Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

More fatalities logged in Turkey-Syria fight

- SUZAN FRASER AND VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Albert Aji and Bassem Mroue of The Associated Press.

ANKARA, Turkey — Two more Turkish soldiers were killed Wednesday in a Syrian government attack in Syria’s northwest, the country’s Defense Ministry said, as steady clashes between the two national armies continued to rack up casualties.

Turkey has sent thousands of troops into the area to support Syrian insurgents holed up there, but it hasn’t been able to stop a Russian-backed Syrian government offensive to retake Idlib province.

A Syrian-opposition war monitor said nine Syrian soldiers were killed in Turkish drone attacks in the area.

The Turkish Defense Ministry’s statement said the latest Syrian attack on its troops also wounded six soldiers. It did not provide further details.

The assault came as Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was scheduled to depart for Moscow, where he he aims to broker a cease-fire in Syria with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Turkey and Russia are the two main power brokers in Syria, and they support rival sides in the nine-year conflict.

“We expect to reach a shared view of the cause of the current crisis, its consequenc­es and agree on a set of measures to overcome it,” Russian presidenti­al spokesman Dmitry Peskov said of the upcoming meeting.

Russian officials have said they hold Turkey responsibl­e for the collapse of a ceasefire agreement reached in Sochi, Russia, in 2018. They say Ankara has failed to honor the deal and rein in militants who continued attacking Syrian and Russian targets. Turkey has rejected the Russian assertion, saying Ankara was making progress against radical groups in Idlib when the Syrian government launched its offensive.

Earlier on Wednesday, Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenko­v assailed Turkey for shielding “terrorists” in Idlib, a statement that reflected Moscow’s forceful posture ahead of the Syria talks.

In a statement, Konashenko­v said that under the 2018 agreement with Russia, Turkey was obliged to ensure that militants in Idlib pull back 9-12 miles from the deescalati­on zone along with their heavy weapons. Instead, he argued, al-Qaida-linked militants “and other terrorist groups pushed moderate rebels north toward the border with Turkey.”

Konashenko­v also accused the West of turning a blind eye to Turkish military action in Syria “in violation of internatio­nal law” and of treating Turkish threats to destroy Syrian army units as a “legitimate self-defense.”

Syrian opposition activists reported intense clashes near the government-held town of Saraqeb that sits on a major highway linking Syria’s two largest cities, Damascus and Aleppo. The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, an opposition war monitor, said Turkish drone attacks near Saraqeb killed nine Syrian soldiers.

The Russian military said in a statement Wednesday that “a group of terrorists” made a failed attempt to detonate ammunition placed next to chemical storage tanks in the western part of Saraqeb two days ago.

The Russian military said the militants were poisoned when one of the tanks leaked before they could detonate the explosives.

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