Turkey says campaign against U.S.-backed
Kurdish force in Syria will be swift
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[January 22, 2018]
By Mert Ozkan
HASSA, Turkey (Reuters) - Turkey shelled
targets in northern Syria on Monday and said it would swiftly crush the
U.S.-backed Kurdish YPG fighters who control the Afrin region, amid
growing international concern over its three-day-old military operation.
Turkish forces and their Syrian rebel allies began their push to clear
YPG fighters from the northwestern enclave on Saturday, opening a new
front in Syria's civil war despite calls for restraint from United
States.
France has called for an emergency meeting of the United Nations
Security Council on Monday to discuss the fighting in Afrin and other
parts of Syria.
The YPG's Afrin spokesman, Birusk Hasaka, said there were clashes
between Kurdish and Turkey-backed forces on the third day of the
operation. He said Turkish shelling had hit civilian areas in Afrin's
northeast.
Ankara considers the YPG a terrorist organization tied to Kurdish
militant separatists in Turkey and has been infuriated by U.S. support
for the fighters. Washington, which has backed the YPG in the battle
against Islamic State in Syria, said on Sunday it was concerned about
the situation.
Turkish anger at U.S. support for the YPG is one of a number of issues
that have brought relations between the United States and its biggest
Muslim ally within NATO to the breaking point in recent months.
President Tayyip Erdogan has pledged to crush the YPG in Afrin, and also
says he will target the Kurdish-held town of Manbij to the east, part of
a much larger swath of northern Syria controlled by YPG-dominated
forces.
That raises the prospect of protracted conflict between Turkey and its
allied Free Syrian Army factions against the Kurdish YPG, who
spearheaded the U.S.-backed campaign to drive Islamic State out of its
Syrian strongholds last year.
Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Mehmet Simsek played down the potential
for a damaging and drawn-out military campaign.
"Our investors should be at ease, the impact will be limited, the
operation will be brief and it will reduce the terror risk to Turkey in
the period ahead," Simsek, who oversees economic affairs, said at a
ceremony in Ankara.
A senior Turkish official declined to give a timeframe for the operation
but said it would "move fast", adding that Turkey believed there was
some local support in both Afrin and Manbij for its action. "Some tribes
are even offering to take part in the Manbij operation," the official
said.
Turkey's "Euphrates Shield" operation to drive back Islamic State and
YPG fighters, which it launched in August 2016, lasted seven months. So
far there has been no indication of major gains on the ground by
Turkey-backed forces in Afrin.
YPG official Nouri Mahmoud said Turkish forces had not taken any
territory. "Our forces have to this point repelled them and forced them
to retreat," he told Reuters.
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Turkish soldiers stand on tanks in a village on the Turkish-Syrian
border in Gaziantep province, Turkey January 22, 2018. REUTERS/Osman
Orsal
He said there were intense air strikes across Afrin. Turkish officials
did not confirm any air strikes on Monday.
TURKISH SHELLING
A Reuters cameraman near Hassa, across the border from Afrin, saw
Turkish shelling on Monday morning. Dogan news agency said Turkish
howitzers opened fire at 1 a.m. (2200 GMT) against YPG targets.
It said militia targets were also being destroyed by Turkish
warplanes and multiple rocket launchers.
On Sunday a Turkish official said Turkey-backed Free Syrian Army
rebel factions had captured a Kurdish village with no resistance and
were clearing landmines. The YPG said it had repelled the Turkish
forces.
Turkey sees the YPG presence on its southern border as a domestic
security threat. Defeating the militia in Afrin would reduce
Kurdish-controlled territory on its frontier and link up two regions
controlled by insurgents opposed to President Bashar al-Assad -
Idlib province and the Euphrates Shield area.
The Turkey-backed Free Syrian Army factions, which have come
together under the banner of a newly branded "National Army", also
want to see an end to YPG rule in Afrin.
They say local authorities in Afrin have often arrested men trying
to pass through the region, and accuse the YPG of displacing 150,000
Arab residents of towns including Tel Rifaat and Menigh to the east
of Afrin, captured in 2016.
"This is a historic moment in our revolution," Mohammad al-Hamadeen,
a senior officer in the FSA forces told fighters in the town of Azaz
on Sunday, as they prepared to join the ground offensive in Afrin.
"God willing very soon we will return to our region that we were
driven from two years ago".
Throughout most of the multi-sided seven-year-old civil war in
Syria, Turkey and the United States jointly backed Arab fighters
seeking to overthrow president Bashar al-Assad. Since 2014,
Washington angered Turkey by growing closer to the Kurdish militia,
which it supported with air strikes, arms, training and special
forces advisers on the ground to oppose Islamic State.
(Additional reporting by Daren Butler in Istanbul, Orhan Coskun in
Ankara and Lisa Barrington in Beirut; Writing by Dominic Evans;
Editing by David Dolan, Gareth Jones and Peter Graff)
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