From his fields
in Turkey, farmer Huseyin Ozdemir can see Islamist militants digging
trenches and planting mines as they ready for battle around the northern
Syrian town of Jarablus. Like
many villagers along this stretch of Turkey's 900 km (560-mile) border,
Ozdemir welcomed the arrival of additional Turkish soldiers to bolster
security in recent days but fears the consequences if they cross into
Syria and intervene. Wary
of advances by both Syrian Kurdish forces and Islamic State militants as
fighting north of the Syrian city of Aleppo intensifies, Turkey has
sent extra troops and equipment to strengthen this part of the border as
the risk of spillover rises. On
Sunday, it deployed missile and artillery batteries in the southeastern
border town of Kilis. The border crossing was operating normally, with
people and trucks queuing up to pass into Turkey. Ankara
has mooted the creation of a 'secure zone' on Syrian soil to prevent a
new wave of refugees crossing the border, but has made clear it will not
act alone and has been lobbying for support from the U.S.-led coalition
against Islamic State. "Islamic
State (militants) are here. They plant mines on the Syrian border. They
don't cross into our territory," Ozdemir said, tending his crops in the
parched soil near the town of Karkamis, across the border from
Jarablus. "We want to see
our soldiers present on the border but we don't want war. We don't want
our soldiers crossing ... We will be satisfied if they just protect our
borders." Syrian
government forces mounted heavy air strikes on Friday against rebel
positions in and around Aleppo, the focus of an insurgent offensive
aimed at capturing areas controlled by President Bashar al-Assad. Turkish
officials have said maintaining access to Aleppo is of critical
importance and that Ankara would act if Syrian Kurdish forces battling
Islamic State militants took control of Jarablus, some 120 km (75 miles)
northeast of the city. Ankara
is wary of the creation of an autonomous Kurdish state in Syrian
territory, fearing that would further embolden Turkey's own 14 million
Kurds. Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Friday there were no
immediate plans for any incursion, but Turkey would respond if its
security was threatened. "THROAT-CUTTING GESTURES" Up and
down the border with Syria, Turks are growing increasingly frustrated at
the violence spilling into their towns and villages. But the prospect
of Turkish involvement in Syria's conflict remains deeply unpopular. "Islamist
militants are threatening us from the other side of the border. They
make throat-cutting gestures," said Halil Kocaaslan in the village of
Karanfilkoy, close to Karkamis. "The
presence of Turkish soldiers at the border gives us confidence but we
don't want them to cross into Syria. That would be devastating," he
said. More than 1.8
million Syrians have fled to Turkey, including more than 20,000 mostly
Arabs in recent weeks who were escaping fighting around the border town
of Tel Abyad further east, where Kurdish-led forces have seized
territory from Islamic State. Officials
in Ankara fear another million people could be displaced if fighting for
Aleppo intensifies, and villagers like Kocaaslan are starting to wonder
where they would go if the fighting spilled into Turkish territory. "The people of Jarablus fled to Turkey. Where would we flee?" he said. Last
week Turkish newspapers carried reports that the government is
considering creating a buffer zone across the border, days after Erdogan
said Turkey would never allow the formation of a Kurdish state along
its southern borders. Plumes
of smoke rose from burning scrubland around the low-rise concrete
buildings of Jarablus on Saturday but it otherwise appeared largely
quiet and there were no immediate signs of activity at a military
outpost on the Turkish side. "Turkish
people, the people of this village do not want war. We absolutely do
not want Turkish soldiers to violate the border and enter Syria,"
Kocaaslan said. (Reuters)
On nervous border, Turks welcome army but fear incursion into Syria

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