Breaking point? Turkey demands ‘concrete steps’ from US while Washington wavers
RT,
13
February, 2018
Strained
relations between Turkey and the US seem to have reached a critical
point. Ankara is seeking clarity from the US, threatening to ‘break’
ties. Washington meanwhile continues to hide behind vague statements.
US
actions are the reason for the “missing trust” between the two
NATO allies, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu told
journalists on Monday. He went on to say Ankara expects “concrete
steps” from Washington, aimed at mending ties that have almost
reached the point of no return.
Turkey’s
“ties with the US are at [a] very critical point,” the minister
said. The two sides “will either fix these relations or they will
break [down] completely,” he added. Ankara was provoked by the
mixed signals coming from the US about its support for Kurdish
militias in Syria amid the ongoing Turkish military campaign against
these forces in Afrin.
The
US has tried to prove to Ankara that it takes its interests in Syria
seriously. Late in 2017, US President Donald Trump promised to end
arms supplies to the Kurds. In January 2018, Washington repeated this
promise, when US National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster told Turkish
Presidential Spokesman Ibrahim Kalin that the US would no longer
provide weapons to fighters of the Kurdish People’s Protection
Units (YPG) and the Democratic Union Party (PYD).
At
the same time, Washington also made it clear that US troops would not
leave Manbij – another northern Syrian town controlled by the
Kurdish militias – even though Ankara said it could extend its
operation into this area. Nor is it apparently ready to end support
for the “Kurdish elements of the SDF [Syrian Democratic Forces],”
an umbrella Syrian armed opposition group.
On
Sunday, US Defense Secretary James Mattis admitted that “some of
the Syrian Democratic Forces” had been “drawn off” from the
battle against Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL), to the Afrin
area by what he called a “distraction,” apparently referring to
the Turkish operation. He went on to say that around 50 percent of
all SDF fighters are Kurds, who “see their fellow Kurds in Afrin
under attack.” The Pentagon chief made no indication that
Washington tries to prevent its allies on the ground from aiding
those whom Ankara considers terrorists.
That
did not, however, stop Mattis from calling Turkey’s reasons for
waging a military campaign in the region legitimate. “They [Turkey]
have a legitimate security concern, and we do not dismiss one bit of
that, along that border with Syria,” he said, adding that the US is
“assisting Turkey” and is “going to work closely” with
Ankara.
However,
Turkish officials do not seem to be satisfied with these ambiguous
statements anymore. “Our demands from the US are clear and have
already been conveyed. We no longer want to hear about promises; we
want to hear about concrete steps. Trust needs to be rebuilt so we
can start to talk about some issues,” Cavusoglu said on Monday.
His
words were echoed by Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, who
urged Washington to “pull itself together and make a sound
decision.” “America’s decision to fight against one terror
organization with the cooperation of another terror organization has
nothing to do with dignity of a state,” Yildirim told reporters.
The
Turkish officials went as far to accuse the US of deliberately
sparing terrorists in its operations to justify the extension of its
cooperation with Kurdish forces in Syria. “The US is not touching
[IS] members in Syria [to have] an excuse to continue working with
the YPG,” Cavusoglu said.
The
Turkish military operation in the Kurdish area of Afrin entered its
fourth week on February 10. Ankara also repeatedly said it plans to
expand it with Manbij and Idlib being mentioned as the possible next
targets.
In
the meantime, Turkey, a NATO member since 1952, seems to be straining
its relations with other allies. During the first week of the Afrin
campaign, Germany froze all decisions on supplying weapons to Ankara,
including upgrades to the German-made Leopard tanks used by Turkish
troops. Later, the French president and foreign minister warned
Ankara against the invasion and accused it of “adding war to war.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.