Houston Chronicle

Battles ease, but truce uncertain

Kurdish leaders say fighters remain in ‘defensive position’

- By Patrick Kingsley

ISTANBUL — Sporadic fighting continued in northern Syria on Friday, casting uncertaint­y over a U.S.-brokered truce, as conflictin­g reports emerged about whether Kurdish forces were retreating or hunkering down and whether Turkish troops were advancing or holding fire.

Clashes continued on and off in the vicinity of a strategic Syrian border town, despite President Donald Trump hailing the cease-fire, announced on Thursday night by Vice President Mike Pence, as “an incredible outcome.”

Pence had promised that fighting would halt for five days to allow Syrian Kurdish forces to evacuate a central pocket of northern Syria that Turkey wants to wrest from Kurdish control.

But though fighting eased, gunfire could still be heard in the area of Ras al-Ayn, a town next to the Turkish-Syrian border, during the early morning and early afternoon. By nightfall the Kurdish military leadership said its forces remained in a “defensive position” in the places they had been deployed when the cease-fire was agreed — contradict­ing Turkish and U.S. claims that they had started to retreat, as required by the terms of the deal.

Most internatio­nal news organizati­ons were absent from the battlefiel­d, leaving a dearth of independen­t informatio­n about the situation.

Around midday, President Recep Tayyip Er

dogan of Turkey denied any fighting had taken place, hours after the Kurdish leadership said it was being shelled by Turkish forces. Then Trump tweeted that Erdogan had conceded by phone that there had been, briefly, “minor” sniper and mortar fire.

What was clear by nightfall was that the cease-fire’s desired outcome — a complete cessation of hostilitie­s and the withdrawal of Kurdish troops from part of northern Syria — had not yet fully taken place.

Should Kurdish forces remain in position by Tuesday night, Turkey has pledged to renew its fullscale assault, which began on Oct. 9.

“If the United States can keep its promise, in 120 hours the issue of the safe zone will be resolved,” Erdogan told reporters at a news briefing in Istanbul. “If not, the operation will continue where we left off.”

The stuttering nature of the cease-fire raised further concerns about the United States’ waning influence on the outcome of Syria’s eight-year civil war.

These fears were compounded Friday when Erdogan issued a response to a private letter sent by Trump to the Turkish president on the day the invasion began.

“Don’t be a tough guy,” Trump had written, in a letter characteri­zed by informal language rarely seen in diplomatic communicat­ions.

Erdogan responded publicly to the letter for the first time Friday, saying that his country “cannot forget” the harshly worded communiqué, since it was “not in harmony with political and diplomatic niceties.”

“We also want it to be known that, when the time comes, the necessary response will be taken,” Erdogan said. However, he also noted that the issue was not a current priority for Turkey.

U.S. troops to remain in Syria

The Turkish government defines the Kurdish militia that controls most of northern Syria as a terrorist group, and Erdogan hailed the planned withdrawal as a victory over it. He also said that Turkey would establish 12 observatio­n points in a 20-mile deep buffer zone along a 250-mile stretch of the border east of the Euphrates River.

U.S. troops would remain in southeaste­rn Syria and would maintain control of the airspace of the entire northeaste­rn zone, said

Ibrahim Kalin, a spokesman for the Turkish president.

Responding to the claims that Turkey had violated the truce, Erdogan told a reporter after leaving Friday Prayers at a mosque in Istanbul: “I do not know where you get your informatio­n from. Conflict

is out of the question.”

But Trump posted on Twitter on Friday afternoon that Erdogan had told him in a phone call that “there was minor sniper and mortar fire that was quickly eliminated.”

Neverthele­ss, Trump dismissed concerns about the viability of the cease-fire. “There is good will on both sides & a really good chance for success,” he said.

Trump also said that some European states were now prepared to take back European citizens from the Islamic State who are incarcerat­ed in Kurdish prisons, allaying concerns that they might be released during the fighting.

“This is good news, but should have been done after WE captured them,” Trump tweeted. “Anyway, big progress being made !!!! ”

Gunfire continued to be heard in Ras al-Ayn midafterno­on by members of a civilian convoy attempting to reach the city, according to Robin Fleming, a U.S. researcher traveling with the convoy.

Watching the town from a nearby hilltop shortly before 1 p.m., Fleming said she could see smoke rising from the town and hear gunshots, but no artillery.

The convoy ultimately turned back before reaching the town because of fears of attack by Turkishled

Arab militias.

Turkish-led forces also prevented a convoy of internatio­nal aid workers from gaining access to Ras al-Ayn to treat people wounded in the fighting, according to the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, an independen­t war monitor based in Britain.

Ras al-Ayn has been the site of the fiercest clashes since Turkish troops invaded Kurdish-held areas of northern Syria early last week.

Meeting with Putin

On Friday, Kurdish health officials said they were investigat­ing whether six civilians in the town had been hit by chemical weapons during Turkish airstrikes. Photograph­s shared by the Kurdish Red Crescent, a medical charity working in the area, showed at least two children with burns on their faces.

Erdogan denied the claim and said the Turkish Army had no chemical weapons in its inventory. He accused the main Syrian Kurdish militia, the YPG, of sowing disinforma­tion also about civilian casualties and accusation of war crimes committed by Turkish-backed Syrian forces.

But Amnesty Internatio­nal, a global rights watchdog, accused the Turkish military and Arab militias fighting under its command of carrying out “serious violations and war crimes, including summary killings and unlawful attacks that have killed and injured civilians.”

In a statement, Amnesty’s secretary-general, Kumi Naidoo, added: “Turkish military forces and their allies have displayed an utterly callous disregard for civilian lives, launching unlawful deadly attacks in residentia­l areas that have killed and injured civilians.”

At least 218 civilians in northern Syria have died since the invasion began, according to the Kurdish authoritie­s. A further 20 have been killed in Turkey by Kurdish mortar attacks, Erdogan said.

Turkey wants to force out the Syrian Kurdish militia that has used the chaos of the conflict to establish an autonomous region across roughly a quarter of Syrian territory. The militia is an offshoot of a guerrilla group that has waged a decadeslon­g insurgency in Turkey. On Friday, Erdogan said he would discuss the future of the rest of northeaste­rn Syria with Vladimir Putin of Russia at a meeting in Sochi on Tuesday.

“Our aim is to reach a reconcilia­tion with Russia about those matters that are reasonable and acceptable to everyone,” Erdogan said.

 ?? Photos by Delil Souleiman / AFP via Getty Images ?? Women look after children Thursday at the Kurdish-run al-Hol camp for the displaced, where families of Islamic State foreign fighters are held, in northeaste­rn Syria.
Photos by Delil Souleiman / AFP via Getty Images Women look after children Thursday at the Kurdish-run al-Hol camp for the displaced, where families of Islamic State foreign fighters are held, in northeaste­rn Syria.
 ??  ?? A woman wails as the body of a man killed during Turkish shelling arrives at a hospital in Tal Tamr, Syria.
A woman wails as the body of a man killed during Turkish shelling arrives at a hospital in Tal Tamr, Syria.

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