Arab Times

Turks offer joint Raqa op

Australian killed fighting IS

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ANKARA, May 30, (Agencies): Turkey is offering to “join forces” with Washington for a special operation inside Syria on condition it doesn’t include a Syrian Kurdish militia blackliste­d by Ankara but seen as an ally by the US, the foreign minister said.

Washington’s support of Kurdish fighters in Syria in the fight against Islamic State jihadists has angered Ankara, especially after AFP pictures last week revealed US commandos sporting patches of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) detested by Turkey.

“If we join forces, they (the US) have their own special forces and we have our special forces,” Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu told a small group of journalist­s in the Mediterran­ean resort of Antalya.

Such a coalition could “easily” head to IS’ de facto capital in Raqa to the south in a second front, he said.

There was no immediate reaction to the proposal from the United States,

whose strategy for fighting jihadists inside Syria is pinned on its alliance with the battle-hardened Syrian Kurds.

The US is supporting an alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters, the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), as the most effective fighting force on the ground

against IS.

But the SDF is still dominated by the YPG, which Turkey sees as the Syrian branch of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) which has fought a three decade insurgency against the Turkish state.

Cavusoglu said Syrian Arab opposition forces opposing the regime of President Bashar al-Assad could be backed up with special forces from Turkey, the United States as well as from France, Britain and Germany.

“The subject we are discussing with the Americans is the closure of the Manbij pocket as soon as possible... and the opening of a second front,” Cavusoglu said, referring to a backdoor border route favoured by IS for smuggling jihadists into and out of Syria.

“We say okay, a second front should be opened but not with the PYD,” he said, referring to the Democratic Union Party, the YPG’s political wing.

“Unfortunat­ely, both Russia and the United States see a terrorist organisati­on as a partner and support it.”

In Ankara, government spokesman Numan Kurtulmus declined to comment on details of any operation but said Turkey placed top priority on protecting a line stretching between Syria’s flashpoint towns of Marea and Jarablus.

“Turkey is determined whatever is needed to protect the line from terrorist groups,” he said on Monday after a cabinet meeting.

The dispute over the role of the YPG has proved a major bone of contention in relations between the two NATO allies. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan at the weekend accused the US of dishonesty.

Cavusoglu lamented the delay in the delivery of American light multiple rocket launchers to be deployed along its border with Syria to combat IS.

The High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) was to have been deployed along the Turkish border by the end of May, but Cavusoglu said it would now only happen in August.

“The United States is unfortunat­ely not keeping its promise,” he charged.

“We are completely ready. Not us, but the US is responsibl­e for the delay.”

The system would allow Turkey to hit IS positions within a 90-km (56-mile) range, while Turkish artillery has a more

limited range of 40 kms.

Yet Turkish cooperatio­n is critical for the US-led fight against IS, with coalition war planes using the southern Turkish base of Incirlik as a hub for attacks on the group.

Cavusoglu said US support for YPG was “very dangerous” for the future of Syria.

Asked if could have implicatio­ns for the US use of Incirlik, he replied: “The United States is our NATO ally, model partner. To be honest, we don’t want the business to reach that stage.”

Australian

An Australian man has been killed in Syria fighting Islamic State jihadists, the country’s third national thought to have died alongside Kurdish forces, reports said Monday.

Former Australian soldier Jamie Bright, in his 40s, was named on social media as having been “martyred” in recent days.

The Kurdish People’s Protection Unit said on its Facebook page that Bright died alongside three other Kurdish fighters.

“He was shot about three or four days ago,” an Australian friend who fought alongside Bright in Syria told News Corporatio­n Australia.

The friend, who was not named, said Bright had travelled to Syria in early 2015 because he “saw something was happening that wasn’t right and wanted to fix it”.

“He saw government­s doing nothing. He saw it as wrong and believed it had to be changed,” he added.

Australia’s foreign ministry said it could not verify if Bright had been killed as the “government’s capacity to confirm reports of deaths in Syria is extremely limited”.

“If confirmed, this latest death is yet another tragic reminder of the dangers involved for those who seek to travel and fight in conflict zones,” it added in a statement.

At least two other Australian­s, Reece Harding and Ashley Johnston, were killed in 2015 while with Kurdish groups fighting the Islamic State group.

A US-backed alliance of Syrian militias is widening an offensive against Islamic State near its de facto capital of Raqqa, targeting an area where the group controls a disused air base, a monitoring group and a Kurdish official said on

Monday.

The Syria Democratic Forces (SDF), which includes the Kurdish YPG militia, launched an attack against Islamic Stateheld areas north of Raqqa city last week. The city itself is not a target of the current offensive however, the SDF has said.

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