U.S. troops cross into Iraq as part of withdrawal from Syria
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[October 21, 2019]
By Kawa Omar
DOHUK, Iraq (Reuters) - U.S. troops crossed
into Iraq early on Monday, part of a withdrawal from northeast Syria
ordered by President Donald Trump that opened the way for Turkish troops
to launch an offensive against Kurdish fighters in the area.
A Reuters cameraman saw more than 100 vehicles crossing from the
northeast tip of Syria, where Turkey has agreed to pause its offensive
for five days under a deal agreed between Washington and Ankara. The
truce expires late on Tuesday.
Reuters video images showed armored vehicles carrying U.S. troops
through the Sahela border crossing into Iraq's northern province of
Dohuk.
U.S. Defence Secretary Mark Esper said on Saturday that all of the
nearly 1,000 troops withdrawing from northern Syria are expected to move
to western Iraq to continue the campaign against Islamic State militants
and "to help defend Iraq".
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has warned that Ankara will resume its
military assault in Syria when the deadline expires if the Kurdish-led
Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have not pulled back from its proposed
"safe zone" area spanning the border.
Erdogan has also said Turkey will set up a dozen observation posts in
the planned "safe zone". A witness in the region said Turkish forces had
already begun establishing two such posts on Sunday, drawing criticism
from Iran on Monday.
"We are against Ankara's establishing of military posts in Syria,"
Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi told a weekly news
conference broadcast live on state TV.
"The issues should be resolved by diplomatic means ... Syria's integrity
should be respected," said Mousavi, whose country is a staunch ally of
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
OFFENSIVE
Turkey launched its offensive after Trump announced he was withdrawing
U.S. troops from northeastern Syria. Trump's move was criticized in
Washington and elsewhere as a betrayal of Kurdish allies who had fought
for years alongside U.S. troops against Islamic State.
However, Trump is now leaning in favor of a new military plan to keep
about 200 U.S. troops in eastern Syria near the Iraq border, the New
York Times said late on Sunday. The White House did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
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A convoy of U.S. vehicles is seen after withdrawing from northern
Syria, at the Iraqi-Syrian border crossing in the outskirts of Dohuk,,
Iraq, October 21, 2019. REUTERS/Ari Jalal
Ankara is seeking to set up the "safe zone" as a buffer as it
regards the YPG militia, the main component of the SDF, a terrorist
group because of its links to Kurdish insurgents in southeast
Turkey. The YPG has been a close U.S. ally in the fight against
Islamic State.
On Sunday, the SDF said they had withdrawn from the border town of
Ras al Ain under the U.S.-brokered ceasefire deal, but a spokesman
for Turkish-backed Syrian rebels said the withdrawal was not yet
complete.
U.S. troops have crossed into the semi-autonomous Kurdistan Region
of Iraq, an Iraqi Kurdish security source told Reuters on Monday.
About 30 trailers and Hummers carrying heavier duty equipment
crossed, with troops in cars coming through, the source added. A
second security source in Mosul also said U.S. troops had crossed
into Iraq from Sahela.
The U.S. pullout has also created a vacuum that Russia, Assad's most
powerful backer, has looked to fill. Syrian and Russian forces,
invited by Kurdish authorities, last week entered the two border
cities of Manbij and Kobani vacated by U.S. troops.
Erdogan has backed rebels fighting to oust Assad in the eight-year
Syrian conflict, but has said Turkey had no problem with Syrian
government forces deploying near the border if the YPG militia were
removed.
At a planned meeting on Tuesday in the Russian city of Sochi,
Erdogan and Russian President Vladimir Putin will discuss the issue
of YPG withdrawal from Manbij and Kobani, Turkish Foreign Minister
Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Sunday.
While Erdogan and Putin have close ties on defence and energy,
Moscow has called the Turkish offensive into Syria "unacceptable"
and said it should be limited.
(Additional reporting by Parisa Hafezi in Dubai and Can Sezer in
Istanbul; Writing by Jonathan Spicer; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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