Trump sanctions fail to slow Turkey assault; Syrian troops move on Manbij
Turkey ignored U.S. sanctions and pressed on with
its offensive in northern Syria on Tuesday, while the Russia-backed Syrian army
roared into one of the most hotly contested cities abandoned by U.S. forces in
Donald Trump's retreat.
Reuters journalists accompanied Syrian government
forces who entered the centre of Manbij, a flashpoint where U.S. troops had
previously conducted joint patrols with Turkey.
Russian and Syrian flags were flying from a building
on the city outskirts, and from a convoy of military vehicles.
Russia's Interfax news agency, citing Moscow's
Defence Ministry, said later that Syrian forces had taken control of an area of
more than 1,000 square kilometres around Manbij. This included Tabqa military
airfield, two hydroelectric power plants and several bridges across the
Euphrates river, it said.
In Manbij, Syrian troops were manning joint
checkpoints alongside regional Kurdish militia (YPG), witnesses said.
A YPG official said Turkish-backed fighters were
still 15 km north of the city. Turkey's state-owned Anadolu agency said six
civilians were killed and 13 wounded in three villages near the town of
Jarablus in a YPG attack launched from north of Manbij.
Turkish Lira shrugs off sanctions
A week after reversing U.S. policy and moving troops
out of the way to allow Turkey to attack Washington's Syrian allies, Trump
announced a package of sanctions to punish Ankara.
But the measures - mainly a hike in steel tariffs
and a pause in trade talks - were less robust than financial markets had
anticipated, and Trump's critics derided them as too feeble to have an impact.
The Turkish lira, which had fallen on the
expectation of tougher U.S. measures, recovered after the sanctions were
announced, as did its bond and stock markets, with traders noting that Trump
had spared Turkish banks.
Bilateral trade between Turkey and the United States
is relatively small - around a tenth the size of Turkey's trade with Europe.
Washington's most effective form of economic leverage would be to hinder
Turkey's access to U.S. financial markets, a step Trump has so far avoided.
In a potentially more damaging blow, German carmaker
Volkswagen said it was postponing a final decision on whether to build a 1
billion euro ($1.1 billion) plant in Turkey, citing concern over "current
developments" after international condemnation of the incursion.
Following Trump's announcement, the U.S. Treasury
said on Monday it had sanctioned Turkey's energy, defence and interior
ministers, as well as the ministries of energy and defence.
Foes become allies
Trump's unexpected decision to withhold protection from
Syria's Kurds after a phone call with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan a week
ago swiftly upended five years of U.S. policy in the Middle East.
The withdrawal gives a free hand to Washington's
adversaries in the world's deadliest ongoing war, namely Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad and his Russian and Iranian allies.
The United States announced on Sunday it was
withdrawing its entire force of 1,000 troops from northern Syria. Its former
Kurdish allies immediately forged a new alliance with Assad's government,
inviting the army into towns across the breadth of their territory.
The U.N. Security Council will likely meet on
Wednesday to discuss the latest developments in Syria, diplomats said, the
second such session since Turkey began its offensive.
Russian-backed Syrian government forces moved
swiftly to fill the void left by departing Americans from Manbij west of the
Euphrates river, which Turkey has vowed to capture.
"We are out of Manbij," said Colonel Myles
B Caggins, spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition in Syria.
Trump's pullout ends joint U.S.-Turkish patrols of
the Manbij area under a deal meant to persuade Turkey not to invade and attack
the Kurdish YPG, seen by Ankara as a terrorist group aligned with Kurdish
separatist insurgents in Turkey.
The YPG is also the main component of the SDF, which
had been Washington's key regional ally fighting Islamic State (IS) militants.
A Reuters cameraman on the Turkish frontier reported
heavy bombardment on Tuesday morning of the Syrian border town of Ras al Ain
where an SDF spokesman reported a fierce battle going on.
Accusations of betrayal
Trump has defended his reversal of U.S. policy as
part of a plan to extricate the United States from "endless" wars in
the Middle East.
But his critics, including senior figures in his own
Republican Party, cast it as a betrayal of the Kurds, loyal allies who lost
thousands of fighters as theprincipal ground forces in Washington's battle
against IS.
France said on Tuesday it would hold talks soon with
Iraqi and Kurdish leaders to weigh how, amidst the upheaval triggered by the
Turkish incursion, to secure thousands of foreign and regional IS militants
held in Syrian camps and prisons.
Turkey says it aims to defeat the Kurdish YPG
militia and create a "safe zone" where millions of Syrian war
refugees now in Turkey could be resettled.
The United Nations says 160,000 people have fled
their homes as Turkish forces advance. The regional Kurdish administration puts
the number of displaced at 270,000.
The U.N. Human Rights office said on Tuesday Turkey
could be held responsible for war crimes by fighters under its direction,
potentially including the assassination of Hevrin Khalaf, a leading Kurdish
politician killed on the side of a highway on Saturday by gunmen who posted the
incident on the Internet.
Turkish-backed fighters have denied blame for her
murder.
Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders)
said it had suspended most medical aid activities in northeast Syria and was
evacuating all international staff in the wake of air strikes and violence
during Turkey's incursion.
Erdogan, who has pledged to continue military
operations come what may, said Ankara was giving the world a chance to bring
peace to the region.
"The international community missed its
opportunity to prevent the Syrian crisis from pulling an entire region into a
maelstrom of instability," he wrote in the Wall Street Journal. "The
European Union - and the world - should support what Turkey is trying to
do."
The Syrian army deployments into Kurdish-held
territory evacuated by Washington amount to a victory for Assad and his most
powerful ally, Russia, giving them a foothold in the biggest remaining swathe
of Syria that had been beyond their grasp through much of its eight-year-old
war.
Trump's allies insisted Washington had not given its
blessing to the Turkish offensive, and demanded a ceasefire.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg echoed that
demand.