Russian missiles aimed at Syria crashed in Iran: US official

AFP photo

Four Russian cruise missiles aimed at targets in Syria crashed in Iran, a US official said Oct. 8, as regime troops backed by Lebanon's Hezbollah pressed a "vast offensive" against rebels in the war-torn country's west.

The missiles were thought to be among a salvo fired Wednesday from Russian warships in the Caspian as part of a nine-day-old air war targeting foes of President Bashar al-Assad.
 
Russia hit back at the claims, saying all the shots were on target, and the defence ministry posted a graphic on its website showing 26 missiles flying over Iran and Iraq before striking inside Syria. Tehran made no comment.
 
"Any professional knows that during these operations we always fix the target before and after impact. All our cruise missiles hit their target," ministry spokesman General Igor Konashenkov said in a statement.
 
Moscow launched an air war in Syria at the end of last month it said was aimed at the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group and other "terrorist" organisations fighting in the country's four-year-old civil war.
 
Russia's air force hit 27 "terrorist" targets in central and northern Syria Oct. 7 night, the defence ministry said, including eight IS strongholds in Homs province and 11 training camps in Hama and Raqa provinces.
 
Western powers have dismissed these claims as window-dressing for a campaign that primarily seeks to prop up Assad's embattled regime against a much broader group of rebels.    

Washington said more than 90 percent of Russian raids have targeted groups other than ISIL or Al-Qaeda's Syrian affiliate, Al-Nusra Front.
 
Another US official said the missiles that landed in Iran were Kalibr-NK cruise missiles, which Russia had "used for...

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