Trump's shock Syria retreat reverberates as Turkish troops mass
Kurdish forces in Syria have said the fate of tens
of thousands of suspected Islamic State fighters and their families is
uncertain, after US forces began a sudden withdrawal from the Turkish-Syrian
border, leaving their Kurdish allies to face the prospect of a Turkish invasion
alone.
The effects of the shock retreat reverberated
through the region on Monday as Turkish forces massed near the border with the
Kurdish stronghold of north-eastern Syria.
The threat of a Turkish offensive marks the end of a
US-Turkish arrangement established in August that saw troops from both
countries carrying out joint patrols in a ‘safe zone’ along the border keeping
Turkish and Kurdish forces apart. That scheme was under strain however, as
Turkey wanted to establish military outposts deeper inside Syria and resettle
non-Kurdish Syrian refugees in the designated safe zone. Those demands were
opposed by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).
In a phone conversation with Donald Trump on Sunday,
the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan,
appears to have told the US president he would no longer abide by the joint
border arrangement and was preparing to invade.
After the phone call, a White House statement (that
showed signs of having been directly dictated by Trump) said: “Turkey will soon
be moving forward with its long-planned operation into northern Syria”, adding
that US forces were being removed from the area of operations.
The SDF said on Monday its US partners had already
begun withdrawing troops from areas along Turkey’s border. Footage aired on the
Kurdish news agency Hawar purportedly showed US armoured vehicles evacuating
key positions in the border region.
The SDF spokesman, Mustafa Bali, accused the US of
leaving the area to “turn into a war zone”, adding that the SDF would “defend
north-east Syria at all costs”.
On Tuesday Syria’s deputy foreign minister Faisal
Mekdad called on the country’s Kurds to rejoin the government side. “The
homeland welcomes all its sons and Damascus will solve all Syrian problems in a
positive way, away from violence,” Mekdad said in an interview with a pro-government
paper.
The Turkish defence ministry declared in a Twitter
post late on Monday: “All preparations for a possible military operation into
northeastern Syria are completed … Establishment of a safe zone is essential to
contribute to stability and peace of the region and for Syrians to live in
safety.”
After a furious political backlash from US
conservatives, in which Trump was accused of betraying the Kurdish fighters who
look the lead in defeating Isis, the Trump administration insisted that the US
had not endorsed a Turkish offensive.
“It appears that the Turks are intent on some sort
of military operation, possibly combined with an effort to resettle refugees,”
a senior administration official said. “The president made it very clear publicly
and privately that the US does not endorse or support any Turkish operation in
northern Syria, or there’ll be no US Armed Forces involvement, or support for
any operation that the Turks undertake.”
In a sign of disapproval, the Pentagon ended a two-week
old confidence building effort in which US and Turkish air forces collaborated
in counter-terrorist operations, and the US also cut Turkey off the flow of
intelligence from drone video feeds over Syria.
“That doesn’t mean the Turks can’t fly over Syria.
That just means they can’t fly with the US,” said Aaron Stein, the director of
the Middle East programme and the Foreign Policy Research Institute. “The DoD
[defence department] is trying to signal the consequences to Turkey, and they
don’t want to look complicit in what is about to happen.”
The administration official said that an estimated
50 to 100 US special forces soldiers were being pulled back from the 30km safe
zone on the border, but would not be leaving Syria, but redeployed instead to
more secure positions inside the country.
“This does not constitute a withdrawal from Syria,”
the official said. “We’re talking about a small number of troops that will move
to other bases within Syria.”
“The fact that we’re removing them is not a green
light,” the official said. He added that Turkey would be held responsible if
Isis detainees held by the SDF were able to escape as a result of the Turkish
offensive, or if war crimes were committed. He pointed to a tweet on Monday by
the president warning of repercussions.
“As I have stated strongly before, and just to
reiterate, if Turkey does anything that I, in my great and unmatched wisdom,
consider to be off limits, I will totally destroy and obliterate the Economy of
Turkey (I’ve done before!),” Trump’s tweet said.
