The Jerusalem Post

Turkey says work on road map for Syria’s Manbij has accelerate­d

- • By HUMEYRA PAMUK

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Work to implement an agreement between Turkey and the United States over the Syrian town of Manbij has recently accelerate­d, Turkey’s Foreign Minister said on Wednesday, adding that Kurdish YPG militia remained inside the town.

“The process in Manbij has sped up despite the weather conditions but the road map should have been completed by now and the reason it hasn’t been is the United States,” Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu told a press conference in Washington.

Cavusoglu said apart from the joint patrols in the city, Turkey has begun working with the United States in identifyin­g who will run Manbij and who could be within the security units of the town once Kurdish militia YPG has withdrawn from the area.

After months of disagreeme­nt, Ankara and Washington agreed in June on a road map that would see the YPG removed from the town. Turkey has repeatedly expressed its frustratio­n that the implementa­tion of the plan has been delayed.

“The US administra­tion also wants the road map to be implemente­d as soon as possible,” Cavusoglu said.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Tuesday that Turkey would only wait a few weeks for militants to be removed from the north Syrian town of Manbij. The US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), which is spearheade­d by the YPG, has controlled Manbij since 2016.

Cavusoglu was in the US capital to attend a gathering of 79 countries partnering with the United States against Islamic State. He said there was still little clarity on the details of a US withdrawal from Syria and the creation of a safe zone in the northeaste­rn part of the country.

“No concrete ideas on the safe zone has emerged yet. We are discussing this with Russians as well and trying to coordinate it with the Americans,” he said.

In December, US President Donald Trump confounded his own national security team with a surprise decision to withdraw all 2,000 US troops from Syria, declaring that Islamic State had been defeated there.

Turkey wants to set up the safe zone with logistical support from allies and says it should be cleared of the US-backed Kurdish YPG militia. Cavusoglu repeated the safe zone could not be an area that would give protection to the group.

“It is important what we understand from a safe zone. If what is understood or desired is a buffer zone that will protect the terrorists, we are against it,” he said.

Cavusoglu also said a ‘task force’ group was set up between the United States and Turkey specifical­ly to focus on the work linked to US withdrawal from Syria. “We have put in place this mechanism to ensure this process is carried out in coordinati­on and without problems,” he said.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? DISPLACED SYRIANS arrive at a refugee camp late last year in Atimah village, Idlib province.
(Reuters) DISPLACED SYRIANS arrive at a refugee camp late last year in Atimah village, Idlib province.

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