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Tartus naval base
Installation of the Russian Navy in Syria
Installation of the Russian Navy in Syria
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 720th Material-Technical Support Point of the Russian Navy in Syria |
| native_name | 720-й ПМТО ВМФ России в Сирии |
| image | NASA FIRMS 2024-10-20 Tartus.png |
| caption | Satellite imagery of Tartus naval facility |
| map_type | Syria |
| coordinates | |
| built | |
| ownership | Ba'athist Syria (1971–2024) |
| Syrian Arab Republic (caretaker and transitional, de jure: 2024–present) | |
| Russian Federation (de facto: 2024–present) | |
| open_to_public | No |
| operator | Soviet Union (1971–1991) |
| Commonwealth of Independent States (1991–1992) | |
| Russian Federation (1992–present) |
Syrian Arab Republic (caretaker and transitional, de jure: 2024–present) Russian Federation (de facto: 2024–present) Commonwealth of Independent States (1991–1992) Russian Federation (1992–present)
The Tartus naval base is a leased military installation of the Russian Navy on the northern edge of the sea port of the Syrian city of Tartus.
Established in 1971, during the Cold War, by an agreement between the Soviet Union and Ba'athist Syria, the facility supported the Soviet Navy's 5th Operational Squadron, its Mediterranean fleet.
After the fall of the Soviet Union, the facility remained in limited use by Russia's Black Sea Fleet. From 2009, the facility was upgraded and expanded, including to serve the Mediterranean Sea Task Force, formed in 2013. From 2011, it was the only remaining Russian naval base outside the former Soviet Union and after 2015, the base supported the Russian intervention in the Syrian civil war. In 2017 Russia concluded an agreement with Syria, obtaining a free-of-charge 49-year lease for its ships based in the Mediterranean, jurisdiction over the base, and the ability to store nuclear weapons aboard its ships.
In December 2024, following the fall of the Assad regime, the Russian Navy began withdrawing from the base, completing this by early March 2025. In January 2025, the Syrian caretaker government ended the treaty allowing Russian military presence in Syria, and a contract with Russian company Stroytransgaz to manage the commercial areas of the Tartus port. In February, the Syrian defence minister Murhaf Abu Qasra stated that Russia would be allowed to maintain the base "if we get benefits for Syria out of this". By October, Russia was using the port for resupplying its airbase while negotiations over its fate continued.
History
1971 to 2012
The Soviet Union established a facility at Tartus during the Cold War in accordance with a Soviet–Syrian agreement concluded in 1971, with a view of supporting the Soviet Navy's 5th Operational Squadron in the Mediterranean, which the Soviets saw as a counterbalance to the U.S. Sixth Fleet headquartered in Italy (then in Gaeta).
In the early 1970s, the Soviet Navy had similar support points located in Egypt, Ethiopia (Eritrea), Vietnam and elsewhere. In 1977, the Soviet Navy evacuated its Egyptian support bases at Alexandria and Mersa Matruh and transferred the ships and property to Tartus, where it transformed the naval support facility into the 229th Naval and Estuary Vessel Support Division.
In 1984, Moscow upgraded the Tartus support point to the 720th Material-Technical Support Point.
In December 1991, the Soviet Union dissolved; the Soviet Mediterranean 5th Operational Squadron (composed of ships from the Northern Fleet, the Baltic Fleet, and the Black Sea Fleet) ceased to exist in December 1992. Since then, the Russian Navy has occasionally deployed ships and submarines to the Mediterranean Sea.
As Russia wrote off 73% of Syria's $13.4 billion Soviet-era debt in 2005 and became Syria's main arms supplier, Russia and Syria held talks about allowing Russia to develop and enlarge its naval facility, so that Russia could strengthen its naval presence in the Mediterranean. Amid Russia's deteriorating relations with the West, because of the Russo-Georgian War and of plans to deploy a U.S. missile defense shield in Poland, an unsourced article said that President Bashar al-Assad reportedly agreed to the port's conversion into a permanent Middle East base for Russia's nuclear-armed warships.
In September 2008, a second floating pier was built at the facility, following the discussion of the issue between the presidents of Russia and Syria in August. Meanwhile, mass media and officials of Russia, Israel, and Syria made contradictory statements about Russian warships planning to call at Tartus as well as about the prospects of upgrading the facility to a naval base.
In July 2009, the Russian military announced they would modernize the Tartus facility.
During the Syrian Civil War
Media reports in March 2012 suggested that Russian special forces had arrived at the Tartus port. According to a TASS report published in December 2017, the Tartus facility has been used for supplies of Russian armaments and military cargo since June 2012. Back in June 2012, Russian officials denied reports that they were reinforcing the garrison at Tartus with marines. In 2012, the BBC reported that up to 50 Russian sailors were stationed there then.
On 3 August 2012, international media reported that three large Russian amphibious assault ships, carrying hundreds of marines would soon visit Tartus. Earlier reports, quoting a source at the Russian General Staff, said the ships would spend a few days in Tartus and would take on fresh supplies of food and water. British media added that the ships each had up to 120 marines on board. The Russian Defence Ministry left open the possibility that the ships might dock there at some point for logistical reasons, saying they had every right to do so. The unnamed General Staff source had said that after calling in at Tartus, they would head for the Bosphorus and the Russian Black Sea port of Novorossiysk. The ships, part of Russia's Northern Fleet, were Aleksandr Otrakovsky, Georgy Pobedonosets and Kondopoga, all s. The source, quoted by Interfax news agency, said one would anchor off Tartus and the other two would use a floating pier, because the port facilities were limited. There was speculation that Russia may begin evacuating its nationals from Syria and deploy Marines to protect personnel and equipment, as the violence intensifies (about 30,000 Russian citizens were said to be living in Syria).
