Russian Warship Docks in Limassol Port En Route to Syria
The anti-missile vessel Smetlivy docked at 11am for refueling and to take on food supplies. The warship was kept in the deep waters of the harbour, which is normally for cruise ships that go around the Greek islands.
There is tight security at the port, and many journalists were turned away by the ports authority on the grounds that they need special permission from the Russian Embassy. The ship is armed with two double-barreled 76 mm AK-726 guns, SAM: 2 x twin launchers (NATO reporting name: SA-N-1 Volna), Navalised version of the Isayev S-125 (SA-3 Goa) system, 32 missiles, five 533 mm torpedo tubes, two twelve-barrel RBU-6000 ASW rocket launchers, and eight anti-ship SS-N-25 Uran missiles.
"Cyprus is small, we are in a difficult position," a ports official told CyprusNewsReport.com.
If a regional war breaks out between Russia, Syria and Turkey, things will get very difficult for the island, he added.
In another complication, Israel and Turkey have gone from being allies to being hostile neighbors after Israel killed nine Turkish-origin activists on their way to break Israel's maritime embargo on the Gaza Strip.
And in the middle of the Eastern Mediterranean are Israel and Cyprus' natural gas fields, which Turkey is eyeing enviously.
Another Russian warship is expected in Limassol Port this afternoon, and according to a Reuters report earlier this week, a total of six Russian navy vessels were despatched to the Eastern Mediterranean.
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