Turkey, Russia reach accord on north Syria—and Trump applauds

Last Update: 2019-10-23 00:00:00 - Source: kurdistan 24

Tuesday’s 10-point accord allows Turkey to keep the land it seized in the assault into Syria, which it calls “Operation Peace Spring.”

The agreement also calls for moving the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), the SDF’s military leadership, 30 kilometers south of the Turkish border in two other areas: the territory to the east and the territory to the west of the land taken by Turkey in “Operation Peace Spring.”

In sum, the YPG is to withdraw along the entirety of the area it holds south to the M-4 highway, the major road in northern Syria, which runs from Syria’s border with Iraq to the west.

That task is to be accomplished within 150 hours, after which there are to be joint Russian-Turkish patrols in a border strip to a depth of 10 kilometers.

Left unstated is the answer to the question: Who will control the strip of Syrian territory between the 10 kilometer line, where there will be joint Russian-Turkish patrols, and the 30 kilometer line, behind which the YPG is withdrawing?

The implication seems to be that Syrian forces will move into that space. Indeed, that is the view of Bassam Barabandi, a former Syrian diplomat, now living in Washington DC.

“100 percent, Syria will move in,” Barabandi told Kurdistan 24.

The agreement is certainly a serious setback for the YPG, but it is not a complete disaster. Most likely, Russia saw an advantage in providing something for the Kurdish group.

The YPG most feared that the Turkish army, along with its militia force, consisting of Syrian Arabs, many of them Islamic extremists, scarcely distinguishable from the Islamic State, would take over Kurdish areas.

But Turkey will acquire no additional territory, beyond what it now controls, as a result of its military assault.

In the 10 kilometer strip along the Turkish-Syrian border, Russian military police will patrol alongside Turkish forces, while the Syrian regime will move into the area south of that.

The agreement also leaves the YPG in control of the territory south of the M-4 highway, at least for now. Of course, there are questions as to how long that will last, and the YPG may find itself obliged to allow Syrian forces into that territory too.

Nicholas Heras, a Fellow at the Center for a New American Security, doubts very much that the US will be able to keep forces in Syria, no matter what Trump ultimately decides.

“Russia’s deal with Turkey is a major threat” to a continued US military presence, Heras told Kurdistan 24. “The Russians are trying to box the US military out of northeast Syrian air space, by placing Russian military units on the border in joint patrols with Turkey.”

“Russia is making a statement,” Heras continued, that if the US plans to stay in Syria, Moscow “will do its utmost to make it impossible for the US to hold a forward operating presence in Deir al-Zor or anywhere else in eastern Syria.”

Editing by Karzan Sulaivany