Syria troops fight Turkish forces alongside Kurds

The Syrian army deployed alongside Kurdish forces on
the front line in northern Syria Wednesday but their newfound cooperation saw
no let-up in the week-old Turkish invasion, a monitor said.
In a rare scene in Syria’s eight-year-old civil war,
government troops and Kurdish fighters were “fighting together” against
Turkey’s Syrian proxies northeast of the town of Ain Issa, the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said.
The Britain-based monitor reported “violent clashes”
near the M4 highway — a key east-west artery that links the Kurdish heartland
in the northeast with Syria’s second city Aleppo and the Mediterranean coast
beyond.
Under the deal announced on Sunday after President
Donald Trump ordered the withdrawal of US troops, government troops have
returned to key Kurdish-held areas for the first time in years.
Syrian soldiers have been sent to Manbij, Tal Tamr,
Ain Issa and Tabqa in their most significant deployment since the army started
withdrawing from Kurdish-majority areas in 2012.
Russia’s special envoy on Syria, Alexander
Lavrentyev, said Turkish and Syrian officials were in contact to avoid clashes
which “would simply be unacceptable.”
But two Syrian soldiers were killed near Ain Issa on
Tuesday in shelling by Turkey’s Syrian proxies — mostly former rebels paid and
equipped by Ankara, the Observatory said.
On Monday, artillery fire by the Syrian former
rebels killed another soldier in the flashpoint city of Manbij, it added.
In the border town of Ras Al-Ain, where Kurdish
fighters have put up stiff resistance against Ankara’s incursion, battles raged
on Wednesday following a night of heavy Turkish air strikes and artillery fire,
the monitor said.
Since its launch on October 9, the Turkish offensive
has killed dozens of civilians, mostly on the Kurdish side, and prompted at
least 160,000 to flee their homes.