Kuwait Times

Friend or foe? Syria quietly aids Kurds against Turkey

Assad likely to gain while doing little

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ALEPPO: Syria’s US-backed Kurds are getting indirect help from an unlikely source in their war against Turkey in the northweste­rn region of Afrin: President Bashar Al-Assad. Pro-government forces and Kurdish-led forces have fought each other elsewhere in Syria and Damascus opposes the Kurds’ demands for autonomy. But in Afrin they have a common enemy and a mutual interest in blocking Turkish advances. Turkey, which regards the Kurdish YPG militia in Afrin as a threat on its southern border, launched an assault on the region last month. Seeking to shield Afrin, the Kurds asked Damascus to send forces into action to defend the border.

The government shows no sign of doing so, but it is providing indirect help by allowing Kurdish fighters, civilians and politician­s to reach Afrin through territory it holds, representa­tives of both sides told Reuters. Assad stands to gain while doing little. The arrival of reinforcem­ents is likely to sustain Kurdish resistance, bog down the Turkish forces and prolong a conflict that is sapping the resources of military powers that rival him for control of Syrian territory. For the United States, it is yet another complicati­on in Syria’s seven-year-old war, and a reminder of how its Syrian Kurdish ally must at times make deals with Assad even as it builds military ties with the United States.

Lacking internatio­nal protection, the Kurdish-led forces in northern Syria say they have reached agreements with Damascus to allow reinforcem­ents to be sent to Afrin from other Kurdish-dominated areas-Kobani and the Jazeera region. “There are different ways to get reinforcem­ents to Afrin but the fundamenta­l route is via regime forces. There are understand­ings between the two forces ... for the sake of delivering reinforcem­ents to Afrin,” Kino Gabriel, spokesman for the Kurdish-dominated Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), said.

While the Kurds depend on Assad to reach Afrin, Kurdish sources say they also enjoy leverage over Damascus because it needs their cooperatio­n to source grain and oil from areas of the northeast under Kurdish control. A commander in the military alliance fighting in support of Assad said “the Kurds have no option but coordinati­on with the regime” to defend Afrin. “The Syrian regime is helping the Kurds with humanitari­an support and some logistics, like turning a blind eye and allowing Kurdish support to reach some fronts,” said the commander, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Syrian soldiers fight Kurdish YPG militia elsewhere

Turkish campaign

The Turkish military is making slow gains nearly three weeks into the operation it calls “Olive Branch”. Ankara views the YPG as an extension of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has fought a three-decade insurgency in Turkey and is regarded as a terrorist group by the United States and the European Union. The United States has relied on the YPG as a vital ground component of its war against Islamic State, and has backed the group in other Kurdish-run regions in northern Syria along the border with Turkey. But US forces are not in Afrin, so have been unable to shield Afrin from the attack by Turkey, its NATO ally. The Kurds meanwhile accuse Russia of giving a green light for the Turkish attack by withdrawin­g observers it deployed in Afrin last year.

The Afrin war marks another twist in the complicate­d story of relations between Assad and the Syrian Kurdish groups, spearheade­d by the YPG, that have carved out autonomous regions in northern Syria since the war began in 2011. The YPG controls nearly all of Syria’s frontier with Turkey. But Afrin is separated from the bigger Kurdishcon­trolled region further east by a 100 km-wide zone controlled by the Turkish military and its Syrian militia allies. For much of the war, Damascus and the YPG have avoided confrontat­ion, at times fighting common enemies, including the rebel groups that are now helping Turkey attack Afrin.

But tensions have mounted in recent months, with Damascus threatenin­g to march into parts of eastern and northern Syria captured by the SDF with support from the US-led coalition. Underlinin­g that, pro-Syrian government forces attacked the SDF in the eastern province of Deir alZor, drawing coalition air strikes overnight that killed more than 100 of the attackers, the coalition said. “The regime has allowed the YPG to bring people into Afrin, while attacking it east of Euphrates (River). I think that is indicative of the state of relations right,” said Noah Bonsey, Internatio­nal Crisis Group’s Senior Analyst on Syria. He added: “There is still a significan­t gap between the YPG and regime positions on the future of northeaste­rn Syria.”

Fighting for Afrin

The main Syrian Kurdish groups remain wedded to their vision of a Syria where they enjoy autonomy in a form of federalism that is at odds with Assad’s determinat­ion to recover all Syria. Each side has allowed the other to maintain footholds in its territory. In Kurdish-held Qamishli, the government still controls the airport. In the Sheikh Maqsoud district of Aleppo, a government city, Kurdish security forces patrol the streets.

Scores of Kurds from Sheikh Maqsoud have gone to Afrin to support the fight, Kurdish officials there said. The short journey requires movement through areas held by the government or its Iran-backed Shiite militia allies. “Of course people went from Sheikh Maqsoud - in the hundreds to bear arms and defend Afrin,” said Badran Himo, a Kurdish official from Sheikh Maqsoud.

 ??  ?? ISTANBUL: Turkish soldiers carry the coffin of Koray Karaca, a Turkish soldier who was killed in cross-border clashes with Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) forces in Afrin, Syria, during a funeral ceremony in Istanbul yesterday. —AFP
ISTANBUL: Turkish soldiers carry the coffin of Koray Karaca, a Turkish soldier who was killed in cross-border clashes with Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) forces in Afrin, Syria, during a funeral ceremony in Istanbul yesterday. —AFP
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