Arab News

Turkish military vehicles enter Idlib, say sources

Clashes between troops, militants reported

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AMMAN/BEIRUT: A small Turkish army reconnaiss­ance team crossed the border into Syria’s Idlib province on Sunday, a senior Syrian opposition member said, ahead of a planned deployment by Turkishbac­ked rebels there.

The group of military vehicles was escorted into the area by the opposition’s rival, the Tahrir Al-Sham alliance, against which the operation has been planned, local sources said, suggesting a deal might be reached to avert fighting.

However, the militants and the Turkish military had earlier exchanged fire nearby, underscori­ng tensions as Turkey builds up forces and the rebel groups it backs prepare to enter Idlib.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday that Syrian rebels backed by Turkish forces would launch an operation in Idlib and warned that Turkey would not allow “a terrorist corridor” near its borders.

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim stressed the importance of ensuring de-escalation near the border. “We will ensure safety in Idlib, and will cooperate with Russia,” Yildirim said.

The operation follows a deal between Turkey and Syrian President Bashar Assad’s allies Russia and Iran to impose a “deescalati­on” zone in Idlib and surroundin­g areas to reduce warfare there, an agreement that did not include Tahrir Al-Sham.

A local resident and another local rebel said they had seen Turkish military vehicles enter Idlib and then travel under Tahrir Al-Sham escort along a road.

The senior Syrian opposition member said the reconnaiss­ance team was heading to Sheikh Barakat, a location that overlooks both opposition-held areas of Aleppo province, adjacent to Idlib, and the Kurdish-controlled area of Afrin.

Reuters witnesses and the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, said that earlier on Sunday, the Turkish military and Tahrir Al-Sham clashed near the village of Kafr Lusin in Idlib.

Tahrir Al-Sham fired on a Turkish bulldozer removing sections of a border wall and Turkish artillery returned fire, they said. The area was later quiet.

Opposition groups taking part in the operation — part of the Euphrates Shield campaign that Turkey has backed with armor and troops in another part of Syria to the east of Idlib since last year — said on Saturday they expected it to start very soon.

Tahrir Al-Sham said any incursion into Idlib would “not be a picnic” for its enemies.

Tahrir Al-Sham is spearheade­d by the former Nusra Front, which was Al-Qaeda’s Syrian branch until last year when it changed its name and broke formal allegiance to the global movement founded by Osama bin Laden.

It has been a formidable military force since early in the conflict, often fighting alongside other opposition groups, but since early this year it has battled them as it tried to gain control over areas including Idlib.

Idlib and neighborin­g parts of northwest Syria represent the country’s biggest and most populous rebel stronghold, home to more than 2 million people, many of them refugees from other regions.

Turkey has been one of the biggest supporters of opposition groups fighting Assad during the six-and-a-half-year war, but its focus has moved from ousting him to securing its own border.

Its biggest security concern on the frontier is the powerful Kurdish YPG militia, which as part of a US-backed alliance is fighting Daesh in eastern Syria.

The YPG controls Afrin, one of the areas that the Turkish reconnaiss­ance team will be able to overlook from Sheikh Barakat, the senior opposition member said.

 ??  ?? Turkish army's armored vehicles and soldiers wait at Syria-Turkey border at Reyhanli district in Hatay on Sunday. (AFP)
Turkish army's armored vehicles and soldiers wait at Syria-Turkey border at Reyhanli district in Hatay on Sunday. (AFP)

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