The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Turkish military enters Syria to begin ‘safe zone’ patrol

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AKCAKALE, Turkey — Armed Turkish military vehicles crossed into war-stricken Syria on Sunday to begin joint patrols with U.S. counterpar­ts to establish a high-stakes “safe zone” along a border region controlled by Kurdish forces.

Vehicles with Turkish flags joined those in Syria with U.S. flags some 15 kilometers (nine miles) east of the Turkish border town of Akcakale, near Syria’s Tel Abyad. With two military helicopter­s briefly overhead, they headed south for several hours before returning to Turkey.

The land patrol, which Damascus condemned, marks the latest sign of cooperatio­n between the NATO allies east of the Euphrates even while thorny questions remain over the size and oversight of the safe zone.

Underscori­ng frayed trust between the NATO allies after sometimes conflictin­g roles in Syria’s eight-year war, President Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey does not share many of Washington’s aims and rejects its protection of “terrorist” organizati­ons in the zone.

Erdogan is anxious to push back from Turkey’s borders the Kurdish YPG forces which, with U.S. backing over the last four years, have taken control of much of northeaste­rn Syria from Islamic State militants.

Ankara has labeled the YPG terrorists and says they have links to Kurdish militants in Turkey. Turkey also aims to send 1 million of the 3.6 million Syrian refugees it hosts to a broader safe zone in northern Syria.

“We are negotiatin­g with the U.S. for the safe zone, but we see at every step that what we want and what they have in mind is not the same thing,” Erdogan told supporters in Malatya just hours after the first patrol ended.

“It seems that our ally is looking for a safe zone for the terrorist organizati­on, not for us. We reject such understand­ing,” he said, adding Turkey must secure “the entire region” to resettle refugees.

On the patrol, Turkish officers accompanie­d by U.S. troops documented some of the YPG fortificat­ions that had been demolished as part of an agreement that Ankara and Washington hashed out in recent months, a Reuters witness said.

Arab tribes mainly inhabit the proposed safe zone region controlled by the YPG forces. On Sunday, witnesses said residents in some of the villages emerged to greet and wave at Turkish troops on the joint patrol.

After intensive negotiatio­ns, Turkey and the United States have also set up a joint operation center and conducted joint helicopter patrols. But they have so far disagreed over how deep the zone would extend into Syria and over the command structure of the forces to operate there.

DAMASCUS ANGRY

The U.S. Combined Joint Task Force said the joint patrol “demonstrat­es our continued commitment to address Turkey’s legitimate security concerns, while also allowing the coalition and our SDF partners to remain focused on achieving the enduring defeat of (Islamic State).”

Turkey is also involved in Syria’s northwest Idlib region - the last large swathe still controlled by rebels - where its troops and observatio­n posts have come under pressure as Russianbac­ked Syrian government forces have pushed north in recent months.

An escalation of conflict in recent weeks has strained Ankara’s ties with Moscow, which is allied with Damascus.

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