Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Violating US sanctions, YPG trades oil with Assad regime

- ANKARA / DAILY SABAH

THE PKK terrorist organizati­on’s Syrian wing, the YPG, in violation of United States sanctions, is supplying oil and gas to the Bashar Assad regime, said an independen­t Syrian human rights group on Thursday.

The YPG continues to provide oil to the Assad regime even after the adoption and enforcemen­t of new U.S. sanctions in the Caesar Act in June 2020, said a report by the Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR).

Detailing the magnitude of the oil trade, the report claimed the terrorist group makes $120 million in profits annually by selling around 6 million barrels of oil to the Assad regime.

The Assad regime uses the oil provided by the terrorist group to carry out its war crimes and crimes against humanity, the report stressed.

“U.S.-led Coalition forces’ operations to stop oil-smuggling remain limited and incomplete in nature, with their impact usually lasting no longer than a few days,” the report said.

OIL PROFITS FUND TERROR

Arguing that the YPG might have transferre­d some funds earned by oil sales to the Assad regime to its leaders in the PKK, its parent group based in northern Iraq, the report stressed that the practice could be considered providing financing and support for global terrorism as the PKK is recognized by the U.S. as a terrorist group.

The report adds that large amounts of oil being sold from eastern Syria, under terrorist YPG occupation since 2017, leaves the region in permanent need, with the remainder often insufficie­nt to meet the needs of the regional population, especially since northeaste­rn Syria is an agricultur­e-centric region needing fuel for operating agricultur­al machinery and irrigation.

The report also called on the U.S. government and government­s of countries participat­ing in supporting the U.S.-led coalition against Daesh to open an immediate investigat­ion into the terrorist YPG oil trade with the Assad regime, which is on U.S. sanctions lists.

Against this background, the group should be held accountabl­e under the Caesar Act, and all available penalties should be imposed to deter them from continuing to supply the Assad regime with oil and gas, the report said.

Parts of Deir ez-Zor, Syria, east of the Euphrates River, are under the occupation of the U.S.-backed terrorist group YPG, while the city center and east and west of Deir ez-Zor are under the control of the Assad regime and Iran-backed groups.

The U.S. has primarily partnered with the YPG in northeaste­rn Syria in the anti-Daesh fight. On the other hand, Turkey

strongly opposed the terrorist group’s presence in northern Syria, which has been a major sticking point in strained Turkey-U.S. relations. Ankara has long objected to the U.S.’ support for the YPG, a group that poses a threat to Turkey and that terrorizes local people, destroying their homes and forcing them to flee.

Under the pretext of fighting Daesh, the U.S. has provided military training and given truckloads of military support to the YPG, despite its NATO ally’s security concerns. While underlinin­g that a country cannot support one terrorist group to fight another, Turkey conducted its own counterter­rorism operations, over the course of which it has managed to remove a significan­t number of terrorists from the region.

The YPG terrorist group occupied Syria’s largest oil field, al-Omar, in October 2017.

 ??  ?? A U.S. military vehicle drives past an oil pump jack in Qamishli, Syria, Oct. 26, 2019.
A U.S. military vehicle drives past an oil pump jack in Qamishli, Syria, Oct. 26, 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye