Involved parties A few hours after the incident,
Russian president Vladimir Putin spoke from
Sochi, where he was meeting with
King Abdullah II of Jordan, saying that it was a "stab in the back by terrorist accomplices", that Russia would not put up with attacks like this one Lavrov cancelled his trip after the incident. On 26 November, Prime Minister
Dmitry Medvedev announced broad economic sanctions against Turkey that would affect their joint investment projects, including the possible shelving of a multibillion-dollar deal to build
Turkish Stream gas pipeline through Turkey. Chechen leader
Ramzan Kadyrov said that Turkey would regret its actions. Putin accused Turkey of helping
ISIL in the illegal oil trade, saying that funds from the sale of oil were used to support terrorists. The Russian Air Force had recently started bombing the oil tankers en route to other countries, including Turkey, and the infrastructure for processing and storage of crude oil. Putin later claimed that the Turkish shoot-down was an "ambush" that had been prepared in advance. A bill making denial of the
Armenian genocide illegal has been introduced in the Russian
State Duma. Syrian Information Minister
Omran al-Zoubi said the shooting would be added to the criminal record of insurgent groups fighting in the country and of those countries that were financing and arming them; he mentioned Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar as the strongest such backers. He further called for working towards solving the crisis in Syria. Davutoglu said Turkey would cooperate but did not offer an apology. Dozens of protesters were reported outside the Russian consulate in Istanbul demonstrating against Russian military operations in the Turkmen-populated areas of Syria. Russia started bombarding rebels – including Turkmen insurgents – in Latakia, ignoring demands made by Turkey over the previous week to end its military operations close to the Turkish border. A Turkmen commander said missiles fired from Russian warships in the Mediterranean were also hitting the area. Russian Defence Ministry spokesman
Igor Konashenkov said that as soon as the pilot was rescued the groups responsible for the attack had been killed by Russian bombing and Syrian government rocket artillery. A Turkish supply convoy, reportedly carrying small arms, machine-guns and ammunition, was bombed by what is believed to have been Russian airstrikes in the northwestern town of
Azaz, in north-western Syria. Claimed as an aid convoy by the Turks, no organization has as yet confirmed that the convoy belonged to them. At least seven people died and ten people were injured as around 20 trucks went up in flames. Turkish state-run
Anadolu Agency accused Russia of supporting the
Kurdish YPG,
PYD and
Syrian Democratic Forces. On 25 November – the day after the jet was shot down, a Russian lawmaker,
Sergei Mironov, introduced a bill to the
Russian parliament that would criminalize the denial of the
Armenian genocide, a political move that Turkey has strongly opposed when countries like France and Greece adopted similar laws. On 26 November, Russia deployed the guided missile cruiser
Moskva armed with
S-300F (SA-N-6 Grumble) long-range
SAM missiles positioned off
Latakia, off the Syrian coast The Russian military warned it would shoot down any aerial target that posed a threat to its planes. On 26 November, the Russian Ministry of Defence broke off contact with the Turkish military. All existing channels of communication between the two sides have been shut down, the ministry said. On 27 November, Russia announced that it had also suspended its participation in joint Black Sea naval drills indefinitely. The Russian navy's envoy in charge of coordinating the actions of Russia's Black Sea Fleet with the Turkish navy has reportedly been recalled. On 28 November, Russian president
Vladimir Putin signed a decree imposing economic sanctions against Turkey. The decree, which came into force immediately, banned charter flights from Russia to Turkey, prevented tour firms selling holidays there, and outlawed some Turkish imports, and halted or curbed the economic activities of Turkish firms and nationals. On 2 December, Russian Deputy Defence Minister
Anatoly Antonov said in a media briefing with foreign journalists that Turkey was the biggest buyer of "stolen" oil from Syria and Iraq and accused the family of Turkish president
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of being directly involved in the trade of petroleum with the Islamic State group. On 3 December, Putin referred to the incident during his annual state of the nation speech. At his annual press conference on 17 December 2015, when asked about a third-party involvement in the current Russian-Turkish relations deteriorated by the shootdown of Russian Su-24, Vladimir Putin remarked "...if someone in the Turkish government decided to lick the Americans in a certain place, well I don't know then, was that the right decision or not?". On 23 December,
Selahattin Demirtaş, co-leader of Turkey's pro-Kurdish
Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), criticized Ankara's stance regarding a Russian jet shot down by Turkey. On 27 December, the Turkish newspaper
Hurriyet published an interview with Alparslan Çelik who spoke about the downing.
