Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. sends forces to support Kurds in northern Syria

Move follows deadly airstrike by Turks on coalition fighters

- SARAH EL DEEB AND BOB BURNS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Mike Corder and Zeina Karam of The Associated Press.

BEIRUT — U.S. armored vehicles are deploying in areas in northern Syria along the tense border with Turkey, a few days after a Turkish airstrike that killed 20 U.S.-backed Kurdish fighters, a Syrian war monitor and Kurdish activists said Friday.

Footage posted by Syrian activists online showed a convoy of U.S. armored vehicles driving on a rural road in the village of Darbasiyah, a few hundred yards from the Turkish border. Clashes in the area were reported between Turkish and Kurdish forces Wednesday, a day after the Turkish airstrike, which also destroyed a Kurdish command headquarte­rs.

The Turkish airstrikes, which also wounded 18 members of the U.S.-backed People’s Protection Units, in Syria were criticized by both the U.S. and Russia. The Protection Units are a close U.S. ally in the fight against the Islamic State extremist group but are seen by Turkey as a terrorist group because of their ties to Turkey’s Kurdish rebels.

Further clashes between Turkish and Kurdish forces in Syria could potentiall­y undermine the U.S.-led war on the Islamic State.

A senior Kurdish official, Ilham Ahmad, said U.S. forces began carrying out patrols along the border Thursday as well as reconnaiss­ance flights in the area. She said the deployment was temporary in principle but that it may become more permanent.

A Kurdish activist in the area, Mustafa Bali, said the deployment is ongoing, adding that it stretches from the Iraqi border to areas past Darbasiyah in the largely Kurdish part of eastern Syria.

“The U.S. role has now become more like a buffer force between us and the Turks on all front lines,” he said. He said U.S. forces will also deploy as a separation force in areas where the Turkish-backed Syrian fighting forces and the Kurdish forces meet.

It is a message of reassuranc­e for the Kurds and almost a “warning message” to the Turks, he said.

Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, did not dispute that U.S. troops are operating with elements of the Syrian Democratic Forces along the Turkish border, but he would not get into specifics. The group is a Kurdish-dominated alliance fighting the Islamic State that includes Arab fighters.

“We have U.S. forces that are there throughout the entirety of northern Syria that operate with our Syrian Democratic Force partners,” Davis said. “The border is among the areas where they operate.”

He said the U.S. wants the Democratic Forces to focus on liberating the Islamic State-held town of Tabqa and the extremist group’s de facto capital, Raqqa, “and not be drawn into conflicts elsewhere.”

Rami Abdurrahma­n, director of the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, said the deployment seems limited and is aimed to “prevent fighting” between the two sides.

Separately, the chief of the internatio­nal chemical weapons watchdog said Friday that he has a team of experts ready and willing to travel to the site of this month’s deadly nerve gas attack in Syria if their safety can be assured.

“We are willing to go to Khan Sheikhoun, and we have undertaken some actions,” Ahmet Uzumcu of the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons told a small group of reporters in The Hague.

Syrian ally Russia has called for an internatio­nal investigat­ion into the April 4 attack that killed nearly 90 people. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov this week expressed regret that the chemical-weapons organizati­on has turned down the Syrian government’s offers to visit the site of the attack and investigat­e. Russia has rejected Western accusation­s that Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government was behind the attack.

Uzumcu said the area of the town of Khan Sheikhoun where the attack occurred is controlled by opposition rebels, adding that the watchdog experts will “need to strike some deals with them,” such as a temporary cease-fire, to assure the team’s safety before it can deploy.

The chemical-weapons organizati­on has been extremely cautious about sending investigat­ors to Syria since a team of its experts came under attack there in 2014. Uzumcu said the organizati­on is in daily contact with U.N. authoritie­s over the security situation in Syria.

The Syrian president has categorica­lly rejected accusation­s that his forces were behind the attack.

Uzumcu is not yet calling the April 4 incident a chemical weapons attack, but he has said tests by his organizati­on have establishe­d beyond doubt that sarin or a similar toxin was used.

Other nations already have labeled it an attack and blamed the Syrian government.

The organizati­on’s team is already gathering evidence from victims and survivors and testing samples outside Syria. Uzumcu said he expects an initial report to be issued in about 10 days. The initial investigat­ion by the organizati­on will not apportion blame — that is left to a separate investigat­ive mechanism made up of experts from the organizati­on and the U.N.

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