Turkish military opens new battlefront, sends more tanks into Syria
RT,
4
August, 2016
Turkish
tanks and other armored vehicles have entered Syria’s northern
province of Aleppo and shelled Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL)
positions in the area, opening up yet another battlefront within the
last two weeks, various media outlets reported.
Turkey
sent tanks into the town of al-Rai, located in Aleppo Province as
part of its Euphrates Shield operation aimed at pushing both IS and
Kurdish militants away from the border, Turkey’s Hurriyet Daily
News reported Saturday.
Turkish
vehicles opened fire on IS installations located in the region,
according to the country’s Dogan news agency.
“The
operations are to work from al-Rai towards the villages that were
liberated west of Jarablus,” Colonel
Ahmed Osman of the Sultan Murad rebel group told Reuters, confirming
that the operation is taking place in cooperation with Turkey.
Leopard
tanks and M60T tanks are involved into the offensive, broadcaster
CNN-Turk reported. The machinery is backed by artillery. About 20
tanks, five armored personnel carriers and other vehicles are
reported to have entered the area.
Civilians
have fled the territory as the Turkish forces advanced.
The
offensive is aimed at targeting jihadists from both the east and west
sides of the stretch of territory between Jarablus and al-Rai which
is presently under militant control.
IS militants reportedly responded with three rockets that hit the Turkish province of Kilis earlier today, Dogan also said.
IS
militants reportedly responded with three rockets that hit the
Turkish province of Kilis earlier today, Dogan also said.
The
new front line was launched some 25 kilometers west of the first one,
which was opened on August 24.
Turkey
has stressed that it has no intentions of staying in Syria and the
operation is strictly defensive in character.
Ankara
seeks to protect its border from the militant group and the Kurdish
YPG militia, which it sees as affiliates of the outlawed Kurdish PKK
group.
The
United States raised concerns over the Turkish incursion in Syria,
and Germany said that a lasting Turkish presence in the war-torn
country is undesirable.
Turkey
aims to push the YPG fighters east of the Euphrates River, and is
seeking the US support in this issue since the US is obliged to work
with Turkey as a NATO member on “all different terrorist threats,”
Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said on September 2,
according to Hurriyet.
“We
would like to see the pressure of the U.S. on the PYD to go to the
east of the Euphrates. So it would be very useful if we would apply
this operation with the US forces together,” Kurtulmus said in an
interview.
Euphrates
Shield was launched on August 24 with the support of Turkish air
forces, as well as A-10S and F-16 warplanes from the US-led
coalition.
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