Arab News

Turkey’s safe zone plan on ice

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Turkey has persistent­ly voiced that it will carry out a military operation to the east of the Euphrates in Syria if an agreement cannot be reached with the US to set up safe zones in the northeast of the country. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has never given up on this idea. To begin with, he referred to a vague date for the launching of the operation. When the negotiatio­ns with Washington gave signals that they might bog down, he became more precise on the date of the operation. Finally, at the beginning of September, he started to say that, if a firm agreement could not be reached for the expulsion of Kurdish fighters from the region before the end of the month, Turkey would act on its own.

Turkey and the US remained on different wavelength­s throughout this chapter of their catalogue of disagreeme­nts. They were not able to eliminate their difference­s, but a modus vivendi seems to have been establishe­d after all. Washington continues to supply arms and ammunition to the Kurdish fighters of the People’s Protection Units (YPG), and Turkey continues to complain about it. Ankara has not stopped sending reinforcem­ents to the Syrian border and the two countries continue to carry out joint — or parallel — patrols on the Syrian side of the border.

The signals coming from Washington are still ambiguous. The Pentagon keeps repeating that Turkey’s unilateral military action in northeaste­rn Syria is “unacceptab­le.” As the deadline for Turkey’s potential interventi­on approached last week, James Jeffrey, US Special Envoy to the Global Coalition Against Daesh, said Washington would continue to support the Syrian Democratic Forces, whose backbone is composed of the Kurdish fighters. In his opening address to the Turkish parliament on Oct. 1, Erdogan re-emphasized the importance of his project of setting up a safe zone in Syria and constructi­ng houses for the Syrian refugees to be repatriate­d from Turkey. When, two weeks ago, he raised this proposal at the UN General Assembly, it attracted the interest of certain countries. If it works, it may solve several problems: Many Syrian refugees would return to their country; they would settle in houses that will be become theirs; and Erdogan would be able to tell the domestic public that he fulfilled his safe zone promise. But the flip side of the coin is that Syria is already opposing the constructi­on of houses in its own territory by a foreign country.

The internatio­nal community may also oppose the plan because it will amount to changing the ethnic compositio­n of the region’s population, especially in an area where Kurdish-Arab rivalry is sensitive.

Turkey’s interests in northeast Syria are incompatib­le with those of the US. The best solution for these two NATO allies would be to find common ground and avoid an unnecessar­y crisis.

At the end of the day, the most important point is that Turkey has not so far carried out the incursion it threatened to the east of Euphrates despite the fact that the deadline passed a week ago.

 ??  ?? YASAR YAKIS
YASAR YAKIS

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