Turkey vs Syrian Kurds: 'Race Between the Two Parties Where Clear Winner is US'

© AFP 2023 / ARIS MESSINISTurkish soldiers on a tank sit opposite the Syrian town of Ain al-Arab, known as Kobane by the Kurds, at the Turkish-Syrian border in the southeastern Turkish village of Mursitpinar, Sanliurfa province (File)
Turkish soldiers on a tank sit opposite the Syrian town of Ain al-Arab, known as Kobane by the Kurds, at the Turkish-Syrian border in the southeastern Turkish village of Mursitpinar, Sanliurfa province (File) - Sputnik International
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As long as Washington's two allies Turkey and the Syrian Kurds, who are engaged in bitter rivalry, also fight against Daesh, the US will support both, Mehmet Yegin, researcher on Turkey-US relations and analyst at Ankara-based think-tank USAK, told Radio Sputnik.

Washington's "primary aim" is to tackle Daesh and "whoever the US is allied with does not change the end result," he said.

Whether it is the Democratic Union Party (PYD) or Ankara, "it does not change the equation," he added. If these forces are fighting against the brutal group that still controls large parts of Iraq and Syria, they "will be accepted by the US."

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The Turkish government views the PYD and its armed wing, the People's Protection Units (YPG), as a terrorist organization. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his supporters have accused the PYD of having links with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), a militant organization trying to achieve greater autonomy for the Kurds in Turkey.

Paradoxically, both parties are Washington's allies in the anti-Daesh efforts. Moreover, the US appears to benefit from their rivalry.

"This is a way of increasing the willingness to fight against Daesh" since both sides, Ankara and the Syrian Kurds, want to strengthen their positions in general and with respect to each other, he said.  "That's a kind of a race between the two parties and the clear winner is the US."

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Meanwhile, relations between Washington and Ankara appear to be improving. At least, the US has backed Turkey's ground military operation in Syria, formally known as Operation Euphrates Shield. So much so that last week US special operations forces joined the Turkish military and their Syrian rebel allies to assist the Ankara-led operation aimed at freeing the border areas in northern Syrian from Daesh.

The bilateral ties were exacerbated by the failed military coup that rocked Turkey on July 15 and the reserved response of US officials to those events.

The Syrian Kurds have also been a major point of contention in the relationship, but "the US and Turkey seem to have reached a modus vivendi on the issue," the analyst observed. "I think that will bring more cooperation. … The latest picture that we are seeing is that the US is supporting the Turkish effort. So I think there will be a certain rapprochement."

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Mehmet Yegin also pointed out that Turkey and the US have not stopped coordinating their ground operations even when their relations hit a low point.

The analyst further said that Turkey was ready to be a part of a trilateral alliance that will see Moscow, Washington and Ankara join efforts to resolve the devastating Syrian crisis that has already claimed more than 280,000 lives and left half of the country's population displaced.

"I think Turkey is ready to be part of it, but major powers, the US and Russia, do not seem to be there yet," he said. "If there is an agreement between these countries, Turkey will not object to that."

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