Turkey Angered By US Move to Arm Syrian Kurds
Local Editor
Turkey Wednesday reacted furiously to a US plan to arm Syrian Kurdish fighters whom Ankara considers terrorists, but the force battling extremists said the move would hasten the extremists' defeat.
The issue risks further stoking tensions between Ankara and Washington less than a week before President Recep Tayyip Erdogan heads to Washington to meet his US counterpart Donald Trump in their first face-to-face encounter as heads of state.
The Kurdish Peoples' Protection Units [YPG] is seen by Washington as the best ally against the Wahhabi Daesh [Arabic acronym for "ISIS" / "ISIL"] extremists in Syria and the prime attacking force in any assault on their stronghold of Raqa.
But Ankara regards the group as a terror group and the Syrian branch of the Kurdistan Workers' Party [PKK], which since 1984 has waged an insurgency inside Turkey leaving tens of thousands dead.
The dispute poisoned ties between Turkey and the US under the administration of former president Barack Obama but commentators had hoped for a smoother ride under Trump.
"The supply of arms to the YPG is unacceptable," Deputy Prime Minister Nurettin Canikli told A Haber television.
"Such a policy will benefit nobody," he said. "We expect that this mistake is to be rectified."
In a surprise announcement, the Pentagon said Trump had authorized the arming of Kurdish fighters within the Syrian Democratic Forces [SDF] "to ensure a clear victory over ‘ISIS' in Raqa."
The SDF, a US-backed group dominated by YPG but which also contains Arab elements, hailed the move and said that receiving US arms and military equipment would "hasten the defeat" of the extremists.
"The US decision to arm the YPG... is important and will hasten the defeat of terrorism," an SDF spokesman told AFP.
The Kurdish-Arab SDF had been the main faction fighting Daesh on the ground in Syria, but Turkey dismisses it as a front for the YPG.
It remains to be seen what shadow the issue will cast over the talks between Trump and Erdogan, which have been touted as chance to forge a new partnership between the two NATO allies.
A high-level Turkish delegation including Chief of Staff General Hulusi Akar, presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin and Turkey's spy chief Hakan Fidan has been in the US laying the groundwork for the meeting.
Canikli said Turkey would take the diplomatic initiative to convince Washington "to do what friendship requires."
"The argument that a ground operation in the fight against Daesh [‘ISIS'] would be successful only with YPG has nothing to do with reality," he said.
Both Washington and Brussels classifies the PKK as a terror group but has never regarded the YPG as such.
Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team
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