NATO hammers Turkey on Syria operation

A Turkish army armoured vehicle advances in the Syrian city of Tel Abyad, as seen from the Turkish border town of Akcakale on October 13, 2019 [File: Burak Kara/Getty Images]

A Turkish army armoured vehicle advances in the Syrian city of Tel Abyad,

BRUSSELS, Oct 25 (NNN-AGENCIES) — NATO defence ministers slammed Turkey for its military operation in Syria conducted with Russia’s help, but recognised there was little they could do to sanction their strategically important ally.

The first day of a two-day meeting of the ministers in Brussels was dominated by the issue, with Turkey isolated among the 29 member states because of its incursion against Kurdish fighters it considers “terrorists” but who are key in the fight against the Daesh group in Syria.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg described discussions as “frank and open” – euphemisms for sharp discord – and noted “we have seen disagreements before” but the transatlantic alliance has endured.

He stressed that the ministers agreed on the need to “maintain our unity in the fight against Daesh,” referring to the group being fought in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere by a broad international coalition including many NATO members.

Germany presented an idea it floated this week of international troops being deployed to create a security zone in northeast Syria – a notion that has been met tepidly by allies because of the situation on the ground and the need for a UN mandate.

The top commander of Syria’s Kurdish force, Mazloum Abdi, welcomed the proposal, telling journalists in northern Syria that “we demand and agree to this”.

But the NATO ministers did not directly embrace the German plan. Stoltenberg said they instead stressed their “broad support … for ways to engage the international community to find a political situation” in northern Syria.

Before the meeting, German Defence Minister Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer said she and her French and British counterparts believed a Turkish-Russian agreement to jointly patrol a “safe zone” inside northern Syria “does not provide a permanent basis for a political solution”.

Belgium’s defence minister, Didier Reynders, said of Germany’s troops idea: “In principle we are in favour of such an agreement to work together – but then again, the situation is totally different now” following the Turkey-Russia agreement.

US Defense Secretary Mark Esper, speaking at a think tank conference in Brussels before the NATO meeting, was blunt about Turkey, saying it was “heading in the wrong direction”.

“Turkey put us all in a very terrible situation and I think the incursion’s unwarranted,” Esper said. — NNN-AGENCIES

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