Syrian air defense was the one that brought it down," he
added. "The whole region is under state control." Four years into Syria's civil war, Washington still says President Bashar al-Assad has no future in Syria, despite leading an air campaign against jihadist groups that are his most powerful foes on the ground. Until now, Syria is not known to have fired on U.S. aircraft. The United States says its air strikes are not coordinated with Damascus but Syria says it receives word of them through mutual friends in Iraq. The
drone was shot down about 10 km (6 miles) north of the coastal city of
Latakia, according to the military source and the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights, which tracks the war using sources on the ground. The area is far from the northern and eastern parts of Syria
where U.S. and allied warplanes have been launching near daily air
strikes against Islamic State positions to roll back the group that has
seized wide areas of Syria and Iraq. Damascus has been consolidating its grip over western Syria,
including the Mediterranean coast, even as it has lost control over
wide areas of the north and east. The coastal region includes a Russian
naval base in Tartous. The
United States has previously described Syrian air defenses as
"passive," meaning they have not engaged the U.S.-led coalition's
aircraft as American and other planes carry out strikes against
militants. The U.S. air strikes have not targeted Syrian military forces or military infrastructure. SENDING A MESSAGE U.S.
officials have not provided word on the drone's mission, although the
fact it was unarmed suggests it was carrying out intelligence
collection. Tuesday's incident took place sometime around 7:40 pm in Syria, when officials said the United States lost contact with the unarmed MQ-1 Predator aircraft. "If
America wanted to send a message - be it for reasons of spying or
discovering points of strength or weakness in the Syrian defenses - I
believe the Syrian response confirmed that violations of Syrian air
space are forbidden," said Salim Harbba, a Damascus-based strategic
analyst. In addition to
the regular strikes against Islamic State, U.S. aircraft have also
occasionally targeted a separate jihadist group, the al Qaeda-linked
Nusra Front, in northwestern Syria, closer to the area of Tuesday's incident. The
Nusra Front, which shares much of Islamic State's militant Sunni
Islamist ideology but does not recognize its legitimacy, has recently
fought with the Syrian military and allied militias in northern Latakia
province. Rami Abdulrahman, who runs the Observatory, said the U.S. drone may have been scouting for al Qaeda-linked militants. "There have been increased battles in the Latakia area," he said.
Downing of U.S. drone suggests Syria imposing red lines on air war

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