Search For Keyword.

Syrian Kurdish official eyes possible talks with Damascus

The Kurdish-led authorities in northern Syria may open talks with Damascus and Russia to fill a security vacuum in the event of a full withdrawal of U.S. forces from the Turkish border area, a Syrian Kurdish official said Tuesday.

Badran Jia Kurd's comments to Reuters reflect the predicament facing Kurdish-led forces in northern Syria following a partial withdrawal of U.S. troops who have effectively shielded the area from Turkish attack.

The United States withdrew 50 American special forces from a section of the Turkish border on Monday, opening the way for Turkey to stage a long-threatened incursion against Syrian Kurdish-led forces that it deems as terrorists.

The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) has described the U.S. decision as "a stab in the back". Spearheaded by the Kurdish YPG militia, the SDF has been a major part of the U.S.-led campaign against Daesh (ISIS).

"If America vacates the area and especially the border area for certain we, as a self administration and as the SDF, will be forced to study all the available options," Jia Kurd told Reuters.

"At that time we may hold talks with Damascus or the Russian side to fill the void or block the Turkish attack, so this may develop and there could be meetings and contacts in case of a vacuum," he said.

A senior Syrian government official said in comments published Tuesday that Damascus is ready to welcome Syria's Kurds back into the fold.

"We will defend all Syrian territory, and we will not accept any occupation of Syrian land," Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad told the pro-government Al-Watan newspaper.

The official said Kurdish groups have been "tossed aside" by Washington, after US President Donald Trump on Monday gave Turkey a green light to press ahead with its planned military operation.

"The nation welcomes all its children and Damascus will solve all problems in Syria in a positive manner, away from violence," Mekdad said, vowing to take back all Syrian territory.

"We advise those who have gone astray to return to the nation, because the nation is their final destiny," he added, encouraging Syria's Kurds to reconcile with the regime.

In the early part of the eight-year-old civil war in Syria, the Kurds consolidated control over the northeast and set up their own autonomous institutions.

When Daesh swept across the region in 2014, they mounted a fierce defence of their heartland and became the U.S.-led coalition's main military partner on the ground.

Mekdad said that Kurdish militias in Syria were being "played" by Washington.

Damascus rejects Kurdish self-rule and wants central government institutions restored in Kurdish-held areas.

The Kurds want protection from the long-threatened Turkish offensive.

Turkey said on Tuesday it had completed preparations for a military operation in the northeast. It views the YPG as a terrorist organisation because of its links to Kurdish militants who have waged a long insurgency in Turkey.

The Kurdish-led administration found itself in a similar position in late 2018 when President Donald Trump announced his decision to withdraw U.S. forces from Syria. The SDF held talks in Damascus that broke down without progress.

Despite enmity between Syrian Kurds and Damascus, the result of years of systematic persecution of Kurds under the rule of the Baathist government, the dominant Syrian Kurdish groups have seldom fought the Syrian government during the war.

While the Syrian rebellion has fought to topple President Bashar al-Assad, the YPG says its priority is to maintain regional autonomy as part of the Syrian state.

Damascus however is loathe to cede the Kurds the level of autonomy they seek. The government earlier this year threatened the U.S.-backed Kurdish forces with military defeat if they did not agree to a return of state authority.

Reuters

Reuters
(67)    (62)
Total Comments (0)

Comments About This Article

Please fill the fields below.
*code confirming note