US, Turkey launch joint patrols in northeast Syria

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AKCAKALE, Turkey, Sept 8, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – The United States and Turkey on
Sunday began joint patrols in northeastern Syria aimed at easing tensions
between Ankara and US-backed Kurdish forces who battled the Islamic State
jihadist group.

Six Turkish armoured vehicles crossed the border to join US forces in Syria
for their first joint patrol under a deal reached between Washington and
Ankara, an AFP journalist reported.

Two helicopters flew over the area as the Turkish vehicles drove through
an opening in the concrete wall separating the two countries.

They then headed west along with the same number of American vehicles,
along with an ambulance and a pick-up, for the joint operation, before
crossing back into Turkey.

The Turkish defence ministry said drones were also deployed.

The agreement reached on August 7 aims to establish a “safe zone” between
the Turkish border and the Syrian areas east of the Euphrates river
controlled by the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG).

Syrian Kurdish forces began withdrawing from along the Turkish border in
late August.

The YPG forms the backbone of the Syrian Democratic Forces — a key
partner of Washington in the fight against IS jihadists in Syria.

But Ankara sees the YPG as an extension of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’
Party.

The PKK, which has waged an insurgency against the Turkish state since
1984, is blacklisted as a terrorist group by Ankara, the US and the European
Union.

Washington’s support for the SDF has been a major point of friction with
fellow NATO member Turkey.

– ‘Preventing war’ –

As the regional fight against IS winds down, the prospect of a US military
withdrawal has stoked Kurdish fears of another Turkish attack.

“We are implementing the agreement and we have no problem with it as long
as it prevents war,” said Riyad Khamis, the head of an SDF military council
in the border town of Tal Abyad.

Although they led the US-backed fight against IS, Syria’s Kurds have
largely stayed out of Syria’s eight-year civil war, instead building their
own autonomous institutions in areas they control.

But Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has threatened to launch an
operation against the YPG in Syria unless progress is made on setting up the
safe zone.

Erdogan said his US counterpart Donald Trump had promised the buffer would
be 32 kilometres (20 miles) wide.

Turkish army chief General Yasar Guler told General Joseph Dunford, the top
US military officer, in a phone call on Saturday that the safe zone must be
set up without delay, the Turkish defence ministry said.

A joint centre of operations was recently established as part of the
agreement.

Turkey carried out unilateral offensives in northern Syria against IS in
2016 and the YPG in 2018.

Ankara hopes the safe zone will smooth the way for the return of some of
the more than 3.6 million Syrian refugees living in Turkey, but experts say
the situation remains unclear.

“We may have joint patrols but we still don’t have a joint understanding of
what the safe zone is,” said Nicholas Danforth, senior visiting fellow at the
German Marshall Fund of the United States.

“America sees the safe zone as a way to preserve our relationship with the
SDF and preserve the SDF’s autonomy. Turkey sees the safe zone as a step
toward ending them both.”