TASS reported that the Turkish militant had fought in Syria for two years. The Russian foreign ministry expressed surprise and indignation that a major Turkish newspaper had given floor to the "murderer and terrorist... filled with hatred towards Russia and the Russian people." On 30 December, the Russian foreign ministry called for Ankara to arrest Çelik. In June 2016, Turkish president
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan sent a letter, on the recommendation of
Farkhad Akhmedov to Russian president
Vladimir Putin expressing sympathy and 'deep condolences' to the family of the victims. An investigation was also reopened into the suspected Turkish military personnel involved in the incident. Three weeks later (in the meantime, there had been a
coup d'état attempt against him), Erdoğan announced in an interview that the two Turkish pilots who downed Russian aircraft were arrested on suspicion that they have links to the
Gülen movement, and that a court should find out "the truth". By doing so, Turkish government aimed to cast aspersions on the movement, a conspiracy theory implying that the organization was behind all the troubles Turkey was facing.
International organizations • :
President of the European Council Donald Tusk called upon Turkey and Russia to stay calm; he was supported by the
High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs Federica Mogherini, following her meeting with
Secretary General of NATO Jens Stoltenberg, who urged both parties to avoid escalation. • :
Secretary General of NATO Jens Stoltenberg backed Turkey's assessment of the engagement, offered solidarity with Turkey, and called for both sides to de-escalate the situation.
Countries • : Defence Minister
Seyran Ohanian said it was a blow to efforts to fight terrorism. • : Foreign Minister
Julie Bishop said that it was important the incident did not lead to an escalation of conflict "in a highly charged regional situation". • : President
Ilham Aliyev said that Azerbaijan was ready to make efforts to reduce and eliminate tension in Turkish-Russian relations. • : The office of President
Nicos Anastasiades stated that the shootdown would undermine efforts to fight terrorism. • : President
Miloš Zeman said Turkey's attack on the jet again fuels previously-raised suspicions that Ankara is supporting the terrorists in Syria. Prime Minister
Bohuslav Sobotka and Foreign Minister
Lubomír Zaorálek called for better co-ordination among those fighting in the region. • : President
François Hollande called the plane incident "a serious one" and said that Turkey is providing information to NATO to investigate the circumstances. He also called for the prevention of any escalation of the situation. • :
Chancellor Angela Merkel said that countries have the right to defend their airspace, but the event took place against a context of tension, and that she had spoken to the Turkish prime minister in an effort to promote calm. German Vice-Chancellor
Sigmar Gabriel called Turkish actions unpredictable. Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier called for "prudence and common sense" in response to the incident and that
Syria peace talks in Vienna should not be derailed. • : Greek Foreign Minister
Nikos Kotzias expressed solidarity with Russia in a phone conversation with his Russian counterpart
Sergey Lavrov. Greeks, also stated that
Turkey violated Greek airspace almost daily. • :
President Rouhani said the governments of Russia and Turkey should investigate the circumstances and avoid repetition.
Mohammad Javad Zarif, Iranian Foreign Minister, said the recent escalation of tensions between the two nations over Turkey's downing of a Russian jet can be settled through mutual discretion and prudence. General
Yahya Rahim Safavi, a revolutionary guards adviser to the
Supreme Leader of Iran, said Turkey had committed a "tactical mistake". • : Vice President
Nouri al-Maliki accused Turkey of hypocrisy, saying that "Turkey's planes violate Iraqi and Syrian airspace every day". • : Kazakhstan Foreign Ministry urged both countries to show restraint. President Nazarbayev said that the plane was in a war against terrorists. • : Minister of Defence
Raimonds Bergmanis told
LNT that NATO allies are united with Turkey, who had the right to protect its airspace. He added that there is much evidence regarding breaches of Turkish airspace carried out by Russian military aircraft. • : Foreign Minister
Linas Linkevičius supported Turkey's right to defend itself. • : A few days later, the
Foreign Office expressed concerns about the ongoing tensions between Turkey and Russia and recommended that the two countries should negotiate. • : President
Tomislav Nikolić said that the incident was the fault of Turkey and that Turkey often violated Greek and Syrian airspace adding that "now one can hardly expect aid from Turkey in the fight against terrorism". • : National Security and Defence Council Secretary
Oleksandr Turchynov said that the Turkish Air Force acted professionally as any civilised country should operate when its sovereign space is violated by another state's warplane. He added that Ukraine should shoot down Russian jets if they violate Ukraine's airspace too. • :
Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said the incident was potentially serious but also said that Turkey was an important ally of the United Kingdom and European Union. When asked by opposition Labour MP
Dennis Skinner whether Turkey could still be considered an ally, Hammond said that Turkey is an important NATO ally in the context of the fight against ISIL and the migration crisis. • : President
Barack Obama assured his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, in a phone call, of support for his country's right to defend its sovereignty and that it was important to find out exactly what had happened and to prevent escalation. The United States announced a list of new
economic sanctions on Russian and Syrian individuals and companies.
Financial markets The
MICEX and
RTS Index, and
Borsa Istanbul fell over 1%. The
Turkish lira also dropped following news of the shootdown, as did broader European
stock markets. ==See also==