Arab News

US alarmed as Turkey warns Syrian Kurds of more strikes

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ISTANBUL: Turkey warned Monday it would carry out more strikes on a Syrian Kurdish militia if it failed to retreat beyond the Euphrates River, as Washington condemned their weekend clashes as “unacceptab­le.”

Turkish forces pressed on with a two-pronged operation inside Syria against Daesh and the Syrian Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), shelling over a dozen targets.

But strikes against the YPG are hugely sensitive as the Kurdish group — seen as a terror group by Ankara — is allied with Turkey’s NATO partner, the United States, in the fight against Daesh in Syria.

Ankara said it had killed 25 Kurdish “terrorists” in strikes on YPG positions on Sunday, a day after a Turkish soldier died in a rocket attack allegedly by the militia. The Pentagon called the clashes “unacceptab­le” and urged an immediate de-escalation.

Turkey’s operation aims to push the YPG back across the Euphrates River to prevent it joining up the region east of the river already under its control with a Kurdishhel­d area to the west.

US Vice President Joe Biden, visiting Ankara last week, said Washington had told the YPG to go back across the Euphrates or risk losing American support. But Ankara says it had seen no evidence of this.

“The YPG... needs to cross east of the Euphrates as soon as possible. So long as they don’t, they will be a target,” said Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.

“In the places where it has moved, the YPG forces everyone out — including Kurds — who do not think like it does and carries out ethnic cleansing,” he added.

Cavusoglu said the ethnic compositio­n of the area around the city of Manbij west of the Euphrates — captured by the YPG from Daesh earlier this month — was largely Arab.

He said that those who had lived in the area before fighting broke out should return rather than new Kurdish migrants.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said at least 40 civilians were killed in Turkish shelling and air strikes on Sunday, claims strongly rejected by Ankara.

“Allegation­s that... civilians were shot at or targeted do not reflect the truth,” the Turkish premier’s office said, adding the army was taking “all necessary measures to prevent any harm to the civilian population.”

It said 13 villages had “been cleared of terrorist elements” and were now controlled by anti-regime Syrian fighters that Ankara refers to as the Free Syrian Army (FSA).

Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said Washington was monitoring the reports of airstrikes and clashes and found such fighting — in an area clear of Daesh — “unacceptab­le and a source of deep concern.”

“The United States was not involved in these activities, they were not coordinate­d with US forces, and we do not support them,” he said.

He called for steps to de-escalate the situation and said Washington had once again told the YPG to retreat east of the Euphrates. This has “largely occurred,” he added.

Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus confirmed one of the key aims of its unpreceden­ted operation was to prevent the creation of a corridor stretching from Iraq to the verge of the Mediterran­ean controlled by the YPG. “If that happens, it means Syria has been divided,” he added, quoted by NTV television.

 ??  ?? ON THE RUN: Syrian families, fleeing Daesh and the ongoing fighting, rest as they arrive to take refuge in the Syrian village of Al-Khalfatli, held by the Free Syrian Army, near the SyrianTurk­ish border, north of Aleppo. (AFP)
ON THE RUN: Syrian families, fleeing Daesh and the ongoing fighting, rest as they arrive to take refuge in the Syrian village of Al-Khalfatli, held by the Free Syrian Army, near the SyrianTurk­ish border, north of Aleppo. (AFP)

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