Turkey Plans to Invade Syria, But to Stop the Kurds, Not ISIS
The Turkish military is not enthusiastic and Washington may have its doubts, but
President Erdogan appears determined to set up a buffer zone.
By Thomas Seibert
June 29, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Daily
Beast" -
ISTANBUL—Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is
planning a military intervention into northern Syria to prevent Syrian Kurds
from forming their own state there, despite concerns among his own generals and
possible criticism from Washington and other NATO allies, according to reports
in both pro- and anti-government media.In a speech last
Friday, Erdogan vowed that Turkey would not accept a move by Syrian Kurds to set
up their own state in Syria following
gains by Kurdish fighters against the so-called Islamic State, or ISIS, in
recent weeks. “I am saying this to the whole world: We will never allow the
establishment of a state on our southern border in the north of Syria,” Erdogan
said. “We will continue our fight in that respect whatever the cost may be.” He
accused Syrian Kurds of ethnic cleansing in Syrian areas under their control.
Following the speech, several news outlets reported that the
president and Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu had decided to send the Turkish
army into Syria, a hugely significant move by NATO’s second biggest fighting
force after the U.S. military. Both the daily Yeni Safak, a mouthpiece
of the government, and the newspaper Sozcu, which is among Erdogan’s
fiercest critics, ran stories saying the Turkish Army had received orders to
send soldiers over the border. Several other media had similar stories, all
quoting unnamed sources in Ankara. There has been no official confirmation or
denial by the government.
The government refused to comment on the reports. Foreign
Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said “the necessary statement” would be issued after a
regular meeting of the National Security Council, which comprises the president,
the government and military leaders, this Tuesday.
The reports said up to 18,000 soldiers would be deployed to
take over and hold a strip of territory up to 30 kilometers deep and 100
kilometers long that currently is held by ISIS. It stretches from close to the
Kurdish-controlled city of Kobani in the east to an area further west held by
the pro-Western Free Syrian Army (FSA) and other rebel groups, beginning around
the town of Mare. This “Mare Line,” as the press calls it, is to be secured with
ground troops, artillery and air cover, the reports said. Yeni Safak reported
preparations were due to be finalized by next Friday.
There has been speculation about a Turkish military
intervention ever since the Syrian conflict began in 2011. Ankara has asked the
United Nations and its Western allies to give the green light to create a buffer
zone and a no-fly area inside Syria in order to prevent chaos along the Turkish
border and to help refugees on Syrian soil before they cross over into Turkey.
But the Turkish request has fallen on deaf ears.
The latest reports fit Erdogan’s statement on Friday and the
government position regarding
recent gains by Syrian Kurds against the Islamic State. The Syrian Kurdish
party PYD and its armed wing YPG, affiliates of the Turkish-Kurdish rebel group
PKK, have secured a long band of territory in northern Syria from the
Syrian-Iraqi border in the east to Kobani.
Ankara is concerned that the Kurds will now turn their
attention to the area west of Kobani and towards Mare to link up with the
Kurdish area of Afrin, thereby connecting all Kurdish areas in Syria along the
border with Turkey. Erdogan expects that the Syrian Kurds, whose advance against
ISIS has been helped by airstrikes from the U.S.-led coalition, will go on to
form their own state as Syria disintegrates after more than four years of war.
PYD leader Saleh Muslim denied that Syria’s Kurds intend to do
this.
But Turkey’s leaders are not convinced that is true. The
daily Hurriyet reported Erdogan and Davutoglu wanted to “kill two birds
with one stone” with a military intervention along the Mare Line. One aim would
be to drive ISIS away from the Turkish border, depriving the jihadists of their
last foothold on the frontier and thereby cutting off supply lines. Such a move
would tie in with the U.S. strategy to contain and weaken ISIS.
A second goal of the operation would be closer to Ankara’s own
interests. The English-language Hurriyet
Daily News quoted one source saying there was a need to “prevent the
PYD from taking full control over the Turkish-Syrian border,” and also to create
a zone on Syrian territory rather than in Turkey to take in new waves of
refugees.
But the military is reluctant, the reports said. Generals told
the government that Turkish troops could come up against ISIS, Kurds and Syrian
government troops and get drawn into the Syrian quagmire. Retaliation attacks by
ISIS and Kurdish militants on Turkish territory are another concern.
Finally, the soldiers pointed to the international dimension.
The military leadership told the government that the international community
might get the impression that Turkey’s intervention was directed against Syria’s
Kurds, the newspaper Haberturk reported.
Turkey’s NATO partners, some of whom have deployed troops
operating Patriot missile defense units near the Syrian border to shield member
country Turkey against possible attacks from Syria, are unlikely to be happy
with a Turkish intervention.
Turkey’s pro-government press insisted there were no tensions
between civilian and military leaders in Ankara. “If the government says ‘go,’
we will go in,” the pro-Erdogan daily Aksam wrote, attempting to sum up
the military’s stance in a headline.
On Sunday, fighting broke out between ISIS troops and FSA
units near the town of Azaz, close to the Turkish border crossing of Oncupinar.
News reports said ISIS was trying to bring the Syrian side of the border
crossing under its control. The area of the latest clashes lies within the “Mare
Line” cited as the possible location of a Turkish incursion.
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