The Miracle

Turkey and Russia ‘form secret alliance’ over Syria war

- Source: arabnews.com.

ANKARA: Turkish troops are making sweeping territoria­l gains in northern Syria, fuelling speculatio­n that Ankara and Moscow are secretly working together to establish greater control over the war. Sections of the Turkish media reported that the center of Tel Rifaat city in northern Syria was encircled on Tuesday after up to 100 Russian police officers mysterious­ly pulled out of the area, allowing the soldiers and members of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) to enter. Although Ankara has yet to confirm this, Arab News sources said that Tel Rifaat’s col- lapse is imminent, with negotiatio­ns still continuing. These latest developmen­ts have caused military analysts to suggest that Moscow is deliberate­ly ceding control of the area, betraying Kurdish fighters it once protected, in a bid to stop Turkey from edging closer to the US. They told Arab News it may be the clearest sign yet that the countries are secretly working together in a double game, swapping territory and selling out guerrilla factions that they had previously supported, in an attempt to improve their strategic footholds in the country. Magdalena Kirchner, of the Istanbul Policy Center, told Arab News that while there was no definitive proof of a quid pro quo, the fact that Russian forces left Tel Rifaat “just hours before the operation started points to fairly close coordinati­on and ongoing negotiatio­ns”. Relations between Turkey and Russia have fluctuated wildly since Moscow intervened in the Syrian civil war in September 2015 to support the regime of President Bashar Assad, which Ankara had vowed to help topple. In November that year, Turkey shot down a Russian fighter plane near its border with Syria, causing Russia to respond with sanctions. In June 2016 Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan apologized for downing the plane and relations began to thaw. Since early 2017 the two countries, together with Iran, have been cooperatin­g in what they say is an attempt to bring about a political end to the conflict by establishi­ng “de-escalation zones” throughout Syria. But Tel Rifaat’s targeting by Turkish forces this week may be a sign that both sides are more interested in furthering their geopolitic­al interests than keeping the peace, analysts told Arab News. Kerim Has, a lecturer in Turkish-Russian relations at Moscow State University, said that there have been indication­s elsewhere in Syria that an unofficial, mutually beneficial arrangemen­t, has been reached between the two countries. While officials have yet to confirm the city’s fall, the Turkish army recently used its Twitter account to claim that people wanted it “to be cleared of terrorist organizati­ons.” Omer Ozkizilcik, an analyst at the Middle East Foundation in Ankara, told Arab News that Russia had made significan­t efforts to involve the YPG in a political solution to the war. He said Moscow gave up on this approach when it emerged that the US is training 30,000 personnel, including elements of the YPG, to secure the Syrian border, a move that has infuriated Ankara. The US denies that the YPG and PKK are closely linked. On Tuesday Russian President Vladimir Putin and Erdogan discussed plans for a Syria summit they are due to hold in Ankara next week. Iran will also attend the meeting. Unlike much of the internatio­nal community, Turkey has said it has no plans to expel Russian diplomats following the poisoning of a Russian double agent in Britain earlier this month.

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