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Trump’s Syrian withdrawal delayed as US looks to safeguard Kurdish forces

John Bolton says Turkey must first guarantee the safety of Kurdish fighters in Syria before the US withdraws its forces.

John Bolton says Turkey must first guarantee the safety of Kurdish fighters in Syria before the US withdraws its forces. Photo: AAP

White House national security advisor John Bolton has added a new condition to the US withdrawal from Syria, saying Turkey must agree to protect the United States’ Kurdish allies.

President Donald Trump’s abrupt decision to announce a US pull-out from Syria left many questions, chiefly whether Kurdish fighters who had been operating in northern Syria alongside US forces would now be targeted by their long-time enemy Turkey.

Mr Bolton, on a trip to Israel and Turkey, said he would stress in talks with Turkish officials, including President Tayyip Erdogan, that Kurdish forces must be safeguarded.

“We don’t think the Turks ought to undertake military action that’s not fully coordinated with and agreed to by the United States at a minimum so they don’t endanger our troops, but also so that they meet the president’s requirement that the Syrian opposition forces that have fought with us are not endangered,” Mr Bolton told reporters on Sunday ahead of talks with Israeli officials.

Asked whether a US withdrawal would not take place in Syria until Turkey guaranteed the Kurdish fighters would be safe, Mr Bolton said, “basically, that’s right”.

The Syrian YPG militia has been highly effective in the war against Islamic State, a part of the wider Syrian conflict that has pitted a range of insurgent groups against President Bashar al-Assad’s forces and sometimes against each other.

But Turkey has long castigated Washington for its military relationship with the Syrian YPG militia.

Ankara regards the YPG an extension of the PKK, a Kurdish group that has waged a 34-year-old insurgency in Turkey.
The YPG has indicated it might seek a deal with Damascus after US forces have gone.

Mr Bolton, who will travel to Turkey on Monday, said the United States will talk to Ankara to find out what its objectives and capabilities were.
Erdogan’s spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said Turkey’s targets were the YPG, the PKK and Islamic State.

“One aim of Turkey’s fight against the PKK and its Syrian extensions is to rescue the Kurds from the cruelty and oppression of this terrorist group,” state-owned Anadolu news agency quoted Kalin as saying, in comments that emerged after Mr Bolton made his remarks.

“Turkey will continue decisively its efforts to end the war, provide security, and implement the process of political transition without discriminating between our Syrian brothers on the basis of religion, ethnicity or sect,” Kalin said.

Mr Trump reiterated that the United States would be pulling its troops out of Syria but suggested the move might not happen soon.

“I never said we are doing it that quickly. But we are decimating ISIS,” Mr Trump told reporters in Washington on Sunday.

-AAP

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