The Jerusalem Post

Turkey urges Russia, Iran to stop Syrian offensive in Idlib province

Ankara claims army advance violates ‘de-escalation’ deal

- • By TUVAN GUMRUKCU

ANKARA (Reuters) – Turkey called on Russia and Iran on Wednesday to pressure Syrian authoritie­s to halt a military offensive in Syria’s rebel-held Idlib province, which Damascus launched despite an internatio­nal deal to reduce hostilitie­s there.

As pro-government forces pressed the assault, the Russian Defense Ministry’s newspaper said Moscow had asked the Turkish military to tighten control over armed groups in Idlib. It said rebels had used the province as the launchpad for a drone attack on two Russian bases in the last week.

Idlib has become a focal point of the Syrian war as government forces and allied militia have thrust toward an insurgent-held air base. Idlib, bordering Turkey, is the largest single chunk of Syria still under the control of rebels fighting President Bashar Assad.

The UN high commission­er for human rights expressed grave concern for an estimated 2 million people in the Idlib region, where the population has grown as Syrian rebels and civilians fled government advances in other areas. Fresh conflict could trigger more displaceme­nt on Turkey’s southern border.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Russia and Iran must fulfill their duties under a joint accord reached with Turkey last year in which the three countries announced a “de-escalation zone” in Idlib.

He said advances by the Syrian Army and allied forces into Idlib could not have taken place without the support of Moscow and Tehran, which have both backed Assad in the war.

“Iran and Russia need to carry out their responsibi­lities. If you are guarantors, which you are, stop the regime,” Cavusoglu told the state-run Anadolu news agency in an interview broadcast on Turkish television channels.

Cavusoglu’s ministry summoned the Iranian and Russian ambassador­s on Tuesday to complain about violations of the Idlib de-escalation zone, and he said President Recep Tayyip Erdogan might call Russia’s Vladimir Putin on the issue.

Turkey, which has been fiercely opposed to Assad, has recently been working with his allies Russia and Iran for a political resolution to the conflict. But Cavusoglu said the Idlib offensive was endangerin­g those efforts.

“This isn’t a simple air strike, the regime is advancing into Idlib. The goal is different here,” he said. “If the aim here is to make some unwilling opposition groups go to Sochi, it will backfire,” he added, referring to Russia’s plans to host a congress on Syria at the end of this month.

In the first attack of its kind, Moscow said on Monday rebels had used drones to attack its naval and air bases in the nearby provinces of Tartus and Latakia. The Russian Defense Ministry’s newspaper said on Wednesday the drones had been launched from the southweste­rn part of the Idlib de-escalation zone held by “moderate opposition” armed groups.

Syrian government forces have taken scores of villages in recent weeks near the provincial border between Idlib and Hama, with the help of Iran-backed militias and Russian air power. They have progressed toward the Abu al-Duhur military airport, where rebels completely ousted the army in 2015.

The forces had advanced to within 3 km. of the air base on Wednesday, said a military media unit run by Lebanon’s Hezbollah, which fights on the Syrian Army’s side.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said the army and militias captured 16 villages and positions on Wednesday. They clashed with Tahrir al-Sham fighters around the airport, the Britain-based war monitoring group said.

The combatants also battled from another direction along a front south of Aleppo city, near the border with Idlib.

Tahrir al-Sham, spearheade­d by al-Qaida’s former Syria branch, is now the dominant insurgent force in the province of Idlib.

Rebel groups seized Idlib, which borders Turkey, in 2015 and it has since become the only Syrian province fully under insurgent control.

Fighting and air strikes have forced more than 60,000 people to leave their homes since November 1, according to the UN Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs.

“What I am seeing here is the use of the presence of al Nusra and HTS as an excuse to attack civilians and moderate opposition­s,” Cavusoglu added.

Under last year’s deal with Iran and Russia, Turkey says it has deployed troops to observatio­n points in northern Idlib, about 60 km. north of the latest Syrian Army offensive.

Cavusoglu said Ankara would host a meeting on Syria with like-minded countries after the summit in Russia’s Sochi.

With Russian and Iranian backing, government forces have recovered large swaths of territory from rebel factions and Islamic State terrorists over the past year.

Assad and his allies now command the single largest section of Syria, followed by US-backed Kurdish militias who control much of the north and east Syria and are more concerned with shoring up their regional autonomy than fighting Damascus.

 ?? (Osman Orsal/Reuters) ?? A GUARD TOWER is shown in this October 2017 photo overlookin­g Turkey’s border with Syria’s Idlib province, with the blue-tiled roofs of the Syrian town of Atimah in the background.
(Osman Orsal/Reuters) A GUARD TOWER is shown in this October 2017 photo overlookin­g Turkey’s border with Syria’s Idlib province, with the blue-tiled roofs of the Syrian town of Atimah in the background.

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