Erdoğan breaching Sochi deal once more
Turkey has established a new checkpoint in the northern Syrian province of Idlib, in a move deemed as an extra provocation for Russia.
The area, where the new
checkpoint has been set up, is defined as a "buffer zone" in the
September 2018 Sochi agreement. This means that none of the countries signing
the agreement has the legal right to establish military bases in it.
New
breach
This is the 60th
checkpoint in the de-escalation region, according to the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights. It is important in that it overlooks large swaths of land in
Idlib.
By establishing the new
checkpoint, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
steps up his escalation against the Russian government. This is especially true
after what is known as Tahrir al-Sham turned down a Turkish injunction for
establishing the checkpoint. Tahrir al-Sham rejected the Turkish injunction
because it knows that the checkpoint would pit it against Russia.
The construction of the
new checkpoint coincides with Turkey's dispatch of reinforcements into Idlib.
Blackmailing
Russia
Political science
professor at Cairo University Mohamed Hussein said Erdoğan
only wants to put pressure on the United States and blackmail Russia.
"He wants both
countries to present financial and logistical support to him," Hussein
told The Reference. "This is especially true with the ongoing
deterioration of economic conditions in Turkey and the coronavirus
outbreak."
He said Erdoğan
had violated the Sochi agreement more than once in the past with the aim of
achieving political goals.
Sorry to say, he said,
Russia bows to Erdoğan's demands every time
he breaches the agreement.