In May 2013, a U.S. newspaper reported that Russia had sent a dozen or more warships to patrol waters near Tartus, a move that was seen as a warning to the U.S. and Israel not to intervene in the conflict in Syria.
At the end of June 2013, Russian deputy foreign minister Mikhail Bogdanov said in an interview that the facility did not have any strategic or military importance and that Russia had evacuated all civilian and military personnel from Tartus and Syria ("Presently, the Russian Defense Ministry has not a single person stationed in Syria"). This information was then confirmed by the Russian Defense Ministry.
After the permanent Mediterranean Sea Task Force of the Russian Navy was formed in September 2013, the facility at Tartus was charged with servicing and repairs of the ships of that formation.
On 18 January 2017, Russia and Syria signed an agreement, effective forthwith, wherein Russia would be allowed to expand and use the naval facility at Tartus for 49 years on a free-of-charge basis and enjoy sovereign jurisdiction over the base. The treaty allows Russia to keep up to 11 ships at Tartus, including nuclear vessels; it stipulates privileges and full immunity from Syria's jurisdiction for Russia's personnel and materiel at the facility. The treaty was ratified and approved by Russian parliament, and the relevant federal law was signed by president Vladimir Putin by the end of December 2017.
In late December 2017, Russia announced it had set about "forming a permanent grouping" at the Tartus naval facility as well as at the Khmeimim Air Base, after president Putin approved the structure and the personnel strength of the Tartus and Khmeimim facilities.
The Russian facility at Tartus has been used for delivering armaments and supplies by Russian dock landing ships and cargo ships that pass the Straits from the Russian Black Sea port in Novorossiysk to Syria (the Syrian Express) — for the Russian intervention in the Syrian Civil War that began on 30 September 2015 as well as for the Syrian Arab Army. According to media reports in September 2015, a drastic intensification of traffic of the Syrian Express was noted since mid-August 2015.
In April 2019, senior Russian officials were reported to have had talks with the Syrian government; Russian deputy prime minister Yury Borisov was quoted as saying that a contract on renting the Tartus port by Russia for "use by Russian business" was expected to be signed shortly.
The Tartus facility can accommodate four medium-sized vessels but only if both of its 100 m floating piers, inside the northern breakwater, are operational. It is not (yet) capable of hosting any of the Russian Navy's current major warships which range in length from the 129 m through to the 163 m , much less cruisers such as the 186.4 m and the 252 m , or the 305 m and the 156 m . It is however, in theory at least, presently able to support limited vertical replenishment operations for those larger warships.
Fall of Assad regime to present day
In November 2024, rebels including Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) launched a major offensive against the Russian-backed Syrian military and seized the city of Aleppo.
On the morning of 3 December 2024, analysts such as Droxford Maritime saw that a tanker and some warships were leaving Tartus. By the evening, image analysts such as M T Anderson had confirmed the base was now empty. Two s, one , one Improved Kilo-class submarine and two auxiliary ships, one of which being the tanker Yelna, had all departed and sailed into the Mediterranean.
On 8 December 2024, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that Tartus naval base had been put on a state of high alert. Reuters reported that Russian war blogger "Rybar", who is close to Russian Defence Ministry, said "Russia's military presence in the Middle East region hangs by a thread, Russian warships had left Tartus and taken up position off the coast for security reasons, the Hmeimim Air Base had effectively been cut off after rebels took control of a nearby town, Kurdish forces had started to block Russian facilities beyond the Euphrates, and Russian positions at an oil facility in Homs had been blocked."
On 9 December 2024, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said communication lines with HTS had been opened to talk about Russia retaining its naval and air bases in Syria.
The former Senior British Military Advisor to US Central Command, Maj. Gen. Chip Chapman, told Times Radio on 9 December 2024 that Russian evacuations from bases across Syria appear to be underway and that small groups of Russian troops are cut off from the main Tartus naval base and trapped.
the last known Russian submarine in the Mediterranean, the Kilo-class Novorossiysk had exited the Strait of Gibraltar.
On 19 January 2025, Tartus Customs Director Riyad Joudi told Al-Watan that an agreement signed in 2019 with a former subsidiary of Stroytransgaz to redevelop the civilian portion of the Port of Tartus was rescinded by the provisional government. In a statement to Kommersant, Anton Mardasov from the Russian International Affairs Council said he believes that this does not indicate any changes for the naval base itself.
On 22 January 2025 the new Syrian government terminated the treaty allowing Russian military presence in Syria. On 2 February 2025, all Russian ships previously stationed at Tartus were reported as having left the base. In the process a Grachonok-class anti-saboteur ship may have been abandoned at the base.
Although Russian warships no longer berth at the base, satellite imagery showed a continued naval presence nearby in Syria’s territorial waters. As of 6 June 2025, at least one surface combatant was operating there: a Steregushchiy-class corvette. In October 2025, Russia began resupplying its airbase in Hmeimim with truck convoys traveling from Tartus, doing so at least 5 times during the first half of the month.
Notes
References
References
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