Syria - Turks Attack Afrin, U.S. Strategy Fails, Kurds Again Chose The Losing Side
21
January, 2018
After
negotiations between Russia/Syria and the Kurds of Afrin had failed,
the Russian side made a deal with Turkey. Now Turkey attacks Afrin
while everyone else looks aside. The main impetus for this
development was the announcement of a U.S. occupation in north-east
Syria with the help of the Kurdish YPG/PKK. The occupation strategy
is already failing. The Kurds made the false choice. They will be the
losers of this game.
We
had wrongly predicted that
Turkish threats against the Kurdish held north-west area of Afrin
were empty:
The threat is not serious:
Afrin is under formal protection of Russian and Syrian forces.
The real danger to Turkey is not Afrin but the much larger Kurdish protectorate the U.S. publicly announced in north-east Syria.
The Turkish threats and its artillery noise have led to counter noise from Syria and more silent advice from Russia. The Syrian government wants to show that it is the protector of all Syrian citizens be they ethnic Arabs or Kurds. Russia is proud of its role as the grown up who is calming down all sides.
Turkey
is now attacking the Afrin canton in full force. With help from one
George Orwell the operation was dubbed "Olive Branch"
The
Turkish operation to go after Afrin was triggered by two events. The
more important one was the U.S. announcement of
a permanent occupation of
north-east Syria with the help of a 30,000 men strong SDF "border
protection force" consisting of mainly Kurds and some Arabs who
earlier fought under ISIS. We had noted at
that time:
The Turks were not consulted before the U.S. move and are of course not amused that a "terrorist gang", trained and armed by the U.S., will control a long stretch of their southern border. Any Turkish government would have to take harsh measures to prevent such a strategic threat to the country.
The
U.S. move was amateurish. It ignored the security needs of its NATO
ally Turkey in exchange for an illegal and unsustainable occupation
of north-east Syria. Secretary of State Tillerson tried to calm the
Turks by claiming that the "border protection force" was
not for border protection. Reports from the training ground expose
that as
a lie:
"This force will be a foundational force to protect the borders of north Syria," proclaimed the announcer at the graduation ceremony.
A
second motive for the Turkish operation was the success of the Syrian
army in the east-Idleb where "Free Syrian Army" and
al-Qaeda Takfiris supported by Turkey were eliminated by Syrian Army
attacks.
The
now unfolding Turkish operation was preceded by several rounds of
negotiations.
The
Syrian government and its Russian allies offered the
Afrin Kurds to protect them from any Turkish attacks:
Nearly a week ago, [a] meeting between Russian officials and Kurdish leaders took place. Moscow suggested Syrian State becomes only entity in charge of the northern border. The Kurds refused. It was immediately after that that the Turkish Generals were invited to Moscow. Having the Syrian State in control of its Northern Border wasn't the only Russian demand. The other was that the Kurds hand back the oil fields in Deir al Zor. The Kurds refused suggesting that the US won't allow that anyway. The meeting was not exactly a success.
Aldar Xelil (@Xelilaldar), member of the Democratic Free Society Tev-Dem: “In a meeting Russia proposed to the Afrin Administration that if Afrin is ruled by the Syrian regime, Turkey won’t attack it. #Afrin Canton Administration refused this proposal.”
The
Kurds made a counteroffer. They would raise some Syrian flags and
give up on the (mostly destroyed) Menagh air force base they hold but
they were unwilling to
give up any border control:
Amberin Zaman talked to Rojava officials Nobahar Mustafa and Sinam Mohammed. They say:
Russia aims to weaken the YPG and to turn Afrin over to "the regime."
We're still in negotiations with Russia. They said if you turn over Afrin to the regime it will protect you. We refused. We offered to turn over Menagh airbase and some other checkpoints but they refused.
We may pull out of Sochi
New alliances will be formed with Saudi, UAE, and Egypt.
Rojava forces commander General Mazlum and Ilham Ahmed have met Brett McGurk to ask the US to stop the Turkish attacks. This is a test of how reliable an ally the US is.
After
the negotiations with the Kurds had failed Syria and Russia, which
was the negotiating entity, made a deal with Turkey. Turkey had
agreed to a de-escalation zone in Idleb but never proceeded to set up
the promised observation posts in the al-Qaeda ruled area. Turkey had
supported al-Qaeda. Fighting it directly is against Turkish
interests. It is itself too vulnerable as many al-Qaeda fighters have
family and friends living within Turkey.
The
new deal will give Syria control over most of Idleb in exchange for
Turkish control over Afrin (if the Turks can indeed take the area).
In parallel to the start of the Turkish operation the Syrian army
took the air base Abu Duhur in east-Idleb. It will eliminate whatever
is left of al-Qaeda and ISIS in the now closed cauldron. It will then
proceed further into Idelb governorate.
Having
Turkey take over Afrin is bad for Syria. The Syrian government
clearly dislikes the deal the Russians made in its name. Any
agreement with the shifty Turkish President Erdogan will likely not
hold for long. But having the Kurds ally with the U.S. in a permanent
occupation of the north-east is even worse.
The
Syrian government has rejected Turkish
claims that it was informed about the attack and officially condemned
the Turkish move. But it can do little against it. Its army is
depleted and engaged elsewhere. Neither Russia nor Iran would support
an open conflict with Turkey.
Turkish papers this morning:
Hurriyet: Our jets hit #Afrin. Turkey’s heart beats as one
Sabah: We hit them in their den
Haberturk: Iron fist to terror, olive branch to civilians
Sozcu: We said we would strike despite the US and Russia. We struck the traitors
Turkey
has launched a quite large operation against Afrin. Its air-force is
bombarding the area. It is now sending its most modern tanks. The
al-Qaeda-"Free Syrian Army" Turkey supports and controls
will be its front line infantry that is sure to bleed the most. Afrin
is mountainous and it will be a difficult fight. Two Turkish tanks
have already been destroyed. The Kurds are well prepared and armed.
Both sides will have lots of loses.
Meanwhile
the Syrian army and its allies will have time to take over Idelb.
The
U.S. is left with a mess. Its strategy for Syria, only announced last
week, is already falling apart. Its Central Command rejected any
responsibility for the Kurds in Afrin while allying with the Kurds in
the east. These are the same people.
The Kurdish military commander
in Afrin earlier fought in Kobane. Now Turkish planes are taking off
from the U.S. build Incerlik air base to bomb the Kurds in the Syrian
west while U.S. tanker planes take off from Incirlik to support the
U.S. alliance with the Kurds in the east.
The
Arab group Jaysh al Thuwar was part of the Arab fig leaf that
disguises the Kurdish command over the U.S. supported SDF in the
east. It has now turned sides and is back
under Turkish tutelage.
(UPDATE:
This has now been
denied.
/end-update) More elements of the SDF will change sides. We can
expect "insider attacks" against the U.S. forces who are
training them.
The
Kurdish command blames Russia
for the Turkish attack on Afrin. That is laughable. Syria and the
Russians had supported the Kurds throughout the war.
They were the
first to deliver weapons and ammunition to the Kurds for the fight
against the Takfiris. It were the Kurds that changed sides and
invited the U.S. occupation. It is the Kurds that announced they
would ask for Saudi support.
Just
a few month ago the Kurdish project in Iraq failed miserably. The
Iraqi government took back all gains the Kurds had made over a decade
and the U.S. did nothing to help their Kurdish "allies".
Why do the Kurds in Syria believe that their immense overreach will
have a different outcome?
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