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CNN: Putin calls plane’s downing by Turkey ‘stab in the back’

Russian President Vladimir Putin called the downing of a Russian warplane a "stab in the back that will have serious consequences for Russia's relationship with Turkey." 
 
One of the world's most volatile regions was roiled further Tuesday when a Russian warplane went down near the Turkish-Syria border. Turkey said it "responded" to a plane after the aircraft repeatedly violated its airspace and ignored several warnings.
 
NATO's governing body, the North Atlantic Council, will hold an emergency meeting in Brussels at 5 p.m. (11 a.m. ET) on Tuesday, after a Russian warplane violating Turkish airspace was shot down, a NATO official told Turkey's semiofficial Anadolu Agency. The council is made up of the NATO ambassadors of the 28 countries that are members of the alliance, and is NATO's highest decision-making body.
 
The news agency quoted Turkish presidential sources in reporting that the Russian Su-24 was "hit within the framework of engagement rules" in Syria's Bayirbucak area, near the border with Turkey.
 
Turkey's ambassador to the United States, Serdar Kilic, tweeted: "Understand this: Turkey is a country whose warnings should be taken seriously and listened to. Don't test Turkey's patience. Try to win its friendship."
 
But Russia's state-run Sputnik news agency said that, "According to preliminary reports, the plane was gunned down from the ground."
 
Russian officials denied that the plane had violated Turkish airspace. Both pilots ejected from the plane, but their fate is unknown, Sputnik reported.
 

Turkey released a purported image of the flight path of the plane showing that it had violated Turkish airspace. Turkey said it issued 10 warnings to the aircraft before two F-16s responded "within engagement rules" near the Turkey-Syria border.
 
But the Russian Defense Ministry said "objective monitoring confirmed" the plane was not in Turkish airspace.
 
"The Su-24 bomber jet was in Syrian airspace at the altitude 6,000 meters, the Russian Defense Ministry said," according to Sputnik. "The pilots were reportedly able to parachute out of the jet before it crashed."
 
A US defense official told CNN that Turkey informed Washington that it had shot down a Russian military aircraft near the Syrian border after an airspace violation. US forces were not involved in the incident, the official added.
 
Syria has been embroiled for more than four years in a brutal civil war that has killed hundreds thousands of people, sent millions fleeing and laid waste to entire cities.
 
Turkey vehemently opposes the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad. Russia is propping up the Assad regime.
 
Skirmishes between Turks and Syrians have taken place in the past, with Turkish officials accusing Syrian planes of violating Turkish air space.
 
"The moment of the plane falling into Bayirbucak region across from Hatay's Yayladagi was captured on camera," the Anadolu Agency reported. "The pilot's evacuation via parachute was also captured. Heavy smoke has been seen in the area where the plane fell."
 
Sajjan Gohel, international security director for the Asia-Pacific Foundation, a think tank, described the downing of the plane as "a very significant escalation."
 
"It's very much the last thing that's needed right now, especially in the aftermath of the Paris attacks, when there was hope that Russia could form an alliance with France and with the United States against ISIS," Gohel said. "This is going to complicate things. This is going to add unnecessary tensions that really weren't required at this critical juncture."
 
He said the downing of the Russian plane would hamper efforts to form a united front against the terrorist group ISIS.
 
"This is a situation that unfortunately was almost inevitable at some point, because Turkey has long been accusing Russia of interfering in their airspace," Gohel said. "They've threatened them in the past. And even though economic relations between the two countries are strong — politically, there have been tensions recently."
 
NATO 'in contact with Turkish authorities'
 
Turkey is a member of the NATO military alliance, which views an attack on one member as an attack on all. A NATO official told CNN that NATO was monitoring the events closely.
 
"We are in contact with Turkish authorities and will have to wait to see how it develops," the official said.
 
The official noted that "when Russian jets violated Turkish airspace a few weeks ago, the Council did meet in an extraordinary session, which resulted in a condemnation of the incursion."
 
The official would not comment on whether the alliance was in contact with Russian authorities over the incident.
 
A massive proxy war
 
Syria's internal conflict has become a massive proxy war for numerous international powers, both in the region and outside it — a situation that has added to the perception that incidents such as Tuesday's plane downing were inevitable.
 
Currently, the United States, Russia, France, the Gulf states, Turkey, Israel, Iran, Jordan and the Hezbollah are involved in one way or another in military activity in Syria.
 
"Russia has a slight get-out-of-jail-for-free card, in that it hasn't lost any actual lives here, but it is insisting that its plane didn't cross into Turkish airspace," said CNN's Nick Paton Walsh
 
"They have tried in the past to have meetings in Ankara and Istanbul between Turkish and Russian officials to make sure misunderstandings didn't happen, and it's clearly failed," Walsh said.
 
This incident has the potential to be extraordinarily damaging, but Russia is unlikely to want to start a major conflict with Turkey, a NATO member, over an incident like this that could technically be blamed on this jet straying, according to Turkish officials, into the wrong territory, Walsh said.
 
Turkey shot down Syrian fighter previously
 
In March 2014, Turkey shot down a Syrian fighter jet after the warplane strayed into its airspace, according to then-Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Erdogan is now the country's president.
 
"Our F-16s went up in the air and shot that plane down. Why? Because if you violate my airspace, then from now on, our slap will be hard," Erdogan told supporters at a campaign rally in 2014.
 
But state-run media in Syria called it an act of "blatant aggression" and said the downed plane was over northern Syria at the time.

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