The Phnom Penh Post

Turkish tanks roll into Syria

- Bulent Kilic and Fulya Ozerkan

TURKISH tanks backed by fighter jets and special forces rolled into Syria yesterday in an unpreceden­ted operation to drive Islamic State jihadists out of a key Syrian border town.

The air and ground offensive also involving Syrian fighters – the most ambitious launched by Ankara in the Syria conflict – is aimed at clearing jihadists from the town of Jarabulus directly opposite Turkey.

But President Recep Tayyip Erdogan emphasised the operation was also targeting Kurdish militia fighters strongly opposed by Ankara – but backed by the US as a key ally against IS – who had also been closing in on Jarabulus.

The operation – named “Euphrates Shield” – began at around 4am (0100 GMT) with Turkish artillery pounding dozens of IS targets around Jarabulus, the Turkish prime minister’s office said.

Turkish F-16 fighter jets, backed by US-led coalition war planes, also hit targets in Syria.

An AFP photograph­er saw around a dozen Turkish tanks cross into Syria in support of Syrian opposition fighters who had also crossed and 1,500 of whom were now in the area according to state media.

Tensions had flared across the Syria-Turkey border on Tuesday following rocket fire from Jarabulus which landed inside Turkey.

Turkish state media said the operation rapidly notched up its first success with the Syrian fighters taking from IS the village of Keklijah five kilometres (three miles) west of Jarabulus.

As well as tanks, the AFP photograph­er in the area of Karkamis opposite Jarabulus saw several smaller military vehicles believed to be carrying the pro-Ankara Syrian rebels.

Security sources quoted by Turkish television said a small contingent of special forces had travelled into Syria to secure the area before a possible larger ground operation.

Turkish authoritie­s had late Tuesday ordered the evacuation of Karkamis for safety reasons, raising expectatio­ns that an offensive was imminent.

Airstrikes by Turkish jets also echoed through the skies, the photograph­er said. The effects of one raid n the northern outskirts of Jarabulus were easily visible, sending up a cloud of black smoke and sand.

Rebel commander Ahmad Othman told AFP in Beirut by phone that the first stage of the operation had been completed and his forces were now one kilometre from Jarabulus.

“The second stage will begin in a few hours,” he said.

‘Syrian quagmire?’

Turkey will want to show with the operation that it is serious about taking on IS, which has been blamed for a string of attacks inside the country, the latest a weekend attack on a Kurdish wedding in Gaziantep that left 54 people dead, many of them children.

Ankara was long accused of turning a blind eye to the rise of IS in Syria and even aiding its movements to-and-fro across the border, claims the government had always vehemently denied.

The launch of the offensive comes as US Vice President Joe Biden visits Ankara to meet Erdogan, with agreeing a unified strategy on Syria set to be a crucial issue.

Biden is likely to face expression­s of alarm from Turkey about the activities inside Syria of the People’s Protection Units (YPG) militia, which Washington sees as an ally but Ankara regards as a terror group.

Saleh Moslem, the head of the Democratic Union Party (PYD), the YPG’s political wing, tweeted that Turkey was now in the “Syrian quagmire” and would be “defeated” like IS.

But a senior US administra- tion official said that Washington had already been “syncing up” with Turkey for the operation and US advisers had been in a planning cell.

Crucially, the official said Kurdish-dominated forces had stopped moving north towards Jarabulus.

“So I think we have put a lid on the Turks’ biggest concern.”

‘Enough is enough’

Erdogan said the operation was aimed against both IS and PYD – “terror groups that continuous­ly threaten our country in northern Syria”.

“We have said ‘enough is enough’ . . . This now needs to be resolved,” he said.

The Turkish airstrikes were the first since a November crisis with Russia sparked when the Turkish air force downed one of Moscow’s warplanes.

A dozen IS targets were destroyed in yesterday’s airstrikes. Turkish artillery meanwhile destroyed 70 IS targets, according to Turkish television.

The movements have come at a critical juncture for Turkey in Syria’s five-and-a-half-year war, with signs growing it is on the verge of a landmark policy shift.

Ankara has always called for the removal of President Bashar al-Assad, putting Turkey at odds with his main supporters Iran and Russia.

However, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim acknowledg­ed at the weekend for the first time that Assad was one of the “actors” in Syria and may need to stay on as part of a transition.

Assad’s government – which has long had little sway in this region – condemned the incursion as a “flagrant violation” of its sovereignt­y.

 ?? BULENT KILIC/AFP ?? A Turkish army tank drives towards Syria in the Turkish border city of Karkamis, in the southern region of Gaziantep, yesterday.
BULENT KILIC/AFP A Turkish army tank drives towards Syria in the Turkish border city of Karkamis, in the southern region of Gaziantep, yesterday.

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