Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Violence along border spoils Syrian cease-fire

Assad regime says Turkish-led fighters attacked its troops

- BY BASSEM MROUE

BEIRUT — Turkish forces and their allies attacked Syrian government troops in northeaste­rn Syria on Thursday, killing some of them, and they also clashed with Kurdish-led fighters, the state news agency in Damascus and a war monitoring group said.

The fighting underscore­d the risks of violence as multiple and often opposing armed forces jostle for new positions in the tight quarters of the northeaste­rn border zone.

Most worrisome has been the prospect of a collision between forces of the Syrian government and those backed by Turkey, which include Syrian rebel fighters and Islamic extremists opposed to President Bashar Assad.

All sides have said they are abiding by a cease-fire as they implement a Russian-Turkish agreement that divides up the border region. But frictions could undermine the effort for a resolution on the border, which U.S. forces were abruptly ordered to leave earlier this month, allowing Turkey to launch its invasion against Kurdish fighters.

Syria’s state-run SANA news agency said Turkish troops and its allied fighters attacked Syrian

army positions outside the town of Tal Tamr. The Syrian troops fought back and suffered “martyrs and wounded,” it reported without elaboratin­g. Separately, the Kurdishled Syrian Democratic Forces said three of its fighters were killed in fighting with Turkish-backed forces.

Syrian forces, Russian military advisers and military police are being deployed in a zone 19 miles deep along much of the northeaste­rn border, under an agreement reached Tuesday by Russia and Turkey.

They are to ensure that Kurdish fighters leave that area. Then Russia and Turkey are to begin joint patrols along a narrower strip directly on the Turkish-Syrian border.

Turkey is to keep sole control of a large section in the center of the border, most of which it captured in its invasion launched Oct. 9. Turkey wanted to drive the U.S.-allied Kurdish forces out of a “safe zone” along the border after U.S. President Donald Trump pulled American troops from the area.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan renewed a threat to resume the military offensive if his country continued to be “harassed” by the Kurdish militia.

He also said Turkey would “crush” any Syrian Kurdish fighter its military comes across while trying to secure areas under its control.

“We would never shy away from moving ahead on our path. We would never calculate whether the price to pay on this path would be too high or too low,” Erdogan said.

He also warned against the possibilit­y of Syrian Kurdish fighters resuming fighting alongside U.S., Russian or Syrian government forces.

In Brussels, U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper lashed out at Turkey, saying its invasion of Syria jeopardize­s gains made there as the U.S.-led coalition and allied Syrian Kurdish forces battled the Islamic State group.

“Turkey put us all in a very terrible situation. I think the incursion was unwarrante­d,” he said. “I think President Erdogan was fixated on making this incursion for one reason or another, and there was not a possibilit­y that we were going to start a war with a NATO ally.”

The commander of the Kurdish-led force, Mazloum Abdi, said Trump had assured him in a phone call that American forces will “stay here for a long time and their partnershi­p with Syrian Democratic Forces will continue for a long time.” He told journalist­s that his force and the U.S. were discussing “how to take positions again in some areas of northeast Syria.”

Trump has said some U.S. troops will remain in Syria to help the Kurds guard oil fields in the east.

The Kurdish fighters captured the main fields from the Islamic State group and since then have helped finance their self-rule by selling the crude, mainly to the Syrian government.

According to U.S. officials, the American troops would not actually “guard” the oil; instead, they would work with the SDF to ensure that IS doesn’t regenerate and also to provide logistical and other support.

The reported attack on Syrian government forces took place at the village of Kozliya on the edges of the Turkishhel­d zone.

Turkish-backed fighters also captured the nearby village of Manajeer in clashes with Kurdish forces, SANA reported. They battled Kurdish fighters in two other nearby villages, “using heavy weapons,” said Mustafa Bali, spokesman for the Kurdishled SDF. He said the SDF would defend itself.

Turkey has said it is abiding by the halt in fighting but will eliminate any Kurdish fighters still in the zone where the Russian deal gives it direct control.

 ?? BAKR ALKASEM/GETTY-AFP ?? Turkish-backed Syrian rebel fighters on Thursday took over areas in northeaste­rn Syria as Kurdish forces left several positions along the border with Turkey.
BAKR ALKASEM/GETTY-AFP Turkish-backed Syrian rebel fighters on Thursday took over areas in northeaste­rn Syria as Kurdish forces left several positions along the border with Turkey.

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