The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US-led coalition to build 30,000strong border force in Syria

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BEIRUT: The US-led coalition fighting the Islamic State group said on Sunday it was working to create a 30,000-strong border security force in northern Syria, drawing sharp condemnati­on from Turkey.

With the offensive against IS winding down, the coalition and its allies in the Syrian Democratic Forces alliance were beginning to shift their focus to border security, coalition spokesman Colonel Ryan Dillon told AFP.

“There is a goal of a final force of approximat­ely 30,000,” about half of whom would be retrained SDF fighters, he said.

“There are approximat­ely 230 individual­s that are training right now in the border security force. That’s an inaugural class,” Dillon said.

Backed by the US-led coalition’s air strikes, special forces advisers, and weapons, the SDF has ousted IS from swathes of northeaste­rn Syria. Its Kurdish and Arab members now control territory bordering Turkey to the north, Iraq to the east and Syrian government forces to the west.

Turkey reacted sharply to news of the border force on Sunday, saying it would “legitimise a terror organisati­on”.

Ankara is fiercely opposed to the SDF, which is dominated by the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) – considered by the Turkish government to be a “terrorist” group.

“Rather than end its support to the PYD-YPG, these steps taken to legitimise a terror organisati­on and to make it permanent in the region are worrying,” said Ibrahim Kalin, spokesman for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“Accepting this state of affairs is absolutely not possible,” Kalin added.

Top SDF media official Mustefa Bali confirmed the creation of the border force, and said training had already begun.

“We are transition­ing to a new phase of coordinati­on between us and the internatio­nal coalition,” Bali told AFP. “The wide areas and cities that were liberated need someone to protect them.”

Bali said the new units would be deployed along the Turkish border and adjacent to territory held by Syrian troops, but did not immediatel­y respond to a question on rules of engagement in those areas.

Turkey has often targeted YPG positions in northern Syria and on Sunday, Erdogan threatened to attack the Kurdish-held area of Afrin in northern Syria “in the days ahead”.

The SDF’s relationsh­ip with regime forces is less tense. Since last year, a “de-conflictio­n line” cutting diagonally across eastern Syria has largely kept the two forces from clashing. — AFP

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