Turkey
and Saudi Arabia consider ground campaign in Syria following border
strikes
Suggestion
that Ankara could take part in ground assault comes as Turkish
strikes hit Kurdish positions and responded to regime fire
Agence-France Presse
Sunday 14 February
2016 05.27 GMT
The Turkish military
has hit Kurdish and Syrian regime targets as Ankara considered a
ground assault with Saudi troops, further complicating efforts to end
the war just days after the US and Russia agreed on a “cessation of
hostilities” in Syria within a week.
State-run news
agency Anatolia said the armed forces shelled Syrian Kurdish
Democratic Union Party (PYD) targets around the town of Azaz, and
also responded to regime fire on a Turkish military guard post in
Turkey’s southern Hatay region.
There were no
further details on the nature of the Turkish strikes, which triggered
alarm in Washington, but they probably involved artillery fire from
tanks.
The Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said Minnigh airbase, recently taken by
the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) militia from Islamist
rebels, was hit in the Turkish shelling.
Ankara considers the
PYD and its YPG militia to be branches of the Kurdistan Workers Party
(PKK) which has waged a decades-long insurgency against the Turkish
state.
Saturday’s
shelling came shortly after the Turkish prime minister, Ahmet
Davutoglu, said Ankara would, if necessary, take military action
against the PYD.
“We can if
necessary take the same measures in Syria as we took in Iraq and
Qandil,” he said in a televised speech, referring to Turkey’s
bombing campaign last year against PKK targets in their Qandil
mountain stronghold in northern Iraq.
Also in the Aleppo
region, which has taken centre stage in the conflict, US-backed
Syrian Democratic Forces, an alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters,
launched a two-pronged attack on Tal Rifaat, one of the remaining
rebel bastions north of Aleppo city, the Observatory said.
It said Tal Rifaat
also came under attack in at least 20 Russian air strikes on
Saturday.
The US State
Department said it was concerned about the situation north of Aleppo,
was working to “de-escalate tensions on all sides” and urged
Turkey to halt its strikes.
“We have urged
Syrian Kurdish and other forces affiliated with the YPG not to take
advantage of a confused situation by seizing new territory,” US
State Department spokesman John Kirby said in a statement.
“We have also seen
reports of artillery fire from the Turkish side of the border and
urged Turkey to cease such fires.”
With the conflict
directly drawing in more international players, Turkey’s foreign
minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, quoted in Turkish newspapers, said Riyadh
and Ankara were coordinating plans to intervene in Syria, where
Russia has been backing a successful regime offensive against rebels.
“If there is a
strategy (against the Islamic State jihadist group), then Turkey and
Saudi Arabia could enter into a ground operation,” he said.
Cavusoglu said Saudi
Arabia is also sending planes to the Turkish base of Incirlik, a key
hub for US-led coalition operations against IS already used by
Britain, France and the United States for cross-border air raids.
Turkish media later
quoted military sources as saying between eight and 10 Saudi jets
would be deployed in Incirlik within the coming weeks, with four F-16
fighters to arrive in a first wave.
Asked if Saudi
Arabia could send troops to the Turkish border to enter Syria,
Cavusoglu said: “This is something that could be desired but there
is no plan. Saudi Arabia is sending planes and they said ’If the
necessary time comes for a ground operation then we could send
soldiers’.”
Saudi foreign
minister Adel al-Jubeir, meanwhile, said in a German newspaper
interview: “There is discussion on whether ground troops are needed
against IS.
“If a decision is
taken to send in special units against Isis, Saudi Arabia is ready to
take part.”
In an interview with
AFP released on Friday, Syrian president Bashar al-Assad said he
“doesn’t rule out” that Turkey and Saudi Arabia would intervene
militarily in Syria, but said his armed forces “will certainly
confront it”.
Saudi Arabia and
Turkey both staunchly support rebels seeking to oust Assad, and see
his overthrow as essential for ending Syria’s five-year civil war
that has cost more than 260,000 lives.
They fear the west
is losing its appetite to overthrow him on the assumption he is “the
lesser of two evils” compared with Isis.
Both are outraged by
Russia’s military intervention in Syria, which analysts believe has
given Assad a new lease of life and has also deeply alarmed the West.
Russian prime
minister Dmitry Medvedev said on Saturday strains with the west over
the Syrian and Ukraine conflicts had plunged the world into a “new
Cold War”.
US secretary of
state John Kerry complained that the vast majority of Russia’s
attacks in Syria were against “legitimate opposition groups”
rather than Isis jihadists.
An ambush by rebels
on pro-regime forces near Damascus this week killed 76 fighters, the
Syrian Observatory said on Saturday.
World powers on
Friday announced an ambitious plan to stop fighting in Syria within a
week.
But doubts have
emerged over its viability, especially because it did not include
Isis or al-Qaeda’s local branch, which is fighting alongside other
rebel groups in several areas.
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