U.S. officials
are discussing with the Turkish military and government how the moderate
Syrian opposition can push Islamic State farther east in Syria,
Washington's ambassador to Ankara said on Thursday. "We
have had some progress in recent weeks as these groups pushed further
east along the border," Ambassador John Bass told a group of diplomacy
correspondents. "We will continue to focus on that area," he said. Syrian
rebel forces seized numerous villages from Islamic State near the
Turkish border earlier this week. The offensive includes factions
fighting under the banner of the Free Syrian Army that have been
supplied with weapons via Turkey. A
sustained rebel advance near the Turkish border would erode Islamic
State's last foothold in an area identified by the United States as a
priority in the fight against Islamic State. "There
is conversation with the Turkish military and government to talk about
opportunities to intensify support to those groups and to push Daesh
east from the current line," Bass said, using an acronym for Islamic
State. The United States
is not providing the Syrian Kurdish YPG militia, its close ally in the
fight against Islamic State, with weapons or ammunition, Bass said. He
said Washington is opposed to efforts by any Syrian group to change the
demography of a region "under the guise" of fighting Islamic State. Turkey has accused the YPG of "cleansing" towns of ethnic Arabs and Turkmen. Bass repeated a
call to the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) to lay down its weapons and
cease attacks on Turkey. The PKK has waged a three-decade insurgency in
Turkey and violence flared anew in July. Ankara
says the PKK, designated a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United
States and the European Union, is closely linked with the YPG.
U.S., Turkey discuss ways Syrian opposition can push Islamic State east
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