Turkey yesterday urged the United States to withdraw personnel from a Kurdish-held town in northern Syria after Washington told Ankara it would stop arming a Syrian Kurdish militia that Turkey is fighting.
As Turkey’s offensive in Syria entered its second week with new air strikes and artillery, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said it was “necessary for them (US) to immediately withdraw from Manbij”, where Washington has a military presence.
Turkey launched operation “Olive Branch” on January 20 against the Syrian Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) militia in its western enclave of Afrin, supporting Syrian opposition fighters with ground troops and air strikes.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has threatened to expand the offensive against the YPG to Manbij, east of Afrin.
Relations between Nato allies Ankara and Washington have worsened since Turkey launched an operation, with the United States urging restraint and fearing an impact on the fight against the Islamic State (IS) extremist group.
One of the issues marring relations was the US supplying the YPG militia — which has spearheaded the anti-militant fight — with arms since last year in battles against IS.
Manbij itself was retaken from IS by the Kurdish-led, US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces in 2016 as part of a push that would later recapture the city of Raqqa from the militants.
The Turkish presidency said US National Security Advisor HR McMaster “confirmed” to Erdogan’s spokesman Ibrahim Kalin in a phone call late Friday that Washington would no longer “give weapons to the YPG”. Ankara says the YPG is a “terrorist” offshoot of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) which is proscribed as a terror group by Ankara and its Western allies. “God willing we will crush them (terror groups) like a steam roller,” Erdogan said yesterday during a speech in Istanbul.
Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim hit out at critics, explaining the “operation was not an option but a necessity”.
Earlier this month, the US-led coalition fighting IS said it was working to create a 30,000-strong border security force in northern Syria.
“The US must cut its ties with a terror organisation. It must take back the weapons it has given,” Cavusoglu said, adding Turkey “now wanted to see concrete steps taken”. During their call, McMaster and Kalin agreed to co-ordinate closely in order to prevent misunderstandings. The contact came just days after Washington and Ankara bitterly contested each other’s accounts of a telephone conversation between Erdogan and US President Donald Trump.
A White House statement said Trump urged Turkey to “limit its military actions”, but a Turkish official said this was not an accurate reflection of the leaders’ call. There have been expressions of concern over the offensive from other Western allies including the European Union.
German police yesterday ordered the dispersal of a protest against the offensive attended by over 15,000 in Cologne because of the presence of PKK symbols, banned in Germany.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said the fighting was concentrated in the northwest part of the Afrin region.


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