Turkey,
U.S. play down differences on fight against Islamic State
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[November 22, 2014]
By Dasha Afanasieva and Humeyra Pamuk
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkey and the United
States played down differences in the fight against Islamic State on
Friday, but Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu made clear Ankara would keep
pressing for a no-fly zone in Syria and President Bashar al-Assad's
removal.
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Turkey has been a reluctant partner in the U.S.-led coalition
against the Islamic State (IS) insurgents. Ankara argues that the
coalition's air strikes in Iraq and Syria are not enough and it has
pushed for a more comprehensive strategy involving Assad's departure
and the creation of a buffer zone inside Syria to protect displaced
civilians.
Ankara has in turn drawn criticism for letting thousands of foreign
rebels cross its borders and for doing little to end the IS siege of
the Syrian border town of Kobani, a battle that has raged for months
within sight of Turkish military positions.
"We've been friends for a long time and one of the great advantages
of being back in Turkey with a friend and NATO ally is we're always
direct with one another," U.S. Vice President Joe Biden told a joint
news conference with Davutoglu.
"We have tackled a number of very contentious issues regionally and
internationally and we've always eventually come out on the same
side," he said.
Speaking just before Biden's arrival in Istanbul, Davutoglu, who has
spent the last two days in Iraq, said there could be no sustainable
peace in Syria while Assad remained in power.
"Look at how things are getting better in Iraq after a government
chosen by the people is in place," he told reporters at Istanbul
airport.
"But in Syria, you can’t bring peace trying to destroy a terrorist
organization on one side of the country, while a regime in Damascus
is using all sorts of weapons to exterminate a portion of its own
people on the other."
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Biden will discuss Turkey's role in the coalition with Davutoglu and
President Tayyip Erdogan. Their talks are also expected to focus on
Turkish efforts to stop the flow of foreign jihadists joining
Islamic State via Turkey, and Ankara's assistance to the more than
1.6 million refugees on its soil.
Davutoglu said that while Turkey and Washington may differ in their
methods, they had common aims, with the United States also wanting
to see Assad gone.
(Writing by Nick Tattersall, editing by Jonny Hogg and Mark
Heinrich)
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