(Reuters) - Turkish troops could be used to help set up a secure zone in Syria,
if there was an international agreement to establish such a haven for
refugees fleeing Islamic State fighters, President Tayyip Erdogan said
in comments published on Saturday. Turkey
has so far declined to take a frontline role in the U.S.-led coalition
against Islamic State but officials said earlier this week Erdogan has
been negotiating on what Turkey's role might now be. "The logic that assumes Turkey
would not take a position militarily is wrong," Erdogan said in an
interview with the Hurriyet newspaper on his way back from New York,
where he attended the United Nations General Assembly meetings. Erdogan
said negotiations are underway to determine how and by which countries
the air strikes and a potential ground operation would be undertaken and
that Turkey is ready to take part. "In
the distribution of responsibilities, every country will have a certain
duty. Whatever is Turkey's role, Turkey will play it," he said, adding
that an air operation alone was not sufficient. "You
can't finish off such a terrorist organization only with air strikes.
Ground forces are complementary ... You have to look at it as a whole.
Obviously I'm not a soldier but the air (operations) are logistical. If
there's no ground force, it would not be permanent," he said. Turkey
would defend its border if necessary, Erdogan said and added that the
necessary steps would be taken once a parliamentary mandate that enables
Turkish troops to conduct operations outside its borders would be
passed next week. "No one
is responsible for protecting your borders," Erdogan said. "Will other
people come and protect? We are the ones who will protect our own
borders," he said. Asked if Turkey might set up a secure zone for refugees in Syria
on its own, Erdogan said: "That (should be done) with those in the
region. By speaking to each one of them. Because we need to have a
legitimacy within the international community. "This
is not only about Turkey but about 1.5 million people returning to
their own land. To help settle these people are among the issues that
are being discussed," he told the paper. Meanwhile
early on Saturday air strikes, believed to have been carried out by
U.S.-led forces, hit Islamic State and other Islamist groups in eastern
Syria, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. Islamic
State has maintained its grip on territory on three sides of a
strategic Syrian Kurdish town on the border with Turkey, with sporadic
clashes continuing on Saturday and heavy weapons fire heard, a Reuters
witness said. Militants
still held their positions around 10 kilometers west of Kobane inside
Syria, the Reuters witness said, with Kurdish positions the last line of
defense between the fighters and the town. Kobane
sits on a road linking north and northwestern Syria and Kurdish control
of the town has prevented Islamic State fighters from consolidating
their gains, although their advance has caused more than 150,000 Kurds
to flee to Turkey since last week.
Erdogan says Turkish troops could be used in Syria
Reuters
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