Los Angeles Times

Turkey rebukes U.S. troops over Kurdish insignia

- By Nabih Bulos and Tracy Wilkinson tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com Special correspond­ent Bulos reported from Jordan and Wilkinson from Washington.

Turkey issued a stern rebuke Friday after images emerged of U.S. ground forces wearing the insignia of a Syrian Kurdish militia during operations against Islamic State.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said it was “unacceptab­le” that U.S. special forces would be wearing shoulder patches of the People’s Protection Units, a Kurdish group known as the YPG.

The photos, which were snapped by a photograph­er with news service AFP, depict what appear to be fully-equipped U.S. Special Forces operators atop a pickup truck. The images, according to Turkish state news operator Anadolu, were taken near the village of Fatisah, some 16 miles north of the de facto capital of Islamic State in Syria.

The soldiers are seen alongside members of the Syrian Democratic Forces, a joint Kurdish-Arab alliance fighting Islamic State that is dominated by YPG. They have the YPG emblem on their arm patch.

A U.S. military spokesman agreed Friday that it was inappropri­ate for American service members to wear the insignia of a Kurdish force in northern Syria.

Col. Steve Warren, spokesman for Operation Inherent Resolve, which oversees warfare in Syria, said in a briefing from Iraq that he had seen photograph­s of two U.S. soldiers wearing the patches.

“I think the first thing to make clear is that wearing those YPG patches was — was unauthoriz­ed and it was inappropri­ate, and corrective action has been taken,” Warren said, “and we have communicat­ed as much to our military partners and our military allies in the region.”

He acknowledg­ed that while army regulation­s say local insignias should not be used, the “special forces community has a long and proud history of wearing such patches when they are partnering with forces around the world.” He cited Afghanista­n, Iraq and Latin America as areas where the special operators train and conduct joint activities.

Given Turkey’s sensitivit­ies about the U.S. reliance on Kurdish forces in the battle against Islamic State in Syria, the personnel were told to remove the patches. Warren said he knew of no other disciplina­ry action.

Turkey maintains the YPG is no different from the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which Ankara and Washington regard as a terrorist organizati­on.

At the State Department on Friday, spokesman Mark Toner reiterated the U.S. position that the YPG and PKK were “separate entities,” although he acknowledg­ed the two groups might have “connection­s.”

“We believe the YPG, as well as other forces in Syria, northern Syria, are effectivel­y taking the fight to [Islamic State],” Toner said. “And we’re going to continue to support them with our advise-and-assist operations there.”

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