Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Operation against YPG east of the Euphrates imminent, president says

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SPEAKING Friday at a military graduation ceremony in the southweste­rn province of Isparta, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said that a military operation against the PKK terrorist group’s Syrian affiliate, the People’s Protection Units (YPG), east of the Euphrates River is impending, in accordance with Turkey’s objective to eliminate all terrorists posing a threat to its national security.

THE Syrian affiliate of the PKK terrorist organizati­on, the People’s Protection Units (YPG), are poised to ramp up autonomous plans in northeast Syria by introducin­g a cryptocurr­ency program to avoid dependence on the currency of the Bashar Assad regime.

Erselan Serdem, the leader of the technologi­cal developmen­t program of the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria (Rojava), the so-called de facto autonomous region of the YPG in Syria, said on Thursday to the Coin Desk website that they are planning the use of cryptocurr­ency, with the aim to gradually print their own paper currency.

“Alongside a system of self-governing communes, Rojava plans to implement new technologi­cal academies, with a particular emphasis on cryptograp­hy and cryptocurr­ency,” Serdem said. He also stated that using their currency is crucial for achieving the vision of Abdullah Öcalan, the imprisoned leader of the PKK, who foresees a form of governance called “democratic confederal- ism.” Pointing out that they have to think about the future of the new system he said, “We do not like to depend on the Syrian government money, which is state money, we want to trade in our own cryptocurr­ency.”

The YPG has organic organizati­onal and operationa­l links with the PKK, a group considered a terrorist organizati­on by the U.S., the EU and Turkey. The YPG and PKK’s ultimate aim is to establish an autonomous region in some parts of Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran.

The power vacuum sparked by the Syrian civil war gave the YPG an opportunit­y to practicall­y apply its form of governance and form communes as dictated by its ideology. After was Daesh cleared from the region with the help of the U.S., the YPG tightened its grip on these areas by establishi­ng nine committees similar to ministries. Moreover, the YPG last month formed a political entity called the General Council of Self-Administra­tion in northern and eastern Syria, hinting to their autonomous plans. In July and Au- gust, the YPG held talks with Damascus in a bid to convince the regime to recognize an autonomous administra­tion in the north and east of Syria, similar to the one in Iraq.

Meanwhile, the U.S. continues to deliver arms to the terrorist organizati­on, transporti­ng on Thursday 300 armored cars to YPG forces, according to the official site of the Kurdistan Regional Government of Iraq. The U.S. has been giving truckloads of military support and providing military training to the YPG under the pretext of fighting Daesh.

The U.S. backing of the YPG, which facilitate­d the group’s efforts to form an autonomous region, has strained relations with Turkey. In response to the YPG threat near its borders, Turkey launched two cross-border military campaigns in the past two years. In the wake of the continued threat near the Turkish border, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan vowed yesterday to expand Turkey’s military campaign into the much larger YPG territory east of the Euphrates.

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