Monday, October 14, 2019

Syrian Army moves North


Bashar al-Assad’s forces began entering northeast Syria in large numbers for the first time in years on Monday after the West’s Kurdish allies agreed to a Russian-brokered deal to try to hold off a Turkish onslaught. 

US President Donald Trump appears to have agreed to a Congressional plan to sanction Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and all of the Turkish president’s top ministers, a move that would infuriate Ankara and inflame US-Turkey relations. 

Fears were also rising over an Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) resurgence as it emerged that US forces had failed to secure dozens of the most hardened jihadist fighters and the first known British member of Isil escaped Kurdish custody.  

Forces loyal to the Syrian regime have started arriving in the Kurdish-held province of Hasakah and Assad’s fighters are expected to start moving into key cities along the Syrian-Turkish border over the next 48 hours. 

The regime’s black-and-red flag was raised over government buildings in Hasakah and the nearby city of Qamishli for the first time in seven years, according to Syrian state media. 
The Russian deal, agreed to by the Kurds in desperation after they were abandoned by Mr Trump, offers Assad an unexpected opportunity to reassert his authority over large swathes  of northeast Syria. 

It likely also marks the end of Kurdish autonomy in the stretch of northeast Syrian they called “Rojava”, where Kurdish officials have governed independently from Damascus since 2012. 

“The betrayal process is officially completed," a Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) official said of the US withdrawal.

The SDF said that under the agreement Kurdish and Syrian regime troops would join forces to drive back the Turkish invasion. However, it seems likely that Russia will broker a broader agreement to avoid a clash between Turkey and the Assad regime.  

It is not clear if Turkish forces and their Syrian rebel allies will continue advancing into Syria now that Assad's soldiers have entered the area. 

The Pentagon said on Sunday that it was withdrawing all 1,000 American forces from northern Syria. But US media reported the Trump administration was preparing to pull its troops out of the country entirely, with the exception of small garrison in the southern town of al-Tanf to deter Iran.

If the US does mount a full-scale withdrawal it will also force the retreat of British and French special forces, who are dependent on American support to continue operating inside Syria

Meanwhile, Mr Trump signalled on Sunday night that would give into pressure from both Republicans and Democrats in Congress to impose sanctions on Turkey as punishment for the offensive against the Kurds.

Mr Trump said he was speaking to Lindsey Graham, a hawkish Republican senator and avowed Erdoğan critic, about “about imposing powerful sanctions on Turkey”. Mr Graham has laid out a plan that would sanction Mr Erdoğan’s personal assets and those Turkey’s foreign and defence minister, as well as blocking arms sales and military equipment to Turkey.  

It is not clear if Mr Trump has agreed to those sanctions specifically but if the final policy is even close to Mr Graham’s proposal it will infuriate Turkey and could lead to the cancellation of Mr Erdoğan’s scheduled visit to Washington next month. 

Mr Trump has so far show little appetite for sanctioning Turkey but he faces little choice but to go along with sanctions that have overwhelming support in Congress. A Western diplomat said the White House believes Congress would override any effort by Mr Trump to veto the sanctions. 

The situation in northeast Syria collapsed into chaos so quickly that US special forces did not have time to execute a plan to seize around 60 of the top Isil fighters in Kurdish custody, according to the New York Times

US commandos planned to take the prisoners from the Kurds and move them to Iraq but were unable to as the roads of northeast Syria were flooded with refugees and military vehicles while Turkish airstrikes rained down. 

It is not known if any British fighters were among the 60 men on the US list. America has already taken custody of Alexanda Kotey and El Shafee Elsheikh, the two surviving members of the “Beatles” group of of alleged British torturers.     

Meanwhile, Tooba Gondal, a 25-year-old who went to Syria and is alleged to have recruited other British women into Isil, became the first known UK member of the jihadist group to escape.

Ms Gondal was among around 800 women and children who broke free from a Kurdish camp in Ain Issa on Sunday when Turkish shells fell nearby. She texted family in the UK “I am free” and told them she was sleeping on the street of a nearby with her children, according to ITV.

Several other British women are believed to have escaped from the camp. All face a deeply uncertain fate as Assad’s forces take control of the area. 


Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader

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