Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Turk vows end of Syria ‘terror corridor’

- SUZAN FRASER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Salar Salim of The Associated Press.

ANKARA, Turkey — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Friday that his country is determined to destroy what he called a “terror corridor” in northern Syria — regardless of whether Turkey and the United States agree on the establishm­ent of a so-called safe zone there.

U.S. and Turkish officials have been holding talks on creating a safe zone east of the Euphrates River to address Turkey’s security concerns stemming from the presence of Syrian Kurdish fighters in the region. Turkey views the Kurdish fighters — who have battled the Islamic State alongside U.S. forces — as terrorists, allied with a Kurdish insurgency within Turkey.

Ankara wants a zone along the border with Syria cleared of the Kurdish fighters and claims such a zone would be safe for Syrians and allow some of the country’s refugees to return.

Turkey has warned of a possible new offensive in Syria if an agreement on a safe zone is not reached and has recently been sending reinforcem­ents to its border area. Since 2016, Turkey has launched two cross-border offensives against the Islamic State and the Syrian Kurdish fighters.

In an apparent message to U.S.-allied Kurdish militiamen in Syria, Erdogan told party officials that “those who engage in bullying by putting their trust in foreign forces will tomorrow find themselves in the grave.”

Marine Gen. Kenneth McKenzie, the U.S. Central Command chief, had visited Syria’s Kurdish-held areas on Monday for the first time since he took his post in March. McKenzie met with the top Kurdish commander to discuss the safe zone.

Erdogan said a new Turkish incursion into Syria east of the Euphrates would cut off contact between Syria’s Kurdish fighters and Iraq, where Turkey has been carrying out airstrikes targeting alleged Kurdish rebel hideouts.

In Syria, the Foreign Ministry condemned what it called destructiv­e U.S. interferen­ce in the country. It said U.S. involvemen­t in Syria aims to prolong and complicate the crisis. A statement from an unnamed ministry official said Syria rejects any agreements with Turkey that blatantly violate its sovereignt­y.

Meanwhile, Erdogan also confirmed that Turkey had caught or killed all suspects behind the assassinat­ion of a Turkish diplomat last week in Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region.

Turkish media reported Thursday that the military, acting on Turkish intelligen­ce, targeted two vehicles carrying the alleged mastermind­s of the July 17 attack that killed diplomat Osman Kose at a restaurant in the city of Irbil. The reports said the planners of the attack and their bodyguards were killed on July 18 and Wednesday.

Iraq’s Kurdish officials said last weekend that the lead suspect in the shooting was arrested. He was identified as a 27-year-old who hails from Turkey’s predominan­tly Kurdish city of Diyarbakir.

“We caught all of those who martyred our consulate’s employee,” Erdogan said. “If any of them were missing, they were rendered ineffectiv­e in their dens through successful operations.”

On Friday, Iraq’s Kurdish security council released a video of purported confession­s of six detained in the diplomat’s killing — three Kurds from Turkey and three from Iraq’s Kurdish region. They included a man described as the main suspect. He said in the televised confession­s that the assassinat­ion was planned at a base in northern Iraq of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, Turkey’s insurgent group, by a senior group leader.

The video also contained new footage of the assassinat­ion, the attackers’ getaway from the scene, and the arrest operation.

 ?? AP ?? Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in a speech to his party Friday in Ankara included a message to U.S.-allied Kurdish forces in Syria, saying “those who engage in bullying by putting their trust in foreign forces will tomorrow find themselves in the grave.”
AP Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in a speech to his party Friday in Ankara included a message to U.S.-allied Kurdish forces in Syria, saying “those who engage in bullying by putting their trust in foreign forces will tomorrow find themselves in the grave.”

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