Los Angeles Times

Kurds blur lines in Syrian conflict

Militia battles Assad’s forces in northeast, highlighti­ng the rift between former allies.

- BY NABIH BULOS AND W.J. HENNIGAN william.hennigan@latimes.com Special correspond­ent Bulos reported from Amman and Times staff writer Hennigan from Washington.

AMMAN, Jordan — For years, the Syrian government and U.S.-backed Kurdish forces shared control of Hasakah, a city in Syria’s northeast. But last week, the Kurdish militia known as the People’s Protection Units, or YPG, launched an assault on government-controlled areas of the city, activists said — marking a rift between onetime allies and further blurring the lines between the warring sides in Syria’s bloody internecin­e civil war.

More than 50 people had been killed in the clashes, including fighters and civilians. It is the most violent confrontat­ion between pro-government and Kurdish forces since the start of the civil war, said Rami Abdul Rahman, head of the proopposit­ion Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights.

The Kurds have played both sides of the Syrian conflict, forging tactical alliances with the Syrian government of President Bashar Assad as well as the rebels fighting to end his rule. They have also worked with other countries involved in the civil war, and emerged as the biggest recipient of U.S. largesse, which has given them weaponry as well as logistical weapons support.

Ever since the opposition took over large swaths of the country’s resource-rich northern areas, a number of rebel factions have battled the YPG in areas around Aleppo. Many accuse the YPG of seeking to consolidat­e areas extending from Syria’s northeaste­rn tip to Afrin, roughly 300 miles to the west.

In July, the YPG assisted pro-government forces in establishi­ng control over Castello Road, a strategic highway that had linked rebel-held areas of Aleppo city to the Turkish border.

But on Tuesday, a dispute between the Asayesh, a Kurdish internal security force, and a pro-government militia escalated into a fullblown drive by the Kurds to consolidat­e their control of the city.

Then, on Thursday, Syrian warplanes launched unpreceden­ted airstrikes on Kurdish positions in the area. Hundreds fled the fighting.

The Pentagon said U.S. special operations forces were caught in the middle when they, acting as advisors in the region, were nearly hit Friday with a Syrian airstrike.

In response, the U.S. scrambled two F-22 stealth fighter jets to monitor the area around Hasakah and chase away any Syrian jets that entered the airspace. U.S. officials, who were not authorized to speak publicly on the matter, said that Syrian jets have not flown near Hasakah since Friday and that American warplanes continue to police the region, providing de facto aerial protection for Kurdish forces that U.S. officials neverthele­ss insisted was not a formal no-fly zone.

The Asayesh issued leaflets telling government troops they had to “lay down their arms … or consider [themselves] dead,” according to images uploaded to social media.

Russia brokered a brief cease-fire between the two sides Sunday — but hours later, shortly after midnight Monday, Kurdish forces relaunched their offensive. They moved to encircle government positions in what was seen as a final bid to oust Damascus’ remaining presence from the city.

Kurdish forces had now completely surrounded government troops that had been forced to retreat from the southern neighborho­ods of Nashwa and Ghweiran, said resident Fahed Fataah.

Kurdish fighters took down images of Assad and Syrian flags that adorned government buildings and replaced them with the YPG’s banner, activists said. They imposed a curfew on neighborho­ods they control.

A pro-government Facebook community, “The Men of the Syrian Army in Hasakah,” corroborat­ed Fataah’s account, but added that Russia was still mediating negotiatio­ns despite the cease-fire’s breakdown.

But a cease-fire might prove elusive. “The Asayesh will not back down no matter what concession­s the regime offers,” said Abu Araaj, a spokesman for a YPG-allied Arab coalition called the Army of the Revolution­aries. He gave a nom de guerre for reasons of security.

He added that Arab units were not involved but would intervene if required.

The escalation between the Kurds and the Syrian government came as two of Damascus’ key allies appeared to be in disagreeme­nt. Iran chastised Russia for revealing that Russian Tupolev-22M3 strategic bombers and Sukhoi-34 fighters had used the Shahid Nojeh air base near the city of Hamadan to mount bombing runs in Syria.

Iranian Defense Minister Hossein Dehghan criticized Russia for exhibiting a “showoff and ungentlema­nly [attitude] in this field,” the BBC reported.

The operation is now over and Russian units are no longer at the base, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qasemi said Monday, according to Iran’s Press TV. But Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenko­v suggested that there would be future deployment­s of Russian warplanes to Iran, “based on mutual agreements on fighting terrorism and depending on developmen­ts in Syria,” Russia Today reported.

Meanwhile, the Kurdish offensive on Hasakah, seen as a further bid to create a Kurdish autonomous entity on Syrian soil, has pushed Turkey to soften its stance toward Assad.

Turkey views the YPG as a proxy for the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, whose insurgency it has battled for decades and which it counts as a terrorist force on a par with Islamic State. It fears that a Syrian Kurdish presence on its southern border could give rise to a fresh PKK campaign for an independen­t Kurdish state — a concern it now shares with Damascus.

The clashes pushed Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim to say that the Syrian leader could remain in a transition­al role Saturday. He also said that Incirlik Air Base, used by the U.S.-led coalition to launch sorties against Islamic State, could be opened to Russia as well.

The offensive has even led to a rare point of agreement between Assad and the opposition: Both Damascus and the rebels have insisted they aim to maintain Syria’s territoria­l integrity and are vehemently against what they describe as “secessioni­st projects.”

Washington’s aerial support for the Kurds, which has in effect grounded Assad’s warplanes over Hasakah and given the YPG an advantage over government troops, is likely to further alienate Turkey.

Nonetheles­s, the U.S. defended its aerial patrols over Hasakah and said it would not tolerate any threat that’s posed to the more than 300 U.S. special forces commandos, many of whom are stationed in Syria’s northeast.

Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook told reporters Monday that the U.S. military informed the Russian military where the troops were located through an emergency communicat­ions channel set up to avoid air accidents. The Russians have passed the message to the Assad government, he said.

“We would continue to advise the Syrian regime to steer clear of those areas,” Cook said. “As our forces move through Syria and continue their partnered operations, we will do what we need to do to protect our forces.”

 ?? DELIL SOULEIMAN AFP/Getty Images ?? A MEMBER of the Asayesh, a Kurdish internal security force in northeaste­rn Syria, keeps watch.
DELIL SOULEIMAN AFP/Getty Images A MEMBER of the Asayesh, a Kurdish internal security force in northeaste­rn Syria, keeps watch.

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