Russia said on Monday it would treat US-led coalition aircraft flying west of the River Euphrates in Syria as potential targets and track them with missile systems and military aircraft, but stopped short of saying it would shoot them down.
In a move that will fan tensions between Washington and Moscow, Russia made clear it was changing its military posture in response to the US downing of a Syrian military jet on Sunday, something Damascus said was the first such incident since the start of the countryโs conflict in 2011.
The Russian Defence Ministry said it was also scrapping a Syrian air safety agreement with Washington designed to avoid collisions and dangerous incidents with immediate effect. Moscow accused the United States of failing to honour the pact by not informing it of the decision to shoot down the Syrian plane despite Russian aircraft being airborne at the same time.
โWe view such actions by the US command as a deliberate flouting of its obligations,โ the Defence Ministry said in a statement. It said it expected the United States to now undertake an investigation into the shoot-down, to share the results, and to take corrective measures.
Russia is one of Syrian President Bashar al-Assadโs most stalwart allies and is supporting him militarily with air power, advisers and special forces as he tries to roll back Islamic State and other militant groups. Unlike the United States, it says its presence is sanctioned by the Syrian government.
Calling the shooting-down a โcynical violationโ of Syriaโs sovereignty and a breach of international law, Russia said the US move amounted to โmilitary aggressionโ against Syria and announced it was taking direct measures in response.
โIn areas where Russian aircraft are carrying out military tasks in the skies above Syria, any flying objects, including international coalition aircraft and drones found operating west of the River Euphrates, will be tracked by Russian land and air-based anti-aircraft ground systems as targets,โ the ministry statement said.
The US Central Command issued a statement saying the downed Syrian military jet had been dropping bombs near US-backed SDF forces, which are seeking to oust Islamic State from the city of Raqqa.
It said the shooting-down was โcollective self-defenceโ and the coalition had contacted Russian counterparts by telephone via an established โde-confliction line to de-escalate the situation and stop the firingโ.
Franz Klintsevich, a senior lawmaker on the upper house of parliamentโs defence and security committee, told RIA news agency that Russia would not automatically shoot down any object and that decisions would be taken on a case-by-case basis.
He said aggressive acts by such objects would be โdealt with severelyโ, however.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov was cited earlier on Monday by Russian news agencies as telling the United States to respect Syriaโs territorial integrity and refrain from further unilateral action there.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov struck a tougher line than Lavrov, telling Tass the US action was an โact of aggression in support of terroristsโ.
Separately, Ryabkov told Interfax that the shooting down was a dangerous escalation and warned Washington not to use force against Syrian government troops.