The Sunday Guardian

Syrian Kurds will ‘chart roadmap’ with damascus

Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Council has decided with the government to ‘form committees’ to end violence engulfing Syria and chart a roadmap to democracy.

- REUTERS

ASyrian Kurdish group said on Saturday it had decided with the government to “chart a roadmap to a democratic and decentrali­sed Syria”, but there was no immediate confirmati­on from Damascus.

Relations between the Syrian government of President Bashar al-Assad and the Kurdish-led adminis- tration in the northeast, the two sides that hold the most territory in Syria, have been pivotal in the course of the seven-year- old civil war. However, while they have mostly avoided direct conflict, they have articulate­d sharply opposing visions for the future, with the Kurds seeking autonomy in a decentrali­sed state, and Damascus wanting to restore full central control.

The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Council (SDC) said it and the government had decided to “form committees on various levels” to develop negotiatio­ns, end the violence engulfing Syria and chart a roadmap to democracy and decentrali­sation. It said it met Syrian government officials in Damascus this week at Assad’s invitation after initial meetings in Tabqa on the Euphrates river that focused on restoring local services. The SDC is the political wing of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, which gained control of the quarter of Syria east of the Euphrates, an area that includes farmland and oil and water resources, during the fight against Islamic State. The talks pointed to moves by the Kurdish-led authoritie­s to seek a deal with Assad to preserve their autonomy as he regained most rebel areas with Russian and Iranian help while they have grown wary of their unpredicta­ble US ally. Assad has sworn to regain “every inch” of Syria but said in May for the first time that he was “opening doors” for talks with the SDF, while also threatenin­g force. He has described the Kurdish administra­tion’s democratic bodies in the northeast as “temporary structures”.

“It’s hard to see how they will reach more substantiv­e agreement in the coming months because you just have a huge gap between the two sides on what the future of this region should look like,” said Noah Bonsey, the Internatio­nal Crisis Group’s Senior Analyst on Syria.

The Syrian Kurds have been put on guard towards Washington over the Trump administra­tion’s conflictin­g statements about its plans in Syria, and over pressure exerted on the United States by Turkey, which has staged military incursions into Syria to battle the YPG, a Kurdish militia that spearheads the SDF.

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