Gulf News

Turkey gets Russian nod to take Manbij

IN ABSENCE OF A US SECRETARY OF STATE ERDOGAN WILL CONTINUE HIS ADVANCE

- BY SAMI MOUBAYED Correspond­ent

Before former US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was sacked by US President Donald Trump, he was working with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on securing an agreement over the northern Syrian town of Manbij.

It was important because Erdogan had threatened to march on all of northern Syria to eliminate what he believes is an emerging Kurdish militant threat — having already kicked them out of Afrin.

Turkey views the USbacked Kurdish YPG group as an extension of the PKK, another Kurdish militant group active in Iraq and Turkey, which it considers as a terrorist group.

However, the US has worked closely with YPG, specifical­ly in the fight against Daesh, which has made Turkey uneasy.

When the US announced in January its plans to form a 30,000 man-strong border force along Turkey’s southern border with Syria — Erdogan vowed to crush it.

Hoping to stave off an open conflict between Turkish and US-backed forces, Tillerson agreed to place Manbij under the co-administra­tion of the Turkish and US armies in exchange for a halt in Turkey’s campaign.

Tillerson’s deal

While Tillerson favoured accommodat­ing fellow Nato member Turkey’s concerns, Trump preferred to support the Kurds, regardless of whether or not Erdogan accepted this or not.

Now that Tillerson is out, his suggested replacemen­t, CIA Director Mike Pompeo is likely to side with Trump, thus killing Tillerson’s deal with Erdogan.

The uncertaint­y prompted Erdogan to negotiate directly with Russia, which seemingly does not mind his advance on Manbij as long as Turkish forces do not trespass on their fiefdom, west of the Euphrates river.

According to informed sources, Russian President Vladimir Putin has even went further and gave Turkey the green light to also march on Tel Rifaat north of Aleppo, where Erdogan claims Kurdish militias have fled in recent days after they were kicked out of Afrin.

“Negotiatio­ns are presently under way between the Russian and Turkish armies regarding the mechanism of handing Tal Rifaat to Ankara,” Ebrahim Hamidi, senior diplomatic editor for the London-based Al Sharq Alawsat newspaper.

On Sunday Erdogan vowed to march on Tal Rifaat “soon”.

The Syrian government has denied the existence of such a deal. Cooperatio­n between Russia and Turkey, once fierce foes, seriously began during the Moscow-backed Syrian government assault on Aleppo in 2016.

Turkey — which had been an ardent backer of rebels based there — had agreed to stop its support in exchange for deploying Turkish troops to the border cities of Jarablus and Azaz.

The same arrangemen­t was repeated this month. While Russia helped the Syrian government overrun the rebel-held Damascus suburb of Eastern Ghouta, Turkish troops were pounding Afrin to oust the Kurds.

Veteran opposition writer Fayez Sara downplays the prospect of any confrontat­ion between the US and Turkey over Manbij. “Let’s remember the US abandoned the Kurds in Afrin so they could do the same in Manbij,” he said.

For now, Erdogan looks poised to march on Manbij and Tal Rifaat, adding them to the buffer zone he already carved back in 2016 which includes Jarablus, Azaz and Al Bab.

Ultimately his goal is to clean out the entire area and its surroundin­gs from Kurdish militias, preventing the rise of a Kurdish state on his borders with Syria.

A Kurdish state in Syria could incite Turkey’s own sizeable Kurdish population into open confrontat­ion with government.

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