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War, War, War
See other War, War, War Articles

Title: Tensions between Russia and Turkey reach new peak
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/d36160f2-d3df-11e5-8887-98e7feb46f27.html
Published: Feb 16, 2016
Author: ft
Post Date: 2016-02-16 08:46:01 by HAPPY2BME-4UM
Keywords: None
Views: 20

Tension between Russia and Turkey has reached a new peak as the two countries step up military action in Syria in support of opposing sides, edging closer to direct confrontation in the country’s increasingly internationalised war.

The growing rift between the two countries — with each now attacking rebels the other supports — has alarmed Western diplomats amid fears Russia is seeking to undermine Nato by ramping up its clash with Ankara.

“It seems to us that just like in the Baltics, Russia wants to try and push at Nato’s ability to stand behind all its members,” said a Nato official. A senior European official said Russian President Vladimir Putin was seeking to destabilise Recep Tayyip Erdogan, his Turkish opposite number.

“Putin is furious with Turkey,” said the European official. “The situation is really incredibly serious.”

The latest rise in tension revolves around Kurdish fighters in Syria, who are backed by both Moscow and the US and other western countries but whom Ankara views as antagonists.

Moscow’s strikes against anti-Assad rebels in Syria’s northern Aleppo province have created an atmosphere of chaos that has been exploited by the Syrian Kurdish militia, known as the YPG, which has seized towns held by rebels backed by Turkey and the Gulf states.

In turn, Turkey began shelling the Kurdish fighters at the weekend, after they advanced on the Turkish border, despite warnings from Ankara to stay put. The Turkish military continued the attack on Monday, despite furious denunciations by Moscow, which called for UN condemnation of the attacks.

The Russian foreign ministry said Turkey’s actions had hit Syrian towns “recently liberated from the terrorists” by the Syrian army and Kurdish fighters, and had “killed and wounded many in the civilian population, destroyed infrastructure and residential buildings”.

Russia, which was itself accused on Monday of striking three hospitals in northern Syria, is keen to throw the spotlight on Ankara and highlight the divide between Turkey and its Nato partners.

Ankara denounces the YPG militants as an affiliate of Turkey’s own outlawed Kurdistan Workers party, which it has been fighting for three decades. It also sees the Kurdish fighters as bitter rivals of the Arab Sunni rebels Turkey favours in the Syrian conflict.

But the US prizes the YPG as the most successful Syrian groundforces against Isis, the extremist jihadi group.

Ahmet Davutoglu, Turkish prime minister, accused the YPG on Monday of being “Russia’s instrument in Syria”, threatening further attacks on the Kurdish fighters.

He said that Turkey would attack the Menagh air base north of Aleppo if Syrian Kurds did not withdraw from it and vowed to protect the Syrian border town of Azaz from the Kurdish forces.

Moscow also accused Ankara of allowing fighters to cross the border into Syria to join Isis and groups affiliated with al-Qaeda while also permitting wounded jihadist fighters to return to Turkey.

Turkey has consistently denied all such charges.

In depth

Syria crisis

A photo taken on March 4, 2015 shows a banner bearing a portrait of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in a street in the city of Damascus. AFP PHOTO / LOUAI BESHARA (Photo credit should read LOUAI BESHARA/AFP/Getty Images)

News, comment and analysis about the conflict that has killed thousands and displaced millions

“Russia supports presenting this question in the UN Security Council to let the UNSC give a clear assessment of Ankara’s provocative line, which poses a threat to the world and to regional security in the Middle East and beyond,” the Russian foreign ministry said.

Russia’s entry into the Syrian conflict in September has led Moscow and Ankara into a strategic rivalry.

Russian military aircraft active in Syria have repeatedly violated Turkish airspace. Since the Turkish military shot down a Russian jet on the border with Syria in November, Moscow and Ankara have been in an angry stand-off.

Moscow’s criticism of the Turkish shelling in northern Syria comes as opposition groups and western leaders are urging Russia to stop the air campaign around Aleppo that has turned the military situation in favour of government troops and claimed large numbers of civilian casualties.

Despite an agreement that a ceasefire should start later this week which requires all conflict parties to scale down fighting, the Russian air strikes have shown no sign of abating.

The Russian government claimed on Monday that its Aleppo campaign was not subject to the ceasefire. “We fight against terrorist groups — Isis, Jabhat al-Nusra and others connected with al-Qaeda. Strikes on objects of terrorist groups will continue in any case, even if we succeed in agreeing on a ceasefire in Syria,” deputy foreign minister Gennady Gatilov told German magazine Der Spiegel.

Reporting by Erika Solomon in Beirut, Kathrin Hille in Moscow, Mehul Srivastava in Istanbul and Sam Jones in London
Forces on the ground in Northern Syria
 Rebels/The FSA

There are hundreds of rebel groups across Syria that emerged when the 2011 protests against Bashar al-Assad transformed into armed revolt. Many forces call themselves part of the Free Syrian Army (FSA), a catch-all umbrella term for groups that are non-Islamist. Many other rebel groups became Islamist as Islamist forces began to take hold in the uprising. Jabhat al-Nusra

As al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria, this group is a radical jihadi force that has a stronghold in the country’s northwestern province of Idlib, but it has pockets of territory across the country. It often aligns with other rebel groups, whether they are Islamist or not. Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis)

This jihadi force claims to be building a caliphate, and since it captured Iraq’s second city of Mosul it has seized territory across about a half of Syria and a quarter of Iraq. The group used to focus its military activities on territorial expansion but has begun launching attacks abroad against western targets to challenge a US-led international campaign against its territory. YPG/YPJ

The People’s Defence Units are usually known by their Kurdish acronym YPG for its male battalions and YPJ for female battalions. They are the most powerful Syrian Kurdish militia in Syria, controlling large chunks of territory which they aim to shape into an autonomous region along Syria’s northern border. They claim they do not want to secede from Syria, however. The group claims to have 50,000 fighters. Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF)

This is an alliance formed with US backing to fight Isis. Some estimates say the group has over 50,000 fighters, but only a fraction of these come from Syria’s rebel groups, which are majority Sunni Arab. The group has launched a series of successful campaigns to take back territory from Isis under US-led coalition air cover.

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