Trump urges closer cooperation with Turkey on Syria

Macron (L) laughs with Trump before a meeting at the Palace Hotel during the 72nd session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
Macron (L) laughs with Trump before a meeting at the Palace Hotel during the 72nd session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
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AFP, Washington :
The United States and its allies must work more closely with Turkey in Syria, President Donald Trump said Tuesday in a call with his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron.
Washington has previously expressed concern about Turkey’s decision to plunge itself more deeply into Syria’s civil war with an offensive against Kurdish-held border areas.
But according to the White House, in conversation with Macron, Trump “stressed the need to intensify cooperation with Turkey with respect to shared strategic challenges in Syria.”
In January, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan ordered an assault against the enclave of Afrin in northern Syria to root out the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) there.
Turkey views the YPG as simply an offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which is fighting an insurgency inside Turkey and whose fighters Ankara and Washington brand “terrorists.”
But the US military has worked closely with the YPG inside Syria, making the Kurdish fighters the backbone of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), set up to fight the Islamic State group.
US officials have repeatedly complained that Turkey’s battle against the YPG is a distraction from the anti-IS fight, but Trump’s remarks Tuesday suggest growing sympathy for his NATO ally. In addition to discussing Turkey and Syria, Trump and Macron touched on the allied response to Russia’s alleged attempt to assassinate a double-agent in a nerve agent attack on British soil.
“Both leaders expressed support for the West’s strong response to Russia’s chemical weapons attack in Salisbury, United Kingdom, including the expulsion of numerous Russian intelligence officers on both sides of the Atlantic,” the White House said.
This marked Trump’s first personal, public comment on the Western response after he allowed his spokeswoman to announce Washington’s unprecedented decision to expel 60 alleged Russian agents.
Meanwhile, the Syrian army is preparing to launch a “huge” operation against the last rebel-held town in eastern Ghouta unless the Jaish al-Islam insurgent group agrees to hand over the area, a pro-Syrian government newspaper reported on Wednesday.
The group has been negotiating about the town of Douma with the government’s main ally Russia. But a commander in the regional alliance fighting in support of President Bashar al-Assad said late on Wednesday that the talks had stopped.
“The negotiations stopped. Most of the militants have set out big conditions, and the Russians and the Syrians have refused them,” the commander said.
A war monitor, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said the Syrian military had resumed artillery bombardment of Douma, where blasts were heard.
Routed by the Russian-backed Syrian army, rebels in other parts of eastern Ghouta are leaving in convoys to insurgent-held areas in the northwest under withdrawal deals that are restoring Assad’s control.
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