publish time

12/05/2017

author name Arab Times

publish time

12/05/2017

Pentagon chief, Turkish PM meet
A member of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) holds a Kalashnikov assault rifle as he stands in the town of al-Karamah, 26 kms from the Islamic State (IS) group bastion of Raqqa on May 10. (AFP)
BEIRUT, May 11, (Agencies): The capture of a key Syrian town and a nearby dam from Islamic State group militants by Syrian Kurdish-led forces undermines the IS’s ability to defend its de facto capital, Raqqa and disrupts its ability to plan attacks in Western countries, the US-led international coalition said Thursday.Tabqa and the nearby dam, Syria’s largest, were seized a day earlier in an offensive that lasted nearly seven weeks, with the backing of airstrikes from the international coalition. The Kurdish-led forces were clearing the town and the dam Thursday of land mines, the militants’ favorite weapon.The fall of Tabqa also denies militants “a key coordination hub” that had been used by the group’s foreign fighters since 2013 to plan attacks against the West, the coalition said in a statement. Tabqa had served as a base for the planning such operations after the militants lost other territories in northern Syria.The capture of Tabqa sets the stage for an advance on Raqqa, some 25 miles (40 kms) to the east. Coalition spokesman Col John Dorrian said the capture of Tabqa is “yet another victory” for the Kurdish-led forces, the US’s most effective partner on the ground in Syria fighting IS. He earlier said that after Tabqa is secured, the Syrian Kurdish-led forces will continue operations to “isolate and seize Raqqa.”The capture of Tabqa came a day after the Trump administration announced it will supply the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces with heavier weapons, a decision that infuriated Turkey, which views the main Kurdish militia in the group as an extension of an outlawed rebel movement fighting an insurgency in its southeast.The SDF, which also includes Arab fighters, has captured large swathes of land in northern Syria from IS with the help of US-led airstrikes. The spokesman for the Kurdish militia that forms the backbone of the fighting force known as the People’s Protection Units, or YPG, told The Associated Press on Thursday that his group will seek “neighborly relations” with Turkey. “From our side, we want to keep good neighborly relations with Turkey,”Redur Khalil said in a series of messages from Syria. He called on Turkey to let go of its “unjustified” fears of the group. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called on the US to reverse its decision, saying weapons in the hands of the Kurdish-led forces are a “threat” to his country. Unnerved by the Kurdish advances along the border, Turkey sent troops into Syria last year to help allied Syrian forces battle IS and block the SDF.The Trump administration says it will supply the Syrian Democratic Forces, of which the YPG is the main component, with heavier weapons ahead of a push on the northern Syrian city of Raqqa, the IS group’s de facto capital. Talal Sillo, a commander with SDF, said no weapons have yet been delivered to the group but that the USled coalition had said that fast delivery was expected from weapons already in Syria with the international coalition.Pentagon chief Jim Mattis met Thursday with Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim in London, the mosthigh profile meeting between American and Turkish officials since the US announced it would arm Kurdish fighters in Syria. In a brief readout of the approximately 30-minute meeting, a Pentagon statement said the two men discussed a range of bilateral security issues.“The secretary reiterated US commitment to our NATO ally,” stated the readout, provided by Pentagon spokeswoman Dana White. “Both leaders affirmed their support for peace and stability in both Iraq and Syria.” It was not immediately clear if the leaders discussed President Donald Trump’s decision this week to arm the Kurdish YPG, who are fighting the Islamic State group in Syria. The move announced on Tuesday has already provoked fury in Turkey, which says the YPG are linked to its own domestic Kurdish separatist group the PKK, or Kurdish Workers Party.