Moscow-Sana
Russian experts and political analysts condemned the aggressive acts and sabotage practices carried out by the Turkish and American occupation forces in Syria and the region, stressing that the assassination of Lieutenant-General Qassem Soleimani, commander of the Quds Force in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, and the ambitions of the Turkish regime's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Libya represent a continuation of serious violations of international laws.
In an interview with a SANA correspondent in Moscow today, the former deputy in the Russian State Duma, Director General of the Institute for Political Research, Sergey Markov, confirmed that the Turkish regime is still continuing its aggressive actions against Syria while the United States continues its unlawful interference through its military occupation forces that steal Syrian oil and plunder capabilities The Syrian people, pointing out that the terrorist war against Syria was characterized from the beginning by the nature of external interference, as countries and regional and international powers led by the regimes in Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar supported and financed terrorist organizations.
In turn, the chief researcher at the University of International Relations of the Russian Foreign Ministry Yuri Zinin pointed out that the hostile American approach is still continuing and firm, condemning the assassination of Soleimani, considering that it represents an unprecedented event in international relations and staining the perpetrators with shame, expressing at the same time his condemnation of Erdogan's moves and his transfer of mercenaries Terrorists from Syria to Libya to fulfill his ambitions there.
For his part, chief researcher at the Center for Arab and Islamic Studies at the Orientalism Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences Boris Dolgov described the Turkish regime as the most aggressive in its actions against Syria and Libya, stressing that the assassination of Soleimani represented a flagrant violation of international law.