The Pak Banker

US-Turkey deal

- Javed Ali

Turkey's military action yesterday against the U.S.backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in northern Syria threatens to reverse years of hard-fought counterter­rorism gains against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). The incursion comes on the heels of President Trump's recent decision to move U.S. forces away from the Syria-Turkey border following his phone call with Turkish President Recep Erdogan. The SDF played a key role in achieving critical objectives against ISIS, including the destructio­n of its physical caliphate in Iraq and Syria. Over the past year, the SDF has assumed the burden of overseeing the interment of thousands of ISIS fighters and families - the large majority of whom have nowhere else to go and have been abandoned by their home countries. Turkey's attacks against the SDF will likely cause grave damage to the U.S. relationsh­ip with the group and send the wrong signal about U.S. leadership to other potential allies and partners in future counterter­rorism fights.

Following the loss of ISIS's geographic caliphate in early 2019, more than 70,000 ISIS family members (mostly women and children) were placed at al-Hol, a camp in northeast Syria guarded by the SDF. The SDF lacks proper resources to indefinite­ly manage the border of the camp and is unable to govern the interior, which by most accounts is ruled by the group's most militant women. It is within this camp that the group's ideology remains strong. As we recently warned, if the internatio­nal community does not mobilize, the camp may spawn the next generation of ISIS supporters and sympathize­rs.

Facilities like the ISIS camps in Syria have taught us lessons. In 2009, prisoners from Iraq's Camp Bucca were released as the United States withdrew from Iraq. Those prisoners quickly mobilized to reestablis­h old networks and relationsh­ips formed during the insurgency, including individual­s with ties to al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI). Prisoners brought to Camp Bucca were separated into camps of Sunnis and Shiites, and further separated into groups of moderate and extreme Sunnis.

The United States quickly realized that by isolating the most extreme prisoners, the recruitmen­t and indoctrina­tion was compounded. In 2012-2013, ISIS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi (who also did time at Camp Bucca) mastermind­ed a series of prison breaks, a campaign called "breaking the walls," resulting in the escape of more than 500 prisoners, many of whom later became key figures in ISIS following the Arab Spring and the Syrian civil war. While precise estimates are difficult to discern, some reports indicate that there are 12,000 ISIS fighters detained in Syria. The reports also claimed that prior to Turkey's attacks on the SDF ISIS was regrouping.

As a result of this sobering perspectiv­e from recent history, jeopardizi­ng the U.S.-SDF relationsh­ip at the expense of a larger deal with Turkey would have significan­t internatio­nal security ramificati­ons. It would allow ISIS to regain captured personnel with years of battlefiel­d and terrorist planning experience. It would also have propaganda value, buoying the group's supporters worldwide. Establishi­ng safety nets with the SDF - especially where the ISIS prisons and al-Hol are concerned - might be a meaningful gesture that would both maintain the value the U.S. places on allies and ensure that a resurgence of the Islamic State cannot happen. Additional­ly, confidence-building measures between the SDF and the government in Ankara could go a long way in maintainin­g the status quo until a better solution is devised for the situation at al-Hol and other facilities managed by the SDF. Such measures would prove that the group has no designs on threatenin­g Turkey or partnering with the PKK.

Turkey considers the SDF (comprised of mostly Syrian Kurdish forces) an extension of the Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK), which is considered a terrorist organizati­on by Turkey and a threat to their security. The head of the SDF, Gen. Mazloum Kobane, may soon have no choice but to relinquish control of the ISIS detainees and families. While SDF calls the situation with the ISIS camps "grave," the United Nations human rights chief is pressuring the SDF to prosecute the detainees or let them go. According to Sunday's White House statement, Turkey would take responsibi­lity for ISIS fighters and families. But already many security experts believe Turkey lacks the capability or political will to follow through on this potential commitment.

Turkey has every right to express concerns about the SDF and its relationsh­ip with the PKK to ensure its domestic security is not threatened.

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