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by Staff Writers Moscow (AFP) Aug 28, 2012 The head of Russia's army said Tuesday that Moscow had no intention to end its military presence in Syria despite the escalating violence and threat of President Bashar al-Assad's fall. "Why are you so worried about Syria?" Chief of Staff General Nikolai Makarov demanded in response to a question about reports that Russia was in the process of evacuating its Syrian naval base and pulling out senior military personnel. "All the plans that we have in place are working and no one is running away from there," news agencies quoted Makarov as saying. "I would think it is premature to start making any conclusions and saying that we ran away," Makarov said. The Russian media have been swirling with unconfirmed reports of the military winding down its presence in the Tartus naval centre that Moscow has leased from its closest Arab world ally since Soviet times. The Nezavisimaya Gazeta daily this month also said the navy had decided to end prematurely its summer exercises near Syria and to pull out of the region in a signal to the West of its refusal to defend Assad with force. The Russian military still supplies the regime with weapons under contracts it signed before the bloodshed began some 17 months ago.
Syria's rebels claim capture of missiles in Damascus "God is great! Ten missiles! Oh God!" said an unidentified cameraman filming missiles seized by rebel groups. Activists say are operating under the name of the Gathering of Ansar al-Islam (partisans of Islam) Battalions from the eastern Ghuta area of Damascus province. The amateur video posted on YouTube showed a tank burning in a field, as well as several armed men. It also showed a warehouse storing missiles which the rebels apparently seized from the hands of the army loyal to President Bashar al-Assad. The eastern Ghuta area is home to some of the best organised rebel battalions in Syria, and has seen fierce fighting in recent days. "The operation was staged by the Gathering of Ansar al-Islam, which works closely with the Military Council," according to Ahmed al-Khatib, spokesman for the rebel Free Syrian Army's Military Council for Damascus and its province. "It is one of the largest (rebel) groups in the province, though it operates in other areas of the country too," Khatib told AFP via Skype, who added that it comprised "several experts in missiles". Though it was not immediately possible to verify the type of missiles in question, Khatib quoted the rebels behind the operation as saying they were surface-to-surface missiles, and that four of them were ready for launching at the time of their seizure. After a dramatic escalation of violence in the southwest of Damascus last week, which culminated in what the opposition described as a "massacre" of more than 300 people in Daraya during the weekend, the army shifted its focus to the east of the capital, aiming to destroy rebel supply lines into the capital. On Monday, Syria's rebels claimed the downing of an army helicopter in the east Damascus district of Qaboon.
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