Turkey Warns US About Kurdish Advances in Syria
GAZIANTEP,
TURKEY (VOA) -- Ankara has warned the United States and Western powers
of red lines when it comes to the Kurds and their military advances
against Islamic extremists in northern Syria, including a firm position
the Kurds must not threaten the territorial integrity of Syria by
seeking their own autonomous Kurdish State.
There should also be
no demographic changes or population shifts on the Syrian side of the
border as a result of Kurdish military offensives against Islamic State,
also known as ISIL, according to a policy document approved reportedly
by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo?an.
The document was
drafted during two high-level security meetings at Turkey's foreign
ministry, after Kurdish fighters captured the Syrian border town of Tal
Abyad from Islamic State last week. "No one can act in their own
interest just because they are fighting ISIL. The demographic structure
of the region cannot be changed through a fait accompli," states one
section of the document leaked to Turkey's Hürriyet newspaper.
The
military gains by fighters from the Kurdish YPG, or People's Protection
Units, which are dominated by Syria's Democratic Union Party (PYD), are
increasingly alarming President Erdo?an. The PYD is an offshoot of
Turkey's own outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which has pursued a
campaign for Kurdish self-rule since 1984. Peace talks between Ankara
and the PKK have stalled.
Kurdish gains
Backed by U.S.-led
coalition airstrikes against IS, the Kurds have united two cantons along
the border, establishing a contiguous Kurdish region stretching from
Kobani in the west to Hasakah Province in the east.
The Turks fear the United States is giving a green light to the Kurds' post-civil war ambitions. And some analysts agree.
The
backing of Kurdish advances with airstrikes "signaled U.S. support for
some form of contiguous Kurdish autonomous region in northern Syria,
despite continuing Turkish reservations regarding the expansion of YPG
influence on its southern border," argue Christopher Kozak and Genevieve
Casagrande, analysts with the Institute for the Study of War, a
Washington-backed think tank.
According to the Turkish policy
document, Ankara's alarm has been communicated to Washington, NATO and
the U.N. Security Council. "The United States has recognized Turkey's
claim and conveyed it to the PYD administration at the highest level,"
the document notes.
But it remains unclear whether the Obama
administration at a later stage will support Syrian Kurdish calls for a
separate autonomous state or whether it is focused only on the fight
against IS.
Last year, when the United States dropped supplies to
Kurdish fighters battling to defend the border town of Kobani, U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry said he understood Ankara's concerns about
the PYD's ties to the PKK.
He appeared to indicate U.S. support
for the Syrian Kurds was temporary in nature. "It would be irresponsible
of us, as well as morally very difficult, to turn your back on a
community fighting ISIL as hard as it is," he said.
Tal Abyad
On
June 11, as Kurdish forces supported by some anti-Assad Arab rebel
militias closed in on Tal Abyad, President Erdo?an warned, "The West,
which is hitting Arabs and Turkmen of Tal Abyad from the air, is sadly
settling the PYD and PKK terror organizations in their places." On June
14, he said the YPG seizure of Tal Abyad "could lead to the creation of a
structure [independent state] that threatens our borders".
More
than 20,000 people from the mainly Arab town of Tal Abyad and
surrounding villages fled over the border into Turkey as the battle
between Kurdish fighters and jihadists raged, prompting Turkish
government spokesman and Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc to accuse
the Kurds of engaging in "ethnic cleansing" in Tal Abyad.
Some
Syrian rebel militias fighting to oust Syria's President Bashar al-Assad
have repeated the charge, maintaining the PYD is trying to effect a
demographic change along the border to expand Kurdish territory by
perpetrating abuses against Arab civilians as they advance, including
the burning of Arab homes.
There has been no independent
verification of the allegations about Kurdish fighters trying to
engineer population shifts along the border, vehemently denied by Syrian
Kurds.
PYD leader Salih Müslim, in an interview with CNNTürk,
insisted the claim is not true and dismissed the allegation that his
fighters are creating a "Kurdish corridor." "There is no corridor," he
said. "We are fighting against ISIL's jihadists and the international
community sees us as the ones who are the most effective in this fight
against the ISIL. And we are satisfied with it."
He warned, "some circles are trying to ignite a Kurdish-Arab military conflict."
"Our
political stance has been clear in this regard. We have no plan to take
a part of Syria. Indeed, we are part of it and we will fight to
maintain an independent, democratic and united Syria with our allies,"
Zuhat Kobani, a Belgium-based PYD official told VOA Kurdish Service.
"Turkey should thank us for what we have done against IS - if it is not
supporting this terrorist group."
The PYD is currently in
negotiations with various independent Syrian civil society groups to
arrange for them to conduct a fact-finding trip to Tal Abyad and
surrounding villages.
But on Monday YPG militias reportedly
blocked a fact-finding mission from rebel political factions from
entering the town. The Syrian National Coalition, a Western and
Gulf-backed umbrella political organization, said a team was refused
entry.
"This came after numerous attempts of the committee to
enter the town," the coalition said in a press statement. About 2,000
refugees - 10 percent of those who fled - have been allowed to return.
The
allegations of Kurdish territorial ambitions, whether true or not, may
complicate the next steps in the Kurdish offensive against IS.
"YPG
gains will also likely exacerbate tensions between Syrian Kurds, the
Turkish government, and the Assad regime in a way which limits the
options available to both the YPG and the United States," predict
Institute for the Study of War analysts Kozak and Casagrande. "These
accusations may threaten to disrupt the current cooperation between
Kurdish forces and the Syrian opposition during preparations for an
offensive on Raqqa city, IS's de facto capital in Syria."
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
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