Turkey and the
United States are working on plans to provide air cover for Syrian
rebels and jointly sweep Islamic State fighters from a strip of land
along the Turkish border, bolstering the NATO member's security and
possibly providing a safe haven for civilians. Long
a reluctant member of the U.S.-led coalition against Islamic State,
Turkey last week made a dramatic turnaround by granting the alliance
access to its air bases and bombarding targets in Syria linked to the
jihadist movement. Struggling
with more than 1.8 million Syrian refugees, Turkey has long campaigned
for a "no-fly zone" in northern Syria to keep Islamic State and Kurdish
militants from its border and help stem the tide of displaced civilians
trying to cross. While no
such formal arrangement has been struck with Washington, Prime Minister
Ahmet Davutoglu said the two allies saw eye to eye on the need to
provide air cover for moderate Syrian rebels fighting Islamic State. "What
we have now is air coverage to clear a region from Daesh (Islamic
State) and support the moderate opposition so they can gain control of
that region," Davutoglu told Turkey's ATV in an interview broadcast
live. "We do not want to see Daesh on Turkey's borders." In
Washington, U.S. officials said discussions were ongoing about the size
and scope of a zone along the border that would be cleared of Islamic
State fighters and allow moderate Syrian rebels to operate freely. U.S.
officials ruled out the joint imposition of a formal no-fly zone and
said the plan was not aimed at creating a "safe zone" for Syrian
refugees. “The purpose of
the operation is not to create a safe zone into which Syrian refugees
will go," a senior Obama administration official said, speaking on
condition of anonymity. "They
might go, but that’s not the purpose of the operation. The purpose of
the operation is to clear the border and close the border to Daesh,” the
official said. NATO will
hold an emergency meeting to discuss security on Tuesday at Turkey's
request. Ankara is expected to brief its allies on the measures it is
taking but did not request any air or troop support during preparations
for the meeting, according to two people with knowledge of the
discussions. "Turkey has a
very strong army and very strong security forces so there has been no
request for any substantial NATO military support," NATO
Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg told the BBC. SYRIAN KURDS "NOT A TARGET" Alongside
its action in Syria, Turkey launched a second night of air strikes on
Kurdish insurgent camps in Iraq on Sunday, part of what a senior Turkish
official described as a "full-fledged battle against all terrorist
organizations". The
renewed military campaign against the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK),
which has waged a three-decade insurgency against the Turkish state
partly from camps in northern Iraq, has raised suspicions that Turkey's
real agenda is checking Kurdish territorial ambitions rather than
fighting Islamic State. U.S.
State Department spokesman John Kirby disputed suggestions that
Washington had condoned Turkey's strikes on the PKK as a quid pro quo
for Ankara's expanded cooperation against Islamic State. He described
the timing as a "coincidence". "PKK is a foreign terrorist organization, Turks have a right to defend themselves against it," Kirby said. "There's no connection between what they did against PKK and what we're going to try to do together against ISIL," he said. Ankara is
concerned that the success in northern Syria of the Kurdish YPG
militia, which has pushed back Islamic State with the help of U.S.-led
air strikes, will stoke separatist sentiment among its own Kurds and
embolden the PKK. Turkey's
Kurds say that by reviving open conflict with the PKK, Turkish
President Tayyip Erdogan is also seeking to undermine support for the
pro-Kurdish opposition ahead of a possible early election and stoke up
nationalist sentiment. Highlighting
the precarious path Ankara is treading as it simultaneously battles
Islamic State in Syria and Kurdish insurgents in Iraq, the YPG on Monday
accused the Turkish army of shelling its positions in a village on the
outskirts of the Islamic State-held border town of Jarablus. A
senior Turkish official confirmed that the Turkish army had shot back
after it came under fire from across the border late on Sunday, but said
it was unclear which group was involved and stressed that the YPG was
not a target. "The ongoing
military operation seeks to neutralize imminent threats to Turkey's
national security and continues to target Islamic State in Syria and the
PKK in Iraq," the official said, adding that Ankara was investigating. "The PYD (the political wing of the YPG), along with others, remains outside the scope of the current military effort." The YPG
made further gains against Islamic State in northern Syria on Monday,
capturing a town near the Euphrates River after a month-long offensive
aimed at cutting their supply lines, the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights, which monitors the conflict, and YPG spokesman Redur Xelil said. HUNDREDS DETAINED The
PYD has emerged as the only notable partner so far on the ground for
the U.S.-led alliance as it fights Islamic State in northern Syria. But
the Kurdish group has links to the PKK, considered a terrorist
organization by Turkey, the European Union and the United States. The
two share not only ideology but fighters, with the PKK drawing Syrian
Kurdish fighters to its camps in northern Iraq and Turkish Kurds among
the PYD ranks. That has made for an uneasy compromise between Washington and Ankara. Davutoglu
was quoted in the Hurriyet newspaper as saying the PYD could "have a
place in the new Syria" if it did not disturb Turkey, cut all relations
with the administration of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and
cooperated with opposition forces. Washington
has reiterated that it labels the PKK as a terrorist organization and
stressed that it respects Turkey's right to take action against the
militant group. The moves
against the PKK come despite negotiations launched by Ankara in 2012 to
end an insurgency that has killed 40,000 people since 1984. The PKK has
said the actions have rendered the peace process meaningless. Turkish
security forces have rounded up 1,050 suspected members of Islamic
State, Kurdish militants and ultra-leftists in recent days, Davutoglu
said, adding 50-60 of them were foreigners. Local media reports said the
vast majority were Kurdish and leftists, not members of Islamic State.
Turkey, U.S. aim for zone cleared of Islamic State in northern Syria

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