Turkey won't apologize for downing Russian warplane, Erdogan says
Turkey
will not apologize for downing a Russian fighter jet it says violated
Turkish airspace near the Syrian border, Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan said in an exclusive CNN interview Thursday in Ankara.
"I
think if there is a party that needs to apologize, it is not us," he
said from the Turkish capital. "Those who violated our airspace are the
ones who need to apologize. Our pilots and our armed forces, they simply
fulfilled their duties, which consisted of responding to ... violations
of the rules of engagement. I think this is the essence."
In
a meeting with community leaders in Ankara, Erdogan said, "If the same
violation occurs today, Turkey has to react the same way."
Turkey has repeatedly said it shot down the Russian warplane on Tuesday only after the plane ignored several warnings and entered Turkish airspace.
Russia
has contested the claim, and its rescued co-pilot Capt. Konstantin
Murakhtin told state media that "there were no warnings -- not via the
radio, not visually." Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said
the downing of the Russian jet did not appear spontaneous, but more
"like a planned provocation."
Russian President Vladimir Putin told reporters in Moscow on Thursday that the strike was unexpected.
"It
did not even come into our mind that we could be struck by a party that
we considered to be our ally," he said. "We considered Turkey to be a
friendly country."
Putin
also noted that Russia had informed the United States, Turkey's ally,
of its flight path, and said it was "not possible" the Turkish air force
didn't recognize the Russian aircraft.
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