ussia raised the alarm on Tuesday after detecting the launch of two
ballistic "objects" in the Mediterranean Sea but Israel later said it
had carried out a joint missile test with the United States.
There were no reports of missile strikes on Syria. Syrian state
sources said the missiles had fallen harmlessly into the sea and there
were no explosions in the capital Damascus, Russian news agencies
reported.
Initial reports of the launch by Russian news agencies had ruffled
financial markets because the United States is preparing for a possible
military strike on Syria over what it says was a chemical weapons attack
by government forces in their conflict with rebels trying to overthrow
President Bashar al-Assad.
But the Israeli Defence Ministry said it had tested a missile used
as a target in a U.S.-funded anti-missile system at 9:15 a.m (0615 GMT),
about the same time as the Russian radar picked up the launch.
"The trajectory of these objects goes from the central part of the
Mediterranean Sea toward the eastern part of the Mediterranean coast,"
Russia's Interfax news agency quoted a Defence Ministry spokesman as
saying.
The spokesman said the launch was picked up by an early warning
radar station at Armavir, near the Black Sea, which is designed to
detect missiles from Europe and Iran.
He did not say who had carried out the launch and whether any impact
had been detected, but RIA news agency later quoted a source in Syria's
"state structures" as saying the objects had fallen harmlessly into the
sea.
The Russian Defence Ministry declined comment to Reuters.
The Russian Embassy in Syria said there were no signs of a missile
attack or explosions in Damascus, state-run Itar-Tass reported.
Syria's early warning radar system did not detect any missiles
landing on Syrian territory, according to a Syrian security source
quoted by Lebanon's al-Manar television.
Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu informed President Vladimir
Putin of the launch but it was not immediately clear how he reacted.
Brent crude oil extended gains to rise by more than $1 per barrel
and Dubai's share index fell after Russia said it detected the launches.
Russia opposes any outside military intervention in the Syrian civil
war, and a Defence Ministry official had earlier criticized the United
States for deploying warships in the Mediterranean close to Syria.
Assad's government denies responsibility for the deaths of hundreds of people in the alleged poison gas attack on August 21.
Russia, Assad's most powerful backer during the more than
two-year-old conflict in Syria, says it suspects the attack was staged
by rebels to provoke military intervention and is critical of U.S. naval
deployments in the Mediterranean.
Five U.S. destroyers and an amphibious ship are in the
Mediterranean, poised for possible strikes against Syria with cruise
missiles - which are not ballistic. U.S. officials said the aircraft
carrier USS Nimitz and four other ships in its strike group moved into
the Red Sea on Monday.
"The pressure being applied by the United States causes particular
concern," Itar-Tass quoted Russian Defence Ministry official Oleg
Dogayev as saying.
He said "the dispatch of ships armed with cruise missiles toward
Syria's shores has a negative effect on the situation in the region."
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