Las Vegas Review-Journal

Turkey, U.S. talk as Syria rift looms

Offensive soon could put American troops, allies in harm’s way

- By Selcan Hacaoglu and Nafeesa Syeed Bloomberg News

ANKARA, Turkey — Turkey says it’s talking to the Americans. The

U.S. says it’s talking to the Turks. Politician­s and generals in the two countries are in almost constant communicat­ion, judging by their public comments.

There’s no indication that any of this talk has resolved the fundamenta­l argument that’s threatenin­g to bring NATO’S two biggest armies into direct conflict in northern Syria.

When Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan began an offensive there last month against U.s.-backed Kurdish fighters, he started in an area in which American troops aren’t embedded with their allies.

But he said the operation will soon extend farther east, to the town of Manbij, where they are.

“We’ll press against terrorists without taking into considerat­ion who’s next to them,” Erdogan said Jan. 30. Several ministers have made the same point.

Turkey considers the Syrian Kurdish militia part of a terrorist group seeking to break off from Turkey.

The U.S. has welcomed Kurdish support against Islamic State — and now that that fight is largely done, leaving the Kurds in charge of about one-quarter of Syria, they’re seen as a bulwark against Bashar al-assad and his backers in Iran and Russia.

Russia moved its soldiers in northern Syria out of the way of the advancing Turks. The U.S. is signaling it won’t do the same.

Withdrawin­g from Manbij is “not something we’re looking into,” Army Gen. Joseph Votel, the head of U.S. Central Command, told CNN.

“Wherever U.S. troops are, they’re going to be able to defend themselves,” Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Kenneth Mckenzie, joint staff director at the Pentagon, said Jan. 25.

“They know where our forces are,” he said of the Turks.

U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said Friday that it is possible to balance the alliance with Turkey while still supporting the Kurds, and he suggested that having U.S. troops working with the Kurdish militias in Syria was one way of helping Turkey’s security.

Ties between the U.S. and Turkey have been tense for years, and when there’s a flare-up, Turkish financial markets usually take a hit. Turkey blames the U.S. for hosting the Islamic preacher it accuses of instigatin­g a failed coup in 2016. The U.S. last year prosecuted a senior Turkish banker for breaking Iran sanctions. Both countries briefly stopped issuing visas for each other’s citizens.

Turkey’s attack on Kurdish fighters in Afrin, in northwest Syria, came soon after the U.S. announced it would help Syrian Kurds set up a 30,000-strong border security force. Washington later backed off that descriptio­n.

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