Turkey released audio recordings of what it says are the Turkish military’s warnings to the pilot of the Russian plane that was shot down at the border with Syria.
The recordings, made available to reporters yesterday, indicate that the plane was warned several times that it was approaching Turkey’s airspace and asked to change course.
Turkey shot down the Russian Su-24 bomber on Tuesday, insisting that it had violated its airspace, despite repeated warnings.
Photo: EPA
A surviving Russian pilot has pilot has denied that his jet veered into Turkey’s airspace and rejected Turkey’s claim that it had issued repeated warnings to the Russian crew.
The series of 10 audio clips were released by the Turkish prime minister’s office and sourced to the Turkish armed forces.
In the recordings, a voice is heard saying in broken English: “This is Turkish Air Force speaking on guard. You are approaching Turkish airspace. Change your heading south immediately.”
Most of the audio is garbled and barely comprehensible, but the tone of the voice gets more agitated as the warnings appear to go unnoticed.
Tuesday’s incident was the first time in half a century that a NATO member shot down a Russian plane.
One of the Russian pilots was killed by militants in Syria after ejecting from the plane, while his crewmate was rescued by Syrian army commandos. A Russian Marine was also killed by the militants during the rescue mission.
Russia on Wednesday sent an advanced missile system to Syria to protect its jets operating there and pledged its air force would keep flying missions near Turkish air space, sounding a defiant note.
Underscoring the message, Russian forces launched a heavy bombardment against insurgent-held areas in Latakia on Wednesday, near where the jet was downed, rebels and a monitoring group said.
The US and Europe both urged calm and continued dialogue.
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