Mindanao Times

Syria safe zone agreement with Turkey will come in ‘stages’: Pentagon

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AN AGREEMENT between the United States and Turkey to establish a safe zone in northwest Syria will be implemente­d gradually, with some operations beginning soon, a Pentagon spokesman said Wednesday.

“We are currently reviewing options for the Joint Coordinati­on Center with our Turkish military counterpar­ts,” Defense Department spokesman Commander Sean Robertson told AFP.

“The security mechanism will be implemente­d in stages,” Robertson said.

“The United States is prepared to begin implementi­ng some activities rapidly as we continue discussion­s with Turkey.”

According to terms of the hard-won agreement between Ankara and Washington reached last week, authoritie­s will use the coordinati­on center, located in Turkey, to organize a safe zone in northern Syria.

The goal of the zone is to create a buffer between the Turkish border and areas controlled by the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) -- which is supported by the US but is classified as a terrorist organizati­on by Turkey.

But retired general Joseph Votel, the former chief of US troops in the Middle East, has publicly opposed Ankara’s control of such a zone.

In an opinion piece published on The National Interest’s website Monday, Votel, who headed the US Central Command until last March, warned that he thinks a Syrian security zone controlled by Turkey would “create more problems for all parties involved.”

“Safe zones are generally establishe­d to protect people in conflict zones and are usually designed to be neutral, demilitari­zed, and focused on humanitari­an purposes,” Votel wrote in the article with George Washington University Turkey expert Gonul Tol.

“Imposing a twentymile-deep (30 kilometer) safe zone east of the Euphrates would have the opposite effect -- likely displacing more than 90 percent of the Syrian Kurdish population, exacerbati­ng what is already an extremely challengin­g humanitari­an situation, and creating an environmen­t for increased conflict,” they wrote.

Syrian Kurds -- who have played a key role in the fight against the Islamic State jihadist group -- have establishe­d an autonomous region in northeast Syria amid the country’s brutal civil war.

But as the fight against IS winds down in the region, the prospect of a US military withdrawal stoked Kurdish fears of a longthreat­ened Turkish attack.

Turkey has already carried out two cross-border offensives into Syria in 2016 and 2018, the second of which saw it and allied Syrian rebels overrun the Kurdish enclave of Afrin in the northwest.Agence France-Presse

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