Presented by ProPublica

By Michael Grabell, Dafna Linzer and Jeff Larson — ProPublica

Iraq has shut its airspace to four Syrian flights scheduled to pick up attack heli­copters that had been repaired in Russia, the spokesman to Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki said Tuesday. Syria has failed several times since June to retrieve the refur­bished heli­copters from Russia, and the regime of Bashar al-Assad appears to be growing more desperate as fighting intensifies.

Iraq’s denial of the flights appears to be a diplo­matic break­through for the U.S. Although Baghdad has said it won’t allow arms ship­ments to Syria and has recently begun to inspect some planes flying from Iran, White House and State Department offi­cials have been pres­suring Iraq to act much more aggres­sively to choke off military aid.

Two U.S. diplo­matic offi­cials who are closely moni­toring Iraq-Syria rela­tions expressed relief when told that Baghdad said it had denied Syria’s over­flight request for the helicopters.

But one of the offi­cials empha­sized caution, noting that flights continue over Iraqi airspace from Iran to Syria. Iraq has main­tained that the flights carry human­i­tarian goods but the United States suspects they contain matériel. “The abuse of Iraq’s airspace continues to be a concern,” the official said. “We urge Iraq either to require flights enroute to Syria over its territory to land for inspection or deny over­flight requests for these aircraft.”

ProP­ublica reported on the Syrian fly-over requests last week, noting that the cargo plane expected to pick up the heli­copters did not land or take off at the scheduled times at a military airfield near Moscow. The reason was unknown at the time.

Ali al-Mousawi, the prime minister’s media adviser, told ProP­ublica on Tuesday that Syria’s requests had been denied by the Iraqi Civil Aviation Authority.

We will not authorize any over­flight until we make sure that it does not contain any military equipment in line with the Iraqi government’s policy which firmly rejects allowing trans­porting any military ship­ments via our airspace from or to Syria,” he wrote in an email.

Syria has tried various ways to retrieve its attack heli­copters from Russia.

In June, a cargo ship carrying heli­copters from the Russian port of Kalin­ingrad to Syria was turned back after the ship’s insurer withdrew coverage in response to sanc­tions. A second attempt by sea a month later also failed.

The new plan, according to flight records obtained by ProP­ublica, was to fly an Ilyushin IL-76 cargo plane in late November and early December from Damascus to Ramen­skoye Airport outside Moscow, also known as Zhukovsky Airport. The records described the cargo as an “old heli­copter after over­haullling” (sic) and iden­tified the model as an Mi-25 — a heavy combat heli­copter that has been filmed in online videos appearing to fire at rebels.

Some of the flight records were posted by hackers asso­ciated with the online collective Anonymous. Many of those docu­ments, as well as others, were obtained sepa­rately by ProP­ublica, which reported last week that Syria appears to have flown 240 tons of bank notes from Moscow this summer.

One of the U.S. diplo­matic offi­cials said Iraq’s decision to block the flights — and to acknowledge doing so publicly — risks angering Moscow. Failure to deliver the heli­copters, this official said, could mean a delay in payment for the Russians. Russia has long been Syria’s main supplier of arms.

Offi­cials at the Russian Foreign Ministry and its lead arms exporter Rosoboronexport did not return phone calls from ProP­ublica. The 150 Aircraft Repair Plant, which is listed as the char­terer of the flights, declined to answer questions.

Russia’s Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev told reporters last week that Russia was obliged to fulfill its existing contracts even in the teeth of inter­na­tional pressure.

Until last year, Iraqi airspace had been largely controlled by the U.S. Air Force. But American offi­cials have grad­ually turned over control to the Iraqis and now have little involvement in day-to-day oper­a­tions, according to U.S. aviation advisers working with the Iraqis.

The New York Times reported Sunday on the struggle of American offi­cials to stop arms ship­ments from Iran. According to the Times, Iraq’s foreign minister promised Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in September that Iraq would inspect the flights from Iran. But since then, the news­paper said, it has only inspected two planes, including one that was returning from Syria.

Pres­ident Obama, speaking yesterday at the National War College, said, “We will continue to support the legit­imate aspi­ra­tions of the Syrian people — engaging with the oppo­sition, providing them with human­i­tarian aid and working for a tran­sition to a Syria that’s free of the Assad regime.”

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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