Presented by ProPublica

By Michael Grabell, Dafna Linzer, and Jeff Larson — ProPublica

In late October, Syria asked Iraqi author­ities to grant air access for a cargo plane trans­porting refur­bished attack heli­copters from Russia, according to flight records obtained by ProP­ublica. With Turkish and European airspace off limits to Syrian arms ship­ments, the regime of Bashar al-Assad needs Iraq’s air corridor to get the heli­copters home, where the government is strug­gling to suppress an uprising.

Iraq regained control of its airspace from the U.S. military just a year ago and has been under intense diplo­matic pressure from the United States to isolate the Syrian regime. Turkey says it has closed its airspace to Syrian flights, and if Iraq did so, Syria would be virtually cut off from trans­porting military equipment by plane. European Union sanc­tions have already constricted arms transport by sea and air.

But it is unclear whether Iraq permitted the fly-overs described in the docu­ments. The Syrian cargo plane scheduled to pick up the heli­copters did not land or take off from Moscow at the appointed times this month, suggesting that those flights did not happen.

Some of the flight request docu­ments have been posted by hackers asso­ciated with the online collective Anonymous and formed the basis of a Time story Thursday. Other docu­ments were obtained sepa­rately by ProP­ublica, which reported Monday that Syria appears to have flown 240 tons of bank notes from Moscow this summer. The authen­ticity of the docu­ments in either cache could not be inde­pen­dently verified.

But taken together, the docu­ments appear to contain new infor­mation. They show that Baghdad has requested several times to inspect other Syrian flights that were going to pass over Iraq from Iran and Russia, some­thing that U.S. offi­cials confirmed to ProPublica.

According to an over­flight request form dated Oct. 30, the heli­copter the Syrians were going to pick up is an Mi-25, a Russian-made gunship that experts liken to a cross between an Apache and a Black Hawk heli­copter because it can fire from the air and transport troops.

Mi-25s are very important to the Syrian Air Force effort against the rebels,” said Jeffrey White, former chief of the Middle East intel­li­gence division for the Defense Intel­li­gence Agency and now at the Wash­ington Institute for Near East Policy. “It’s a heavily armored military heli­copter, which makes it very difficult for the rebels to shoot down.”

Videos have been posted online that appear to show Syrian Mi-25s attacking rebels, and Syria has reportedly been strug­gling to maintain the helicopters.

Still, the docu­ments leave many ques­tions unan­swered. Crucially, it is not known whether the over­flights actually happened.

A U.S. diplo­matic official told ProP­ublica that the United States has been working with the Iraqi government to stop such flights. “We have urged them directly to insist that the inspection of those flights occur or deny over­flight rights,” the official said. “We have raised this concern and they have taken a couple steps in the right direction — either denying over­flight rights if they believe arms are being shipped to Syria or insisting on an inspection.”

But, State Department and Pentagon offi­cials have not provided infor­mation on the particular request made in the docu­ments. Iraqi and Russian offi­cials did not respond to questions.

The first two flights were scheduled for Nov. 21 and Nov. 28, but a photog­rapher hired by ProP­ublica did not observe the cargo plane at the Moscow airport where it was supposed to land and then take off just three hours later. Nor could the flights be confirmed with inter­na­tional tracking services that have recorded the plane’s move­ments in the past.

Two more flights are scheduled for Dec. 3 and Dec. 6 , according to the records.

The Assad regime has been trying to suppress a popular uprising for almost two years. Tens of thou­sands of people have reportedly died in the fighting. On Thursday, dispatches described intense clashes on the main road to the Damascus Inter­na­tional Airport, and at least one airline was reported to have canceled flights. Most of the Internet in the country was shut down as well.

Russia’s prime minister, Dmitri Medvedev, said this week in an interview with the French news­paper Le Figaro that arms ship­ments are part of a long­standing contract with the Syrian military to repair equipment for “defense against an external aggression.”

We must fulfill the oblig­a­tions connected to our contracts,” Medvedev said, noting that Russia has faced a legal conflict after suspending some arms deliv­eries to Iran.

Syria has found it increas­ingly difficult to transport heli­copters. In June, a ship carrying three Mi-25 heli­copters from Russia to Syria was forced to turn back after the ship’s insurer withdrew coverage in response to sanc­tions. A month later, a second attempt to deliver the heli­copters by sea was aborted.

The newly obtained flight docu­ments show that Syria planned to use its Ilyushin IL-76 cargo plan to pick up heli­copters at Ramen­skoye Airport, also known as Zhukovsky Airport, near Moscow. The manifest describes the cargo as an “old heli­copter after over­haulling [sic].” A second document, sent to the Syrian embassy in Baghdad, iden­tifies the heli­copters as Mi-25s.

Offi­cials at Russian Heli­copters, which makes the Mi-25, and Ilyushin, which makes the IL-76, said one Mi-25 with its blades removed would fit into an IL-76. Such heli­copters have been shipped this way all over the world, they said.

Rick Francona, who was the U.S. air attaché in Damascus in the 1990s, said that using a cargo plane instead of a ship suggested the Assad regime was getting desperate.

If they’re willing to use an IL-76 to bring one or two heli­copters back, that tells me they need these right now,” he said. “Rather than getting it there in 10 days, it gets there in five hours. You can pull it out, reattach the blades and have in the air the next day.”

U.S. offi­cials have expressed particular frus­tration with Russia over the Syrian conflict, which began in March 2011.

I think we’ve been very clear, both publicly and privately, how we feel about any country, Russia included, supporting the Assad regime in any way,” State Department spokes­woman Victoria Nuland said Wednesday. “And it doesn’t simply go to the question of military support; it also goes for any kind of economic or political support.”

In June, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Russian aid with Syria’s attack heli­copters would escalate the civil war “quite dramat­i­cally.” But a week later, a Pentagon spokesman declined to answer whether the Defense Department would try to stop future heli­copter shipments.

The records obtained by ProP­ublica list the Russian 150 Aircraft Repair Plant as the char­terer of the flights to pick up the heli­copters. The docu­ments show the firm was oper­ating under a contract dated Nov. 27, 2005. The address listed for the char­terer is in Kalin­ingrad, a Russian territory between Poland and Lithuania that contains large Russian military installations.

As with the currency ship­ments, the flight records show the Syrian cargo plane would take a circuitous route back from Moscow, flying over Azer­baijan and Iran before crossing Iraq.

Iraqi airspace has largely been controlled by the U.S. Air Force since the American-led invasion in 2003. Indeed, the over­flight request form used by Syria for the heli­copters was created by the U.S. Air Force and still bears the old contact infor­mation for the regional air command, which is no longer in charge.

Last year, the United States began trans­ferring air traffic control respon­si­bil­ities to the Iraq Civil Aviation Authority. The Iraqis assumed control of the last sector, over Baghdad, in October 2011.

ProP­ublica

ProP­ublica is an inde­pendent, non-profit newsroom that produces inves­tigative jour­nalism in the public interest. Our work focuses exclu­sively on truly important stories, stories with “moral force.” We do this by producing jour­nalism that shines a light on exploitation of the weak by the strong and on the failures of those with power to vindicate the trust placed in them.

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