Russia Resupplies Syrian Air Base, Signaling Kremlin’s Intent to Keep Strategic Foothold
Key Facts
- Russia sent the sanctioned cargo ship Sparta to Syria in what U.S. officials described as the first known resupply mission since the Assad regime fell in late 2024.
- The shipment indicates Moscow may have retained access to its Khmeimim air base and Tartus naval facility under Syria’s new Islamist-led government.
- The move comes after the U.S. withdrew from its Syrian bases earlier this year, while Russia continues working to preserve its military reach in the Mediterranean and beyond.
by Emmitt Barry, Worthy News Washington D.C. Bureau Chief
(Worthy News) – Russia has sent a sanctioned cargo ship to resupply its air base in Syria, signaling that Moscow intends to preserve one of its most important military footholds in the Middle East despite the fall of longtime ally Bashar al-Assad, according to U.S. officials and satellite images reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
The Russian cargo ship Sparta left St. Petersburg in March and arrived in the Syrian port of Tartus in May after being escorted for much of its journey by Russian naval vessels. U.S. officials said it was the first known Russian resupply mission to Syria since Assad’s regime collapsed in late 2024.
The Sparta was reportedly carrying equipment for Russia’s Khmeimim air base, near Tartus. The ship’s owner is under U.S. sanctions for delivering weapons on behalf of Russia’s Defense Ministry.
The mission suggests that Moscow has managed to retain access to both Khmeimim and the Tartus naval facility under Syria’s new government, led by President Ahmed Sharaa, a former Islamist rebel commander whose forces once fought Assad and Russia’s military intervention.
Russia’s bases in Syria have long served as critical hubs for operations in the Mediterranean, Africa, and beyond. Their survival would represent a strategic win for the Kremlin at a time when some U.S. officials had hoped Assad’s ouster would weaken Moscow’s global military reach.
The development also comes after the U.S. withdrew from its Syrian bases earlier this year, ending a more than decade-long deployment that began as a campaign against ISIS.
According to the report, hundreds of Russian personnel remain in Syria. Moscow has also provided Syria with wheat and oil, likely at favorable rates, as the country’s new rulers seek economic relief after years of war and sanctions.
Former President Joe Biden had conditioned sanctions relief for Syria on the removal of Russian bases. President Trump later backed away from that requirement and ordered sanctions lifted without that restriction.
The Syrian government, U.S. Central Command, and Russia’s Defense Ministry did not comment on the reported resupply operation.
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