American F-16 fighter jet from Incirlik
made 23-minute flight over Syria
By Terry Boyd, Turkey
bureau
IZMIR, Turkey By all accounts, it was a usual incident. An American F-16 flying
out of Incirlik Air Base in south-central Turkey flew for nearly half an hour over at
least 150 miles of Syria last Wednesday without even a protest from Syria. But just how an
American fighter jet could fly so long and far over potentially hostile Middle Eastern
territory is something of a mystery.
And one public intelligence analyst is suggesting that the incursion was no accident,
but a deliberate attempt to check for Iraqi forces preparing for war.
Air Force and Pentagon officials said the plane, part of the Operation Northern Watch
mission patrolling the no-fly zone over northern Iraq, accidentally flew over Syria for
about 23 minutes without incident before crossing into Iraq, just south of the 36th
parallel.
Syrian officials have not filed a formal protest, said Greg Sullivan, a State
Department spokesman in Washington, D.C. Sullivan said that U.S. officials approached
their Syrian counterparts immediately after the incursion, explaining that the jet had a
technical malfunction. He said that Syrian forces neither shot at the single-engine
fighter nor even engaged it with radar.
Officials at the Syrian embassy in Washington, D.C., did not return repeated calls.
American officials also informed Turkish officials of the incident, said Frank Woods, a
spokesman at the American Embassy in Ankara. "There were probably
military-to-military conversations," but Turks who grant the United States and
Britain permission to fly ONW missions from their base filed no formal protests,
Woods said. A source at Turkeys Office of External Affairs said last Friday that he
was unaware of the over-flight, adding that Syria had not lodged any protests with Turkey.
Sullivan characterized the incident as a relatively brief incursion: "It was 15
minutes in, 15 minutes out." Sullivan added that its not uncommon for American
planes to inadvertently cross into other countries' territory. Still, the incursion comes
only five months after Chinese fighter pilots forced a Navy EP-3 surveillance plane to
land, then held its crew for 11 days.
And one retired Air Force aviator calls it "bizarre" that a single American
plane could leave an ONW sortie, which typically includes at least 40 planes. "A
pilot under AWACS control just flies into Syria for a half-hour without his wingman?
Thats not the way we do things," said the source, who asked to remain
anonymous.
Rear Adm. Craig Quigley was quoted last week as saying that an AWACS
command-and-control plane monitored the pilot, but could not get him back on course.
"We had an AWACS aircraft up and saw that he was steering wrong, that he was into
Syrian airspace, and called him out, and he got out of Syrian airspace," Quigley
said. Asked why the crew of the AWACS allowed the pilot to fly off course for 23 minutes,
Quigley declined to discuss ONW operational details.
Stratfor.com, an Austin, Texas-based commercial intelligence company, offered its own
explanation in an Aug. 17 report the F-16 was on a reconnaissance mission, looking
for signs of Iraqi troop build-ups in Syria in preparation for an all-out war with Israel.
Last month, Iraqi papers announced that Saddam Hussein was preparing a jihad, or holy war,
to "liberate" Palestine, where Israeli and Palestinian authorities have been
fighting since early this year.
"The more likely explanation is that the multi-role fighter was sent on a
reconnaissance mission over Syria," stated the unsigned report. The F-16 is not
usually the first choice for reconnaissance; satellites and reconnaissance aircraft can
carry out such missions, stated the report.
But if Washington was trying to spot ground forces, "the F-16 could have acted as
a decoy, attempting to goad camouflaged troops into revealing their presence and
identities through electronic emissions such as air-defense radars and
communications."
An analyst at Sentinel a division of Janes Sentinel Information Group
has a more prosaic explanation.
The F-16 went off course, and the Syrians simply missed it, said Jeremy Binnie,
Sentinels Middle East analyst. "Twenty-three minutes is a very long time for a
modern jet to fly off-course, and it does seem very strange" that Syrian fighters
didnt intercept, Bennie said.
But he said that Syria has most of its sophisticated military equipment in the
southwest, close to bitter enemy Israel, and the disputed border with Lebanon. The more
stable border with Turkey could be protected by relatively obsolete S-300 Soviet-made
radar, he said.
Moreover, Syria only has two airbases in the north al-Qamishli in the northeast
on the Turkish border and Dayr az Zawr in east-central area near Iraq.
From those bases, Syria could have scrambled sophisticated Russian-built MiG-29s, he
said. "But they probably couldnt get locked on [the F-16], to be honest,"
he said. And that, said Bennie, is not something that the Syrians are going to rush to
acknowledge.
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