Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Turkey threatens offensive in Syria

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ISTANBUL — Turkey’s president threatened Saturday to launch a unilateral offensive into northeaste­rn Syria if plans to establish a so-called safe zone along Turkey’s border fail to meet his expectatio­ns, including a demand that Turkish soldiers control the corridor.

Speaking to graduates of a military academy in Istanbul, Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the U.S. had up to three weeks to satisfy Turkish demands.

Earlier in August, Turkish and U.S. officials agreed to set up the zone east of the Euphrates River. Ankara wants U.S.backed Syrian Kurdish fighters, considered terrorists by Turkey, to pull back from the border.

“If our soldiers do not start to control the area actively, we will have no choice but to activate our own operationa­l plans,” Erdogan said.

Turkey has been pressing to control — in coordinati­on with the U.S. — a 19-25 mile deep zone within civil war-ravaged Syria, running east of the Euphrates all the way to the border with Iraq.

On Friday, Erdogan said Turkish officials had “temporaril­y” agreed to a safe zone proposed by the U.S. that is narrower than 20 miles.

The two countries set up a joint operations center in Turkey’s border province of Sanliurfa this month and started helicopter patrols. But Turkish officials have repeatedly vowed to go it alone if the U.S. delays safe zone plans.

Erdogan said his visit to New York in September for the U.N. General Assembly, where he’s expected to meet President Donald Trump, would be a “last chance” before a Turkish offensive.

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