Turkey
Vows "Harshest Reaction" To Kurdish Advance In Syria As
Missiles Hit Hospitals, School
15
February, 2016
With
the Sunni-backed opposition on its last legs in Aleppo and under near
constant bombardment by Russia from the air and Hezbollah on the
ground, Ankara and Riyadh have a decision to make: intervene or allow
the rebellion to be crushed.
We’ve
spilled quite a bit of digital ink explaining why allowing the rebels
to be routed really isn’t an option. It would represent a key
victory for Iran at a time when the country is already on a roll.
International sanctions have been lifted, oil revenue is set to
quintuple by year end, and Tehran’s grip on Iraqis military and
politicians is stronger than ever. A victory in Syria would be an
embarrassment for the Saudis who have funded and armed the opposition
and a win at Aleppo would give the Iranians sectarian bragging rights
at a time when tensions between Riyadh and Tehran are already running
high thanks to the execution of prominent Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr.
And
so, with the stakes high, the Saudis sent warplanes to Turkey’s
Incirlik air base and Turkey promised an imminent “escalation.”
The problem, we said, is this: somehow, Turkey and Saudi Arabia need
to figure out how to spin an attack on the YPG and an effort to
rescue the opposition at Aleppo as an anti-ISIS operation even though
ISIS doesn’t have a large presence in the area.
Well
that problem hasn’t been solved, but Turkey doesn’t seem to
care. Ankara
began shelling YPG positions over the weekend at
Menagh air base, which the Kurds seized from Turkey-backed rebels
just days ago.
Turkey
claims this is about self defense. Erdogan equates the YPG (which is
supported overtly by the US) with the PKK, Ankara’s arch enemy
that’s recognized by Washington as a “terrorist” group.
The
YPG have consolidated gains in northern Syria and are essentially
trying to bridge the territory they hold east of the Euphrates with
their territory in the west. That, Turkey says, isn’t going to
happen. “YPG
elements were forced away from around Azaz. If they approach again
they will see the harshest reaction,”
Turkish PM Ahmet Davutoglu said on Monday. “We will not allow Azaz
to all.”
Of
course Azaz already “fell” - to Islamist rebels backed by the
Turks who are aiming to usurp the government of a sovereign state.
In
any event, more
than a dozen civilians were killed in Azaz on Monday when missiles
hit a children's hospital.
"At least 14 civilians were killed when missiles hit a
children's hospital, a school and other locations in the rebel-held
Syrian town of Azaz near the Turkish border," Reuters reports.
"At least five missiles hit the hospital in the town center and
a nearby school, where refugees fleeing a major Syrian army offensive
were sheltering [and] another refugee shelter south of the town
was also hit by bombs dropped by jets believed to be Russian."
Yes,
the jets are "believed to be Russian," although Davutoglu
just finished explaining how the YPG will face "the harshest
reaction" if it advances on the town.
We
suppose it's not at all possible that the Turkish army made a little
targeting "mistake" with some mortars.
Also
on Monday, another MSF affiliated hospital was destroyed in Idlib.
“This appears to be a deliberate attack on a health
structure,” Massimiliano Rebaudengo, the Doctors Without
Borders head of mission in Syria said. “The destruction of the
hospital leaves the local population of around 40,000 people without
access to medical services in an active zone of conflict.” Here's
what was left of the building after the strike:
last rebel
stronghold before the border with Turkey."
"We
have been moving scores of screaming children from the hospital,"
one medic said.
According
to Davutoglu, the school and the hospital were hit by "a Russian
ballistic missile." The PM also said Russia and the YPG
have closed the "humanitarian border" north of Aleppo. In
reality, Russia and Iran have closed Turkey's supply line to the
rebels. It has nothing to do with "humanitarian aid."
Moscow and Tehran have no interest in starving the people of Aleppo.
They do, however, have an interest in starving the rebels of guns.
That's
what the weekend's hostilities were all about. Turkey hasn't figured
out exactly how to intervene at Aleppo without getting into an open
confrontation with Russia, but everyone knows Erdogan hates the YPG,
so Ankara figured shelling the Syrian Kurds advancing on Azaz from
the west would effectively kill two birds with one stone: it would
help keep supply lines to the rebels open, and some Kurds would be
killed in the process. And no one, Turkey figures, is going to get
too bent out of shape about it because let's face it, Turkey has been
shelling the Kurds in Syria for months anyway.
Whoever
was responsible for the multiple civilian casualties that unfolded
across the country on Monday, it's not going to deter the Russians
from routing the opposition... er... "the terrorists." “We
are fighting with the terrorist groups (Islamic State), Nusra Front,
and others linked to al Qaeda,” Russian Deputy Foreign
Minister Gennady Gatilov said in an interview with Der
Spiegel. “Strikes on terrorist groups will continue in any case,
even if a cease-fire is agreed upon in Syria.”
"Moscow's
aim is to leave the international community with just two options in
Syria: President Bashar al-Assad or Islamic State," Davutoglu
said on Monday.
Why, one might fairly ask, does the "international community" have a say in this at all? Had Syria been left to handle its own affairs five years ago, we wouldn't be in this mess and the world wouldn't be teetering on the edge of a global conflict. Well, at least not over Syria.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.