Austin American-Statesman

Turkey attacks Kurds fighting Islamic State in northern Syria

- By Sarah El Deeb and Suzan Fraser

Turkey escalated its offensive Thursday against Kurdish fighters in northern Syria, pounding them with airstrikes and artillery

and complicati­ng the battle against the Islamic State group by Ankara and Wash

ington, both NATO allies. In the fight for Aleppo, meanwhile, the Syrian mili- tary used a lull in violence to urge residents and rebels to evacuate the besieged opposition-held part of the city.

Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency said as many as 200 members of the Kurd- ish-led forces were killed in Syria’s Aleppo province by the bombing and shelling.

A senior commander with the main Syria Kurdish mili- tia confirmed the Turkish attack on his forces but disputed the casualty toll, saying that no more than 10 fighters were killed.

As in Iraq, where Kurdish fighters are at the forefront of the offensive to retake Mosul from the Islamic State group, Kurdish forces in Syria also have been battling Islamic State and made significan­t territoria­l gains. That has dismayed Turkey, which is dealing with a homegrown Kurdish insurgency and trying to prevent an expansion of Kurdish influence in neigh- boring Syria.

Kurdish commander Mahmoud Barkhadan of the People’s Protection Units accused Turkey of aiding the Islamic State by turning the fight into a Turkish-Kurdish battle.

“We are fighting Daesh. Why are they striking at us?” he asked, using the Arabic acronym for Islamic State.

Turkish artillery also hit near Afrin, a Kurdish enclave in northweste­rn Syria, he said, adding that his forces have not retreated but that Turkey’s actions allowed Islamic State fighters to wage a counteroff­ensive.

A U.S. defense official in Washington said the Syrian Kurdish fighters targeted by Turkish airstrikes Wednesday are not among the Kurdish groups that U.S. forces are advising and assisting, so there were no U.S. troops with them during the attack.

The official said, however, that since the Kurds who were targeted are affiliated with U.S.-backed Kurdish fighters, the Turkish attacks were problemati­c and have angered the U.S.-backed Kurds. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter.

In August, Turkey sent troops and tanks into northern Syria to help opposition forces drive the Islamic State away from Turkish-Syrian border areas and to curb the Syrian Kurdish forces’ territoria­l expansion.

Ilham Ahmed, a senior Syrian Kurdish official, said the Turkish attack was an aggression on her people’s aspiration for self-administra­tion in a contiguous territory in the north as well as a threat to the U.S-led antiterror­ism fight there.

 ?? QASIOUN NEWS AGENCY ?? An Iraqi woman who fled the besieged city of Mosul rests in Hasakah, in northeast Syria, on Thursday. Iraqiled forces are trying to clear Mosul of the Islamic State, forcing many residents to flee.
QASIOUN NEWS AGENCY An Iraqi woman who fled the besieged city of Mosul rests in Hasakah, in northeast Syria, on Thursday. Iraqiled forces are trying to clear Mosul of the Islamic State, forcing many residents to flee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States