Daily Sabah (Turkey)

NATO shown how arms given to SDF end up in PKK hands

Defense Minister Canikli said weapons given to PKK-linked groups in Syria has exceed 3,000 trucks, adding that he presented documents at a NATO meeting that show the PKK used those arms in their latest attacks on Turkish forces

- MEHMET SOLMAZ – BRUSSELS

DEFENSE ministers of NATO countries who gathered for a twoday meeting in Brussels were given documents and images by Turkish officials showing the links between the People’s Protection Units (YPG), a militant group dominated by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), and the PKK, which killed six Turkish soldiers and two village guards last week with an anti-tank missile the U.S. gave to the SDF.

Speaking on the second day of the meeting at NATO headquarte­rs yesterday, Defense Minister Nurettin Canikli said the weapons given to the SDF now exceed 3,000 trucks, and "this number does not match the necessity in the fight against Daesh."

Explaining that he has told all of his NATO counterpar­ts about the danger caused by providing weapons to the SDF, Canikli said that since the fight against Daesh is over, there is no further explanatio­n for the ongoing arming of a terrorist organizati­on by a NATO ally.

"We said that the YPG was the PKK's Syrian offshoot, they are commanded from the same place and they are bred from the same pool. We presented it with documents and photograph­s. We have presented it not only to the U.S. but also to Britain, Spain, Albania and other countries," Canikli said.

Commenting on Turkey's "successful" fight against terrorism, the defense minister said the results show the rate of success.

"The number of [PKK] terrorist organizati­on members neutralize­d since Jan.1, 2017 is 2,304," he said.

Turkish intelligen­ce officials and police recently discovered a secret tunnel from the Turkish border town of Nusaybin to Qamishli, Syria.

The governorat­e of Mardin where Nusaybin is located said that the National Intelligen­ce Organizati­on (MİT) and the local police were carrying out counterter­rorism operations in the area and started combing the site on Oct. 31, upon informatio­n regarding a secret tunnel.

The tunnel was six meters undergroun­d and its entrance in Syrian was blocked. It was located in an empty lot, officials said, noting that they were examining "the workplace and residence" where the tunnel's entrance in Turkey is.

Continuous U.S. support for the YPG has stirred tensions between Washington and Ankara. Washington has insisted that the PKK, and the YPG which is the Democratic Union Party’s (PYD) militia, are two different organizati­ons and that supporting the YPG is the only option to defeat Daesh. Meanwhile, Ankara has argued that rather than supporting and arming a "terrorist group," an alternativ­e could be found with local Arab tribes backed by other countries in the region.

 ??  ?? The YPG fighters stand guard as U.S. forces take up positions in the northern village of Darbasiyah, Syria , April 29.
The YPG fighters stand guard as U.S. forces take up positions in the northern village of Darbasiyah, Syria , April 29.

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