The Latest: UK's Cameron: Airstrikes on IS won't raise risk
By Associated Press
Nov 26, 2015 5:56 AM CST
FILE - This Tuesday, Nov. 24, 2015 frame grab from video by Haberturk TV, shows a Russian warplane on fire before crashing on a hill as seen from Hatay province, Turkey. The Russian plane shot down by Turkey on Tuesday was operating over the Turkmen Mountain region in Syria's Latakia province, and one...   (Associated Press)

BEIRUT (AP) — The latest developments regarding the war in Syria. All times local.

1:55 p.m.

British Prime Minister David Cameron says airstrikes against the Islamic State group in Syria won't raise the risk of an attack in Britain, because the U.K. "is already in the top tier of countries" the militants are targeting.

Cameron on Thursday is trying to persuade British lawmakers to back expanding Royal Air Force strikes against IS from Iraq into Syria.

He said France and the United States want Britain to join and the country "must not shirk our responsibility for security or hand it to others."

Cameron wants to hold a vote in Parliament on airstrikes, but said he would only do so if "there is a clear majority for action, because we will not hand a publicity coup" to IS.

He's likely to decide after Thursday's Commons debate whether to hold a vote next week.

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1:35 p.m.

A Hezbollah TV station says a joint operation by the Lebanese militant group and Syrian security agents killed an Islamic State figure suspected of involvement in Beirut's deadly bombing earlier this month.

AL-Manar TV says Abdul-Salam Hendawi, also known as Abu Abdo, died in an ambush in an IS-held area in Syria's central province of Homs.

It says Hendawi was responsible for bringing into Lebanon two suicide bombers who carried out the Nov. 12 attack in southern Beirut. The attack killed 43 people and wounded more than 200.

Thursday's report did not say when the ambush on Hendawi took place. It added that his main job was to transport suicide attackers from the northern Syrian city of Raqqa into Lebanon.

The Islamic State group did not immediately confirm Hendawi's death.

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1:25 p.m.

Russian President Vladimir Putin says Turkey still has not apologized for the downing of a Russian warplane or given assurances that "the culprits of this crime" will be punished.

Previously warm relations between the two countries have soured after Turkey on Tuesday shot down a Russian Su-24 on a bombing mission near the Syria border.

Speaking at the Kremlin on Thursday, Putin complained that he has not received an apology from Turkey nor an offer "to make up for the damages." Russia previously insisted that its plane never violated the Turkish airspace as Turkey claimed.

He said he regretted the fact that relations between Turkey and Russia have been driven into a stalemate.

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