The Phnom Penh Post

Turkey is stepping up where others fail to act

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SYRIA’S refugee flows, violence and instabilit­y have pushed us to the limit of our tolerance. Since the Syrian civil war began in 2011, no country has felt the pain of the ensuing humanitari­an crisis more severely than Turkey.

We took in 3.6 million Syrian refugees – more than any other country – and spent $40 billion to offer them education, healthcare and housing.

Our culture of hospitalit­y compelled us to shoulder the burden of hosting millions of war victims with very little help from the internatio­nal community.

Yet at a certain point, Turkey reached its limit.

My administra­tion repeatedly warned that we would be unable to stop refugees from flooding into the West without internatio­nal financial support.

Those warnings fell on deaf ears as government­s, eager to avoid responsibi­lity, portrayed as a threat what was intended as a mere statement of fact.

My administra­tion concluded that the internatio­nal community wasn’t going to act, so we developed a plan for northern Syria.

I shared the plan with world leaders at last month’s UN General Assembly.

In line with that plan, Turkey last week launched Operation Peace Spring to end the humanitari­an crisis and address the violence and instabilit­y that are the root causes of irregular migration in our region.

Absent an alternativ­e plan to deal with the refugee crisis, the internatio­nal community should either join our efforts or begin admitting refugees.

Prepared to cooperate

As part of Operation Peace Spring, the Turkish military, together with the Syrian National Army, will remove all terrorist elements in northeaste­rn Syria.

These militants are preventing Syrian refugees, including some 300,000 Kurds, from returning home.

Our mission is simultaneo­usly to combat the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, the terrorist organisati­on known as the PKK, along with its Syrian affiliates and Islamic State (IS).

Turkey has no argument with any ethnic or religious group.

From our perspectiv­e, all citizens of the Syrian Arab Republic – who don’t belong to terrorist groups – are equal.

In particular, we object to equation of the PKK with the Syrian Kurds.

Likewise, Turkey opposes equation of foreign terrorist fighters in 2014 and 2015.

Perhaps the government of a certain European country, which I won’t name, would like to explain to the world how one of its nationals could board a flight to Istanbul in 2014 with live ammunition in his checked luggage. refugees with their ancestral lands, how many war victims have they admitted?

How much did they contribute to efforts to end the humanitari­an crisis in Syria?

Which political initiative­s did they support to stop the civil war?

The Arab League, whose statements don’t reflect the true views and sentiments of the Arab people, has no legitimacy.

The internatio­nal community missed its opportunit­y to prevent the Syrian crisis from pulling an entire region into a maelstrom of instabilit­y.

Many countries have had to deal with the conflict’s negative side effects, including irregular migration and an uptick in terrorist attacks.

Operation Peace Spring represents a second chance to help Turkey end proxy wars in Syria and restore peace and stability to the region.

The EU – and the world – should support what Turkey is trying to do.

 ?? ADEM ALTAN/AFP ?? President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaks during an extended meeting with provincial heads of the ruling Justice and Developmen­t (AK) Party in the Turkish capital Ankara last week.
ADEM ALTAN/AFP President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaks during an extended meeting with provincial heads of the ruling Justice and Developmen­t (AK) Party in the Turkish capital Ankara last week.

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