Turkey summoned
the U.S. ambassador to express its displeasure on Tuesday after a State
Department spokesman said Washington did not regard Syria's Kurdish
Democratic Union Party (PYD) as a terrorist organisation, a Turkish
foreign ministry official said. Tensions
between the two NATO allies have flared over the PYD, which Washington
supports in its struggle against Islamic State militants in Syria. Ankara
sees it as a sister of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), with which it
has been embroiled in fierce fighting in southeast Turkey since their
decades-old conflict reignited last July. The PKK is classed as a
terrorist organisation by Turkey, the United States and the European
Union. Asked about the difference
in opinion with Turkey on Monday, State Department Spokesman John Kirby
said: "This is not a new concern, as I said, that the Turks have
proffered. And we don’t, as you know, recognise the PYD as a terrorist
organization." On Tuesday, Kirby
confirmed that U.S. Ambassador to Turkey John Bass met senior Turkish
officials on Tuesday, although he declined to describe what they
discussed. The spokesman also said the United States has not changed its
views on the PYD. Turkey fears
advances by Kurdish YPG militia, backed by the PYD, on the Syrian side
of the two countries' 900-km (560-mile) border will fuel separatist
ambitions among its own Kurds. It has been
conducting a violent crackdown on the PKK in the southeast, with hundred
of militants, security force members and civilians killed. President Tayyip Erdogan has previously hinted that Turkey may conduct military operations in Syria to halt the YPG's advance.
Turkey summons U.S. envoy over comments on Kurdish PYD in Syria

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