Arab News

Idlib still turbulent despite virus agenda

- Menekse Tokyay Ankara

Three weeks after the signing of a cease-fire agreement, Ankara is expected to do its homework to uphold its shaky March 5 deal with the Kremlin on Idlib and to ensure full security along the strategic M4 highway.

After their first joint patrol on March 15 was cut short due to local protests against the presence of Russian troops, the Turkish and Russian military conducted a second joint patrol along the M4 highway on the section of the highway linking the cities of Aleppo and Latakia on March 23.

Again, the route of the second joint patrol had to be reduced over security concerns because of tough local dynamics, with some armed factions trying to block joint patrols along the highway.

“The first priority of Turkey and Russia now is to ensure the security of the M4 highway linking Syria’s east and west and to eliminate any potential risk of attack. Establishi­ng the safe passage along this road is our specific duty right now and we have to fulfill it within the upcoming months,” Aydin Sezer, an Ankara-based Middle East analyst, told Arab News.

Turkey recently establishe­d three new military posts in the Jisr Al-Shughour countrysid­e in Idlib, located in the villages of Badama, Al-Najiya and Al-Sainiya.

Extremist factions that are not controlled by Turkey, especially Caucasian and Central Asian fighters, have been harshly criticized for continuing their destabiliz­ing activities in Idlib — recently detonating improvised explosive devices on the route of a Turkish convoy patrolling the village of Sfukhon in Idlib province.

The explosions damaged two armored vehicles and injured two Turkish soldiers on March 24. Ankara did not, however, release any official statement about the injury of its troops.

The attack on Turkish soldiers came just four days after the country’s first reported casualties since the cease-fire of early March. Two Turkish soldiers were killed and another was injured in a rocket attack by radical groups in Idlib. “The Turkish side pledged in the near future to take measures to neutralize radical extremist groups that impede the movement of columns of joint patrols of the M4 highway in the security corridor,” the Russian Reconcilia­tion Center for Syria recently reported.

Russian Defense Minister Sergei

Shoigu visited Damascus on March 23, the same day of the joint patrols with the Turks, for talks with Syrian President Bashar Assad. The visit came just three days after Putin and Assad had a telephone conversati­on about developmen­ts in Idlib. Turkey’s military is responsibl­e for patrolling up to 6 km deep to the north of the security corridor being set up around the M4 highway, while Russian forces will patrol 6 km deep to the southern flank in the war-torn country’s last rebel bastion. Turkish-backed rebels are also expected to remain in place for not torpedoing Putin-Erdogan agreement of March 5.

As part of the implementa­tion of the Astana de-escalation agreement of 2017, control groups keep monitoring the compliance with the cease-fire conditions and detecting some cease-fire violations in Idlib province.

In the meantime, humanitari­an actions are being carried out for the Syrian population with a total of 4,021,4074 tons of humanitari­an cargo delivered so far, according to data from the Russian Reconcilia­tion Center for Syria on March 25. According to Sezer, there are signs of an impending escalation in northweste­rn Syria that are similar to the incidents in early February, and “the silence from Turkish authoritie­s by not commenting either on any injury or on the implementa­tion of the March 5 deal confirms it.”

‘The first priority of Turkey and Russia now is to ensure the security of the M4 highway linking Syria’s east and west and to eliminate any potential risk of attack.

 ?? AFP ?? Syrian Civil Defense, also known as the White Helmets, disinfects a tent for the displaced in Idlib as part of efforts to prevent the spread of coronaviru­s.
AFP Syrian Civil Defense, also known as the White Helmets, disinfects a tent for the displaced in Idlib as part of efforts to prevent the spread of coronaviru­s.

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