Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Turkey threatens Kurds

- By Philip Issa

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says his country may act against U.S.-backed Kurdish militants.

BEIRUT — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Sunday his country may take further action against Kurdish militants in Iraq and Syria, as U.S.-backed forces in Syria closed in on the last neighborho­ods of a former stronghold of the Islamic State group.

The U.S. views the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces as the most effective partner to counter the Islamic State group in northern Syria, an assessment bolstered by the SDF’s steady advances against the militants.

But it has complicate­d relations with Turkey, which views the group’s Kurdish component as an extension of a terror group operating inside its own borders.

In Istanbul, Erdogan insisted that U.S. support for such groups “must come to an end,” and said that he would bring up the matter at a meeting with President Donald Trump later this month.

The SDF, which includes Arab fighters, seized six neighborho­ods from Islamic State militants in Tabqa on Sunday, according to the affiliated Hawar news agency.

Tabqa is about 25 miles southeast of the militants’ de facto Syrian capital, Raqqa, and an important stronghold for the militants.

It is next to the Tabqa Dam, one of several controllin­g the flow of the Euphrates River.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitoring group said the SDF’s control of Tabqa was “practicall­y total.”

A U.S. air lift of artillery and special forces advisers to place them behind the Islamic State group’s lines in March was a turning point in the Tabqa offensive and underscore­d the closeness between Washington and the SDF.

Turkey, however, has remained hostile to the Kurdish People’s Protection Units, known by their Kurdish acronym the YPG, which form the backbone of the SDF.

The YPG are close to the Kurdish PKK insurgent group in Turkey, which is designated as a terror organizati­on by NATO and the U.S.

Last month, Turkey struck at YPG positions inside Syria, killing 20 fighters and media activists, according to the group, prompting Kurdish parties to call for a U.S.-enforced no-fly-zone over northern Syria.

U.S. troops were seen Saturday in armored vehicles in Syria in Kurdish areas in a show of force apparently intended to dissuade Turkey and Syrian Kurdish forces from attacking one another. Kurdish officials describe the U.S. troop movement as a “buffer” between them and Turkey.

Video from northern Syria showed the U.S. patrols parked alongside Kurdish units flying the YPG flag.

“We will be forced to continue (our offensives),” Erdogan said. “We won’t provide a date and time for when we’ll come. But they will know that the Turkish military can come.”

Erdogan is due in Washington on May 16 for his first meeting with Trump.

The YPG is distrusted by Turkish-backed anti-government forces in Syria, who say the group is an ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government. The YPG and Syrian government forces have largely avoided confrontat­ion over the course of the country’s six-year civil war.

Other Kurdish parties accuse the YPG’s political arm, the PYD, of squelching dissent and embracing authoritar­ianism.

In other developmen­ts, more than a thousand residents of Damascus’ suburbs protested anti-government rebel infighting, activists said, only to be met at one demonstrat­ion by rebels who tried to disperse the protest with gunfire.

Videos from the suburb Arbin showed demonstrat­ors scrambling for cover after gunmen dressed in military fatigues lined up in front of the march and fired, largely into the air.

Seven protesters were wounded, according to the activist-run Ghouta Media Center. The Observator­y said 12 people were injured.

Demonstrat­ors blamed the powerful Army of Islam group for trying to suppress the march.

 ?? PRESIDENCY PRESS SERVICE ?? Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is to meet with President Donald Trump this month.
PRESIDENCY PRESS SERVICE Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is to meet with President Donald Trump this month.

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