The confusion over US policy has followed a familiar
pattern of the Trump presidency in which the president appears to dramatically
alter course in an informal conversation with a foreign leader, follow up with
a series of tweets, and leave the administration to try to rationalise,
downplay or mitigate Trump’s impulses.
As has often been the case, Washington’s European
allies – UK, France and Germany – were not given advance notice of Trump’s
Sunday night statement, though the administration official insisted that senior
US administration officials had been informed.
The background briefings provided by officials
appeared to be at odds with what Trump himself has said. The White House
statement issued on Sunday night gave no hint that the president disapproved of
a Turkish offensive. Furthermore in his later tweets, Trump was adamant that
the US troops withdrawn from the border would be brought back to the US, not
redeployed inside Syria.
In his tweets, Trump had appeared unsentimental
about the Kurds, noting that they had been paid “massive amounts of money and
equipment” in the four year campaign, when they were used as the main US proxy
to fight Isis in Syria.
But the issue of Isis foreign fighters, most of them
European, has clearly preoccupied the US president.
Both Trump and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic
Forces (SDF) have repeatedly called on European states to repatriate around
20,000 foreign nationals currently held in north-east Syria for trial and
rehabilitation at home.
Trump argued it was up to Turkey and Europe and
others, “to watch over the captured Isis fighters and families”.
An SDF spokesman, Amjed Osman, said on Monday it was
not clear what would happen to the prisoners. “We repeatedly called for foreign
states to take responsibility for their Isis nationals. But there was no
response,” he said in a statement.
It is far from clear if Turkey has the capacity – or
desire – to take custody of the detainees being held in crowded Kurdish jails
and displacement camps, stretching the SDF to its limits and prompting warnings
that militants are using the prisons to regroup.
Some 74,000 women and children of the caliphate are
held at the infamous Hawl camp, where they are guarded by just 400 SDF
soldiers. But the camp, a hotbed of violence and extremist ideology, falls
outside the parameters of the 32km-deep safe zone on the Turkish-Syrian border
that Erdogan has said his forces would establish.
The administration official briefing the press had
claimed, wrongly, that the camps were inside the border zone.
Aid agencies warned that an offensive could displace
hundreds of thousands of people, and create a new humanitarian disaster.
Save the Children said that more than 9,000 children
from 40 countries were being held in camps and depended on humanitarian aid to
survive.
“Reports of imminent military operations and troops already
sent to the border are deeply troubling. The international community, including
the UK, should take urgent steps to do what’s best for these children and bring
them to their home countries before access becomes even more unpredictable,”
the group said.
The Guardian understands that the SAS and French
special forces present in Rojava would be tasked with securing the camp
perimeters if the Kurds withdrew. However, with only several hundred troops
between them, their numbers would need to be quickly boosted by regular
soldiers to avoid a catastrophic collapse in security.
In Washington, the move was condemned by allies and
opponents of the president. House speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, said the
move “poses a dire threat to regional security and stability, and sends a
dangerous message to Iran and Russia, as well as our allies, that the United
States is no longer a trusted partner”.
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said: “A
precipitous withdrawal of US forces from Syria would only benefit Russia, Iran,
and the Assad regime. And it would increase the risk that Isis and other
terrorist groups regroup.”
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, a staunch Trump loyalist
on most issues, said he would call for Turkey’s suspension from NATO and
introduce sanctions against Ankara if the Turks attack Kurdish forces.
“This decision to abandon our Kurdish allies and
turn Syria over to Russia, Iran, & Turkey will put every radical Islamist
on steroids. Shot in the arm to the bad guys. Devastating for the good guys,”
Graham wrote in a tweet.
During the campaign against Isis, the SDF did the
bulk of the ground fighting to defeat Isis in Syria, losing 11,000 troops in
the grinding battle. The senior ranks of the organisation are dominated by
members of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has fought a four-decade
guerilla war against the Turkish government.
Ankara has long complained that, while fighting
Isis, PKK forces were also waging war in Turkey.