Turkey says it won't bow to US threat over its Syria plans
Turkey will not bow to threats over its Syria plans,
the Turkish vice president said Tuesday in an apparent response to President
Donald Trump's warning to Ankara the previous day about the scope of its
planned military incursion into northeastern Syria.
Trump said earlier this week the United States would
step aside for an expected Turkish attack on Syrian Kurdish fighters, who have
fought alongside Americans for years, but he then threatened to destroy the
Turks' economy if they went too far.
The US president later cast his decision to abandon
the Kurdish fighters in Syria as fulfilling a campaign promise to withdraw from
``endless war'' in the Middle East, even as Republican critics and others said
he was sacrificing a US ally and undermining American credibility.
Trump's statements have reverberated on all sides of
the divide in Syria and the Mideast.
In Ankara, Turkish Vice President Fuat Oktay said
Turkey was intent on combatting Syrian Kurdish fighters across its border in
Syria and on creating a zone that would allow Turkey to resettle Syrian
refugees there.
Where Turkey's security is concerned, we determine
our own path but we set our own limits,'' Oktay said.
Meanwhile, in the Syrian capital of Damascus, Deputy
Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad called on the country's Kurds to rejoin the
government side after apparently being abandoned by their US allies.
Mekdad's comments were the first Syrian reaction
since Trump's announcement on Sunday and as northeastern Syria braces for an
imminent Turkish attack on Syrian Kurdish militias. Trump's statement has
infuriated the Kurds, who stand to lose the autonomy they gained from Damascus
during Syria's civil war, now in its ninth year.
The homeland welcomes all its sons and Damascus will
solve all Syrian problems in a positive way, away from violence,'' Mekdad
claimed in an interview with the pro-government daily Al-Watan.
President Bashar Assad's government abandoned the
predominantly Kurdish area in northern Syria at the height of Syria's civil war
to focus on more key areas where the military was being challenged by the
rebels. The US began working with the Syrian Kurdish fighters after the
emergence of the Islamic State group.
The Syrian government ``will defend all Syrian
territory and will not accept any occupation of any land or iota of the Syrian
soil,'' Mekdad said about the expected Turkish incursion.
The Syrian Kurdish force has pledged to fight back,
raising the potential for an eruption of new warfare in Syria.
We will not hesitate for a moment in defending our
people'' against Turkish troops, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces said
in a statement, adding that it has lost 11,000 fighters in the war against the
Islamic State group in Syria.
On Tuesday, a spokesman for the US-backed
predominantly Kurdish force that fought IS invited Trump to come see the
progress the force and the US made in northeastern Syria.
We have more work to do to keep ISIS from coming
back & make our accomplishments permanent. If America leaves, all will be
erased,'' he tweeted, referring to the Islamic State group by an alternative
acronym.
Turkey, which considers Kurdish fighters in Syria
terrorists and links them to a decades-old insurgency in Turkey, has already
launched two major incursions into northern Syria over the past years.
The first was in 2016, when Turkey and Syrian
opposition fighters it backs attacked areas held by the Islamic State group
west of the Euphrates River. Last year Turkey launched an attack on the Syrian
Kurdish enclave of Afrin, leading to the displacement of some 300,000 people.
Also Tuesday, Iran urged Turkey not to go ahead with
its planned an attack on Syrian Kurds, the Iranian state TV reported. Foreign
Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif called his Turkish counterpart, Mevlut Cavusoglu,
to express Tehran's opposition to the anticipated Turkish operation.
Zarif urged Turkey to respect Syria's integrity and
sovereignty, the report said.
Iran, Turkey and Russia have been working together
as part of the so-called Astana group on the Syrian civil war, talks that have
run parallel to UN efforts to find a solution to the conflict.
Trump's announcement threw the military situation in
Syria into fresh chaos and injected deeper uncertainty into the region.
US involvement in Syria has been fraught with peril
since it started in 2014 with the insertion of small numbers of special
operations forces to recruit, train, arm and advise local fighters to combat
the Islamic State.
Trump entered the White House in 2017 intent on
getting out of Syria, and even before the counter-IS military campaign
reclaimed the last militant strongholds early this year, he declared victory
and said troops would leave.
In recent weeks, the US and Turkey had reached an
apparent accommodation of Turkish concerns about the presence of Kurdish
fighters, seen in Turkey as a threat.
American and Turkish soldiers had been conducting
joint patrols in a zone along the border. As part of that work, barriers
designed to protect the Syrian Kurds were dismantled amid assurances that
Turkey would not invade.