Pro-war Guardian condemns Russia (again); defends Turkey and criticises Kurds
Seemorerocks
I woke up this morning to listen to news from RT on Ankara's ultimatum not to allow the capture by the Kurds and the Syrian Arab Army of the town of Azaz, 20 kilometres from the Turkish norder
Standing alongside Ukrainian PM, Arseny Yatssenyuk, the Turkish PM accused Russia of hitting a hospital in Azaz with a strategic missile.
The RT piece above did a good job of putttng this ridiculous allegation to bed.
However this line was repeated verbatim, without any sense of irony by western media, including by this piece from Agence France Press.
And this was repeated by the Guardian:
Airstrikes
on hospitals in two locations in north of country are latest in
series of attacks on medical facilities
Parts of the media, like this from Radio New Zealand (quoting the BBC) reports Washington's seeming displeasure with Ankara.
Parts of the media, like this from Radio New Zealand (quoting the BBC) reports Washington's seeming displeasure with Ankara.
France's
foreign ministry has urged Turkey to end its assault on Kurdish
fighters in northern Syria.
In
a statement (in French) it said it was "worried about the
continued worsening of the situation".
On
Saturday, Turkey began shelling the militia, which it said was linked
to the banned Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).
The
fighters, the YPG militia based in Syria, have rejected Turkey's
demand to leave areas it has seized, saying Islamists would return if
it left.
The liberal attackdog,Guardian, seems to be adopting an even more extreme point of view than other outlets.
According to the Guardian, now that the Kurds, previously seen as the victims of terrorists and as allies, are lining up with the Syrian government and the Russians - they are now turning into an enemy force who are upsetting the Turks who seemingly, according to the Guardian, can do no wrong.
The liberal attackdog,Guardian, seems to be adopting an even more extreme point of view than other outlets.
According to the Guardian, now that the Kurds, previously seen as the victims of terrorists and as allies, are lining up with the Syrian government and the Russians - they are now turning into an enemy force who are upsetting the Turks who seemingly, according to the Guardian, can do no wrong.
Turkey
is enraged as one of the war’s least visible players takes on an
ever more important role in the conflict
Amid
the chaos in northern Syria in recent months, several themes have
emerged.
The
first is that Islamic State has been spared from intensified Russian
airstrikes and advances by pro-regime forces. The second, and
potentially more important development, is that one of the war’s
least visible players – the Kurds – have done more than anyone
else to carve out a new reality.
As
Lebanese Hezbollah, militias from Iraq, and Syrian troops – all led
by Iran – have inched their way around the top of Aleppo, the
Kurdish YPG, supported by Russian air cover, has been making strident
moves towards areas they have avoided throughout the conflict.
Over
the weekend, the YPG moved towards two Syrian towns between the
Turkish border and the almost besieged Aleppo, after earlier seizing
an airbase that had been held by the opposition. Throughout the war,
the YPG had been viewed warily by the opposition, and given a wide
berth by the regime.
Now,
though, its moves have sharply expanded a footprint in the north,
alarming rebels who have been distracted by other foes, and Turkey,
which had vowed never to let the Kurds dominate its border with
Syria.
The
Kurds are ascendant, and the Turks are enraged. Ankara sees YPG
militants, who are affiliated with the Kurdistan Workers’ party
(PKK), as vying to own areas they have never before controlled, to
establish a foothold from Irfin in Syria’s north-west to the Iraqi
border, a frontier dominated for decades by Arabs.
Helping
the YPG do that are the same Russian jets that are steadily
destroying Turkish-supported rebel groups, whose three-year push to
oust Bashar al-Assad increasingly looks lost.
Turkey
insists that an emboldened YPG also boosts the PKK, against whose
insurgency it has been fighting for more than 40 years. It rejects
both groups’ insistence that they want more autonomy, not
independence. Instead, Ankara views Kurdish aspirations as a graver
subversive threat than Isis.
Over
the past six months, the number of airstrikes it has launched against
the Kurds has dwarfed those it has aimed at a terror group that its
allies see as the most formidable threat to global security.
Further
complicating things is that the US, which has largely confined its
role in Syria to fighting Isis, has used the YPG as a proxy ground
force to push the terror group from part of the north-west and edge
towards its stronghold of Raqqa. US jets had in late 2014 defended
the Kurdish city of Kobane from an extensive assault by Isis. Ever
since, a relationship has firmed between both sides, much to the
chagrin of Turkey, a US ally and Nato member.
Turkish
prime minister issues stark warning to Kurdish militia
Of
all the mini-wars being fought in the muddy mess of the north, none
is more likely to transform a series of proxy conflicts into a hot
war than Turkey’s stance towards Syria’s manoeuvring Kurds and
the Russians expediently backing them. Moscow has shown it knows how
to needle Ankara. It knows the Kurds are Turkey’s weak spot.
However, the dangers of missteps in the small pocket of the Syrian
border that remains out of Kurdish control are very real.
The
same strip is the last remaining supply line to battered rebel groups
and lifeline to refugees fleeing the fighting. What becomes of
Turkey’s war will be determined here. So far, it has watched on
angrily as its support for the opposition is whittled away by Russian
jets flying high above the echo chamber of global diplomacy that has
collectively failed to stop the war.
Turkish
shelling of YPG positions over the past three days has signalled that
worse will follow if its advances continue. Russian airstrikes on the
border town of Azaz – the main gateway for refugees and Turkish
supplies – also up the ante.
All
sides sense that the war may be entering a decisive phase –
possibly a miscalculation in a conflict that now has so many feed
points. The temptation to force rivals’ hands has never been
greater. So too are the risks.
Here are some other opinion pieces from the same publication
Here are some other opinion pieces from the same publication
Syrian
Kurdish party opening a Moscow office marks new nadir in relations,
and could lead to Turkish forces crossing border
Ahmet
Davutoğlu says YPG units have been warned to withdraw from border
territory captured from Syrian rebels
Turkey’s
prime minister, Ahmet Davutoğlu, has confirmed that the country’s
forces have struck Kurdish YPG militia targets in northern Syria, and
have demanded the group withdraws from the area it has recently
captured.
The
shelling took place on Saturday after Kurdish fighters, backed by
Russian bombing raids, drove Syrian rebels from a former military air
base near the Turkish border.
“We
will retaliate against every step [by the YPG],” Davutoğlu told
reporters in comments shown live by state broadcaster TRT Haber on
Turkish television. “The YPG will immediately withdraw from Azaz
and the surrounding area and will not go close to it again.”
Here are my reflections:
Here are my reflections:
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