Turkey kills 33 soldiers, forces Assad to pay for it-tense February 28, 19:41

In Syria, where civil wars continue, 33 Turkish soldiers in support of the rebels were killed in an Assad-side attack, and senior officials from the Turkish Presidency said, `` We will continue operations until we can pay the Assad government a price. "The situation is growing intense, or there is no major battle between the Turkish and Assad regimes.

In the ongoing civil war in Syria, 33 soldiers in Turkey were killed after the Assad administration bombed a Turkish squadron in support of the rebels on Tuesday in the northwestern Idlib province, the last rebel base.

The Turkish government held an urgent meeting to discuss the response, and spokeswoman Altun, president of the Presidency, issued a statement on Tuesday.

"The Turkish government has decided to respond to the attack and the Assad regime, which is responsible for killing a large number of Syrians, and will continue operations in Syria until they have paid the price," said Artun.

The Turkish army has repeatedly clashed with the Assad administration, but the situation has increased as the Turkish army expands its operations and develops into large-scale combat.

Russian Ministry of Defense `` Turkish responsibility for soldier death ''

Russia's defense ministry, which has been the backing of the Assad administration in the Syrian civil war, issued a statement on Tuesday that it reported that 33 Turkish soldiers had died in an attack on the Assad administration's side. Faction attempted a massive attack on Syrian government troops, "he emphasized, saying Assad's operations were against militants.

He said, `` Turkish troops were not and should not be in the area where the battle was based on the location information received from the Turkish side '', claiming that the Turkish side did not inform the movement of the troops and was involved in the battle Did.

He then called on both sides to restrain themselves so that the attack did not lead to a massive retaliation between the Turkish and Assad regimes.