Pressure mounts on Turkey over its clashes with Kurds in Syria

Published August 31st, 2016 - 06:26 GMT
A Turkish army tank in the border city of Karkamis drives towards Syria. (AFP/Bulent Kilic)
A Turkish army tank in the border city of Karkamis drives towards Syria. (AFP/Bulent Kilic)

Russia has voiced concern over the actions of Turkey’s armed forces and fighters led by Ankara in northern Syria.

Russian Foreign Minster Sergei Lavrov spoke to his Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu by telephone on Wednesday.

Moscow has urged Turkey to avoid strikes on opposition and ethnic groups, including Syrian Kurds, who are fighting Daesh.

That echoes the view of the United States, Turkey’s NATO ally.

“We don’t believe tactical operations between members of the SDF and Turkish forces, or forces supported by Turkey, to be productive in terms of the fight against Daesh,” US State Department John Kirby said on Tuesday.

Ankara however is defiant, summoning the US ambassador over his country’s stance and denying reports of a temporary truce with Syrian Kurdish forces that Ankara sees as "terrorists."

A spokesman for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan insisted that Turkey would continue striking Kurdish militia until they withdraw from the region where Turkish forces are fighting.

Turkey fears that, if Kurdish fighters control the entire area along its Syrian border, it could embolden Kurdish militants at home who have been fighting for decades for autonomy on Turkish soil.

Operation “Euphrates Shield”, in which Turkish troops and tanks entered Syria in support of rebels for the first time, began on Aug. 24 with the swift capture of Jarablus, a town a few km inside Syria that was held by Daesh.

Turkey said on Wednesday that it wanted to clear Daesh from a 90 km stretch of territory on the Syrian side of its border, a week after launching the incursion.

But it also wants to prevent Kurdish militias from seizing territory in their wake.

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