Tuesday, October 15, 2019

TURKEY’S INCURSION INTO KURDISH AREA OF SYRIA NOT LIKELY TO BE DETERRED BY US SANCTIONS

Erdoğan is reviving the Islamic State; There is something disturbing and disappointing about the US decision to leave the Kurds to their fate

By Oded Granot

Israel Hayom
October 13, 2019

After the Turkish incursion into the Kurdish area of northeast Syria, everyone involved – the US, the European Union, the Arab League, Syria, Iran, and Iraq, even Russian President Vladimir Putin – was concerned. Some their agreement to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's military gambit through silence, some were apathetic.

Of course, the concern had nothing to do with the human tragedy that is resurging in the area west of the Euphrates river. No mercy for the hundreds of thousands of civilians, Kurds and others, women and children, who are being uprooted and are fleeing the villages near the border. No one is feeling any regret over the more than 500 people who have been killed and wounded after only five days of Turkish aerial bombardments and artillery shelling.

The main concern of those who took no particular steps to stop Erdogan is the threat that the Islamic State, tens of thousands of whose operatives are currently being held in prison by the Kurds, while tens of thousands of their relatives are being held in detainment camps controlled by the Kurds, could rise again. In a last attempt to thwart the Turkish military assault, the Kurds warned that there was a real danger that under cover of battle, their ISIS prisoners might escape and return to their native countries to resume jihad against the infidels.

Even if the Kurds' threat is somewhat exaggerated (most of the prisoners are located outside the zone in northern Syria Erdoğan is targeting), it is not baseless or unreasonable. The Kurds are busy defending themselves and devoting less time to guarding the ISIS prisoners. The Americans, who until now were helping them secure the prison facilities, are now more concerned with protecting the lives of their own forces in Syria, especially after a few of them were nearly hit on Saturday by errant Turkish artillery fire.

Aside from that, the war against the Islamic State, which is still alive and kicking in many places in eastern Syria, has been halted almost entirely due to Erdoğan's operation. This allowed ISIS operatives who are still walking around free to set off car bombs in Qamishli, a major logistics center for the Kurds, as it was being bombarded by the Turks.

The fear that ISIS could rise again as a result of Erdogan's attack has prompted the Europeans to do what they rarely do and fall in line with Washington by threatening to apply sanctions to Turkey if it does not cease its military action. Putin also expressed concern about ISIS operatives making their way back to Russian-controlled areas. The Arab League convened a special meeting of Arab foreign ministers in Cairo on Saturday, many of whom condemned the Turkish incursion.

Now, US President Trump might be starting to regret his phone call to Erdoğan last week and his ensuing decision to withdraw a few dozen American soldiers from the area Turkey is now invading. The fear of an Islamic State revival and the harsh criticism from both parties over his abandonment of the Kurds have caused the US president to not only threaten Erdoğan with "paralyzing the Turkish economy," but also to instruct Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin to prepare to hurt Turkish assets in the US if the Turkish operation continues.

Erdoğan won't blink at sanctions

Maybe out of a desire to prevent additional harm to the US, which is now seen as turning its back on its allies, Trump rushed to announce he was deploying additional forces and anti-aircraft defenses to Saudi Arabia to help defend it against Iran. But the Saudis don't really trust Washington anymore and have already asked Pakistan to help solve their conflict with Iran through diplomatic channels.

There is little to no chance Erdoğan will blanch at sanctions and stop his military campaign against the Kurds. This weekend, he threatened that if the Europeans took action against him, he would let millions of refugees in Turkey loose to "flood" Europe. The deal to hold refugees in Turkey in exchange for billions of dollars in European aid is due to expire soon.

Wiping out Kurdish autonomy

The Turkish incursion into northern Syria rests on an orderly, two-state plan designed to eradicate any possibility of establishing a Kurdish economy there. The first part of the plan is to run Kurdish residents and militias out of towns and villages that lie within a strip of territory along the Turkish-Syrian border and advance 32 kilometers (20 miles) into Syria to set up a buffer zone. The second stage will fill that territory with more than 2 million Syrian refugees who are currently in Turkey. In simple terms, this is known as ethnic cleansing.

Turkey, which has the second-biggest military in NATO, and its partners (such as the pro-Erdoğan Syrian rebels), have a clear military advantage over the Kurdish forces as well as superior air power. Occupying a security zone and pushing the Kurds out is one possible move, but holding it in the long-term without casualties won't be simple. The Kurds have a lot of experience in guerrilla warfare, and Erdoğan should learn a lesson from Israel's traumatic experience controlling the security zone in southern Lebanon until it withdrew in 2000.

Israel is following developments in northern Syria, and the responses from the superpowers (mainly the US) to the Turkish incursion, very closely. The alliance between Jerusalem and Washington is strong and different from Washington's commitments to its other partners in the region. However, there is something disturbing in the fact that the Kurds, a brave people, feel abandoned by the strongest country in the world, and the Saudis are already convinced that the US won't defend them against the big threat from Tehran.

1 comment:

bob walsh said...

I am unsure the assertion that Edrogan will not be deterred by sanctions is accurate. If I recall correctly Turkey's currency is linked to the U S dollar and therefore one would tend to believe that by the U S unlinking it, bad things would happen to Turkey's economy very quickly.

I am much more interested in what will happen with the Nukes the U S has in Turkey. That has the potential to get very interesing if Turkey gets very stupid.