San Francisco Chronicle

Money, hatred drives Turkey’s Syrian fighters

- By Sarah El Deeb and Joseph Krauss Sarah El Deeb and Joseph Krauss are Associated Press writers.

BEIRUT — The Syrian fighters vowed to kill “pigs” and “infidels,” paraded their Kurdish captives in front of cameras and, in one graphic video, fired several rounds into a man lying on the side of a highway with his hands bound behind his back.

They are part of the selfstyled Syrian National Army, the shock troops in Turkey’s offensive against U.S.allied Kurdish forces.

The Syrian fighters, trained and funded by Turkey, present themselves as heirs to the uprising against Syrian President Bashar Assad. But while they include some Islamic extremists and past members of some Syrian rebel factions, many are Arab and Turkmen fighters from northern and eastern Syria who have an ax to grind against the Kurds and a reputation for violence and looting.

“The main problem with these forces is their criminalit­y,” said Elizabeth Tsurkov, a fellow at the U.S.based Foreign Policy Research Institute who has interviewe­d dozens of the fighters and said they appear to be driven by a desire for power and money rather than by any specific ideology.

“Hatred of Kurds, a sense of Arab chauvinism, complete intoleranc­e for any dissent, and just a desire to make a profit is what’s driving most of the abuses,” she said.

Since Turkey began funding the force in 2016, its fighters have yet to battle Assad’s troops.

Instead, they have mostly fought in Turkey’s crossborde­r offensives against the Islamic State and the Syrian Democratic Forces, a Kurdishled militia that had partnered with the U.S. and battled Islamic State extremists with far greater success.

Backed by Turkish air strikes and artillery, the fighters have provided the bulk of the ground forces and taken the most casualties. At least 16 Syrian fighters have been killed compared to four Turkish soldiers since the operation began last week.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Turkishbac­ked Free Syrian Army soldiers stand in formation near the northern Syrian town of Azaz.
Associated Press Turkishbac­ked Free Syrian Army soldiers stand in formation near the northern Syrian town of Azaz.

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