Turkey
gives the cold shoulder to US proposal to seal Syria border
3
December, 2015
Prime
Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu has underlined the difficulties and
potential complications of a move by Turkey to close the border with
Syria, as a report revealed Ankara’s anger over U.S. leadership’s
insistence on using Turkish ground forces on the border to accomplish
this goal.
“Keeping
the entire border with Syria [closed] may come on the agenda as a
project but then what will you do about transiting refugees? We have
a moral responsibility along this 911-kilometer-long border and it is
accepting refugees. We have a strategic responsibility and it is
ensuring security of the border. Not having terrorists transition and
any negative developments on the Turkey-Syria border are in Turkey’s
interest. We have paid the highest price for Daesh’s terrorist
activities,” Davutoğlu said on Dec. 3 in response to a question on
border security, using the Arabic acronym Daesh to refer to the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
“There
is nothing more difficult than protecting a border on the other side
of which there is no political authority. There is no functioning
state system or counterpart administration on the other side. At the
moment, around 98 kilometers of our border seem under Daesh control.
In the past months we had given orders to build physical barriers on
the entire border and these physical barriers are being built.
Control is maintained through signal systems but beyond that we are
conducting all kinds of works to eradicate Daesh from these 98
kilometers,” Davutoğlu said at a press conference ahead of his
departure for an official visit to Baku.
“The
characteristic of Russia’s operations [in Syria], which are not
against Daesh, is one of the factors which obstructs the eradication
of Daesh from our borders,” he added.
In
its Nov. 27 edition, The Wall Street Journal focused on the pressure
U.S. President Barack Obama’s administration has put on Turkey to
deploy thousands of additional troops along its border with Syria to
cordon off a 98-kilometer frontier, by citing U.S. officials as
saying it was used by ISIL to move foreign fighters in and out of the
war zone.
“The
U.S. hasn’t officially requested a specific number of soldiers.
Pentagon officials estimated that it could take as many as 30,000 to
seal the border on the Turkish side for a broader humanitarian
mission. Cordoning off just one section alone could take 10,000 or
more, one official estimated,” The Wall Street Journal reported.
According
to a Dec. 3 exclusive report by Deniz Zeyrek from daily Hürriyet,
discussions over Turkey’s intense deployment of ground forces on
the border came on the agenda during a meeting between Turkish and
U.S. officials which took place in Ankara.
Yet,
according to the Hürriyet report, it was Turkish officials who
“pronounced the specific number of 30,000 troops.”
When
making an assessment of the U.S. proposal for Turkish troops to
protect the border, Turkish officials said, “To keep the border
[secure] through the method you mentioned, we need to pile up 30,000
troops along 98 kilometers and put a watchtower/soldier every three
meters,” Hürriyet reported.
Ankara
refused the U.S. proposal for two reasons; first, it is not
applicable and second, the “opposing side” might adopt a hostile
attitude by using the troop build-up as a justification, the daily
said.
Turkey
has begun building walls on the border and increased the number of
border patrols and watchtowers, Turkish officials speaking with
Hürriyet said, adding these methods have however been insufficient
thus far.
To
reach 100 percent success, an integrated border system has to be
implemented, the same officials told the daily, while noting Turkey
would have difficulty meeting the huge expense of such a system.
The
border between Turkey and Syria is at the same time the border
between NATO and Syria, the officials said, calling on both the
European Union and the United States by saying, “Let’s share the
cost and we would then rapidly implement it.”
As
recently as Dec. 1, Obama said he had spoken to his Turkish
counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, in Paris on the sidelines of a
climate change conference about the need to close the border between
Turkey and Syria, while U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has said
Erdoğan is “completely committed and ready to proceed” to help
guarantee that the remaining portion of the border is closed.
“With
respect to Turkey, I have had repeated conversations with President
Erdoğan about the need to close the border between Turkey and
Syria,” Obama said during a speech delivered at the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development’s (OECD) headquarters in
Paris on Dec. 1.
“We’ve
seen some serious progress on that front, but there are still some
gaps. In particular, there’s about 98 kilometers that are still
used as a transit point for foreign fighters and for ISIL to ship out
fuel for sale that helps finance their terrorist activities,” he
added.
Stating
the Turkish and U.S. militaries were working together to determine
how a combination of air and Turkish ground forces on the Turkish
side of the border could do a better job of sealing the border, Obama
said that he believed Erdoğan “recognizes that.”
Meanwhile,
Kerry said Dec. 2 in Brussels that the Turkish side was ready to
cooperate in totally sealing its border with Syria.
“President
Erdoğan is completely committed and ready to proceed with Turkish
forces, and in cooperation with others, to help guarantee that the
remaining portion of the border is sealed,” Kerry said after a
meeting of foreign ministers from the 28 NATO states in Brussels,
according to Reuters.
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