​U.S. complains to Russia about Syria airstrikes

Russian war planes bomb Syria for a second day

WASHINGTON -- In talks aimed at avoiding unintended U.S.-Russian confrontations in the skies over Syria, Pentagon officials complained to the Russian military on Thursday that their airstrikes are hitting places where few, if any, Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) fighters are operating, administration officials said.

Tensions between the U.S. and Russia are escalating over Russian airstrikes that apparently are serving to strengthen Syrian President Bashar Assad by targeting rebels -- perhaps including some aligned with the U.S. -- rather than hitting ISIS fighters it promised to attack.

Russian airstrikes complicate U.S. Syria strategy

CBS News correspondent Holly Williams reported that video appeared to show the aftermath of an airstrike in Idlib Province on American-backed opposition fighters. Colonel Abdul Jabbar Al-Akaidi, a rebel commander in Syria's U.S.-backed opposition, told Williams Thursday's strikes hit an area more than 30 miles from ISIS control.

White House press secretary Josh Earnest described Russia's air operations, which began Monday, as "indiscriminate military operations against the Syrian opposition." Elissa Slotkin, who represented the U.S. side in Thursday's talks, said as much during the hour-long videoconference call, according to Earnest. Slotkin is the acting assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs.

"She pointed out that the Russian military operations we've seen so far raise some concerns, because Russia is targeting areas where there are few if any ISIL forces operating," Earnest said, using another acronym for ISIS.

A frame grab taken from video released by the Russian Defense Ministry October 1, 2015, shows Russian jets hitting a target in Syria. REUTERS

Of further concern is the prospect of the U.S. and Russia getting drawn into a shooting war in the event that Russian warplanes hit moderate Syrian rebels who have been trained and equipped by the U.S. and received promises of U.S. air support in the event they are attacked. Russia's planes are based inside Syria; those of the U.S. and its coalition partners are flying from various countries in the region, including Turkey and Jordan.

How Russian airstrikes in Syria conflict with U.S.

Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook declined to say how the U.S. would respond in the event that U.S.-trained rebel groups are attacked by the Russians, describing it as a hypothetical question.

Cook said both sides in Thursday's talks presented proposals and ideas for avoiding conflict between U.S. and Russian aircraft. He said these would be studied further before deciding whether to hold further talks. He called the talks "cordial and professional."

At United Nations headquarters in New York, Secretary of State John Kerry said he foresees further consultations with the Russians about air operations.

"We are not yet where we need to be to guarantee the safety and security" of those carrying out the airstrikes, Kerry said, "and that is the discussion that is taking place today," referring to the US-Russia military talks. "And it will take place even more so over the course of the next few days depending on the outcome today."

Cook said the U.S. side proposed using specific international radio frequencies for distress calls by military pilots flying in Syrian airspace, but he was not more specific about that or other proposals.

Activists claim 2nd day of Russian strikes in Syria

Russia's defense ministry said that over the past 24 hours it had damaged or destroyed 12 targets in Syria belonging to ISIS, including a command center and ammunition depots. A U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad, Col. Steve Warren, said he had no indication that the Russians had hit Islamic State targets.

Lt. Gen. Robert Otto, the deputy chief of staff for intelligence and surveillance for the Air Force, said Thursday that even as the U.S. tries to make sure Russian airstrikes don't conflict with ongoing coalition operations in Syria, he does not believe there will be any real intelligence-sharing with Moscow.

"I have a low level of trust in the Russians. It's trust but verify," he said. "It's easy, then, to exchange factual data where you're going to operate. I would not envision a relationship where I would share some of my intelligence with them."

Otto added that the Russians have been dropping "dumb bombs," a reference to munitions that are not precision-guided. And the use of such indiscriminate targeting, he said, could kill innocent civilians, which could have the unintended consequence of creating more terrorists than they kill.

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