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Pence, Pompeo to visit Ankara as Russian forces move into northeast Syria, with US departure

Pence Pompeo to visit Ankara as Russian forces move into northeast Syria with US departure
Pence, Pompeo to visit Ankara as Russian forces move into northeast Syria, with US departure

2019-10-16 00:00:00 - Source: kurdistan 24

The US-sponsored negotiations would entail discussions, at least indirectly, between Ankara and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). Amb. James Jeffrey, US Special Representative for Syria Engagement, who is accompanying Pence and Pompeo, has quietly been conducting indirect negotiations between Ankara and the SDF for a while.

On Monday, US President Donald Trump spoke – for the first time – with the SDF commander, Gen. Mazloum Kobani, in the process, according him enhanced legitimacy in US policymaking.

Read More: Trump speaks with Gen. Mazloum; calls for Syrian ceasefire; imposes sanctions on Turkey

However, Erdogan, speaking with reporters late on Tuesday, as he returned from a summit in Azerbaijan, essentially said he had rebuffed Trump’s requests, when the two leaders spoke on Monday, following Trump’s discussion with Mazloum.

Of course, that is not how US officials portrayed the discussion between Trump and Erdogan. Yet Erdogan claimed on Tuesday that he had told Trump he would not accept a ceasefire before Turkey had achieved its goals. Erdogan reaffirmed them as control over a corridor that is 32 kilometers wide on the Syrian side of the border, reaching from the Euphrates River to Iraq. He also rejected the idea of negotiations with the SDF.

Meanwhile, as the US withdraws from Syria, Russia is stepping into the vacuum, politically, as well as militarily. Late on Tuesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Erdogan spoke. Following their discussion, the Kremlin issued a statement, saying Putin had invited Erdogan to Russia for “a working visit in the coming days” and “the invitation has been accepted.”

So, it appears that Erdogan will meet with Pence and Pompeo, and then travel to Russia to meet with Putin.

Putin is currently on a rare visit to the United Arab Emirates, his first since 2007. Russia’s Special Envoy on Syria, Alexander Lavrentiev, is accompanying him, and Lavrentiev said in Abu Dhabi, “We didn’t agree with the Turks on any questions about their presence in Syria, and we don’t approve of their actions.”

He explained that under a 1998 agreement between Ankara and Damascus, known as the Adana pact, Turkish forces can move up to 10 kilometers into Syria to conduct counter-terrorism operations on a temporary basis.

“But it doesn’t give them the right to remain on Syrian territory permanently, and we are opposed to Turkish troops staying on Syrian territory permanently,” Lavrentiev said, as Reuters reported.

On the ground in Syria, both regime forces and their Russian supporters have moved into areas that US troops have evacuated.

In a deal Moscow brokered, the SDF invited Syrian forces into the strategically located city of Manbij to protect it against a Turkish assault.

As Turkish forces raced toward Manbij, a small Syrian unit arrived there first, securing the city for the Syrian regime. Moscow then announced that Russian military police had begun patrolling between the Syrian and Turkish forces to prevent armed clashes.

“No one is interested” in fighting between the two, Lavrentiev stated, as he affirmed that Russia “is not going to allow it.”

Thus, Turkey failed to secure Manbij, while the newly arrived Russian and Syrian forces have moved into the US base there, hastily abandoned only a short time before.

“Just like that, one superpower ceded influence to another, with little fanfare, as if territory was a thing to be handed off, like a suddenly vacant chair,” The Washington Post reported.

Further east, close on the Turkish border, lies the Kurdish city of Kobani. At the request of Gen. Mazloum, Trump had pressed Erdogan not to attack the city, and Erdogan had agreed.

However, on Tuesday, US forces in Kobani came under attack from Turkish forces or their proxy militia. That prompted Sen. Lindsey Graham (R, South Carolina) to tweet a warning, “If Turkey continues to move and take Kurdish areas around Kobani, I will take this as a breach of President Erdogan’s promise and a major escalation.”





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