Bangkok Post

Erdogan renews Syria air and ground attack threat

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ANKARA: President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Saturday renewed Turkey’s threat to launch an “air and ground” operation in Syria against a Kurdish militia viewed as terrorists by Ankara.

The president previously said that Turkey’s patience was wearing thin after Turkish and American officials agreed in August to establish a buffer zone in northern Syria.

“We’ve made our preparatio­ns, completed our operation plans, given the necessary instructio­ns,” Mr Erdogan said during a televised speech, adding that the offensive could start “as soon as today, tomorrow”.

“We will conduct this (operation) on the ground and the air,” he added, saying it would be east of the Euphrates.

Kurdish authoritie­s in northeast Syria denounced Mr Erdogan’s comments and urged the internatio­nal community to step in to stop a Turkish assault on Syrian territory under their control.

A statement said the “internatio­nal community (must) put pressure on Turkey to stop it from aggression”.

The Kurds also called on the European Union and the US-led coalition to help stop Mr Erdogan’s threats, which they said “are dangerous and threaten the security and stability of the region”.

Mr Erdogan has repeatedly threatened to launch a cross-border offensive and recently suggested that progress on the zone with the US was not developing as Ankara wanted.

While there have been joint US-Turkey patrols, Ankara wants to urgently establish a “safe zone” for the return of up to two million Syrian refugees.

Turkey is home to more than 3.6 million Syrian refugees but there has been a growing backlash against their presence.

Ankara wants to push the US-backed Syrian Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) militia from its border, saying that the group is a “terrorist” offshoot of Kurdish insurgents in Turkey.

But the YPG has worked closely with American troops in the fight against the Islamic State (IS), recapturin­g territory from the jihadists in northern Syria.

The Turkish military has twice launched offensives in Syria — against the IS in 2016, and against the YPG in 2018.

Long marginalis­ed, Syria’s Kurds have — beyond heavy campaigns against the IS — essentiall­y stayed out of the country’s eight-year civil war, instead of setting up their own institutio­ns in areas under their control.

 ??  ?? Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan talks to supporters during an event in Ankara, Turkey on Saturday.
Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan talks to supporters during an event in Ankara, Turkey on Saturday.

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