Kurdish Militia Casualties Climb as Turkey’s Syria Offensive Continues

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/10/world/middleeast/syria-turkey-offensive.html

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AKCAKALE, Turkey — Shells and rockets landed in the center of this busy Turkish border town early Thursday afternoon, killing two civilians, one of them an infant, and wounding 46, in a sharp escalation of the conflict between the Turkish state and the Kurdish militias who fought alongside American forces in the campaign to contain Islamist extremists in northern Syria.

The attack came as a Turkish offensive against Kurdish fighters in northern Syria entered its second day, with Turkish troops continuing an air and ground assault against the Kurdish groups, killing at least 16 Kurds, rights groups reported.

By Thursday morning, Turkey had conducted 181 airstrikes in the area, its Defense Ministry said. The Turks also used cranes to remove parts of a concrete border wall, allowing Turkish troops and military vehicles to enter Kurdish-held territory in northern Syria.

Turkish-backed Syrian Arab fighters said they had taken at least one formerly Kurdish-held village that lies just meters from the border.

On Thursday afternoon, Kurdish fighters appeared to return fire, as three sharp explosions in Akcakale filled streets around the town’s police headquarters with smoke, and sent pedestrians fleeing for cover and armored police vehicles barreling through the streets.

On both sides of the border, the fighting sent droves of civilians to cram into cars and pickup trucks in search of safety.

More than 60,000 Syrians in Kurdish-held territory have fled away from the border since Wednesday, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a conflict monitor based in Britain.

The fighting, which began on Wednesday, marks a new stage in an eight-year-old Syrian civil war that began in 2011 as a wave of protests against President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, but which has since escalated into a complex military conflict involving foreign armies and local militias formed of a wide range of actors including former regime officers, Islamist extremists — and Kurdish nationalists.

Kurdish militias received the implicit backing of the United States, who allied with Kurdish fighters in order to clear the northeastern Syria of militants from the Islamic State.

This gave Kurdish groups an opportunity to carve out an autonomous statelet in northeastern Syria, buttressing the southern Turkish border.

But this Kurdish presence, so close to the Turkish border, enraged the Turkish government, since these Kurdish fighters had close ties to a Kurdish guerrilla force inside Turkey.

For several years, a small American force kept the peace between the Syrian Kurds and the Turkish state — until President Trump’s sudden decision on Sunday to pull American troops out of Turkey’s way, despite qualms from his own military officers and State Department officials, and criticism from Republican politicians.

On Thursday afternoon, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey characterized the invasion as an attempt to preserve Syria’s long-term sovereignty and to clear the area of not just Kurdish fighters but also the remnants of the Islamic State.

‘‘The aim of Operation Peace Spring is to contribute to the territorial integrity and political union of Syria,” Mr. Erdogan said in a speech to his political party, using the Turkish military’s code word for the invasion.

Mr. Erdogan dismissed concerns that the mayhem of the invasion would risk allowing the escape of thousands of Islamic State militants held captive by Kurdish militias.

“We will keep in jail the ones who should be kept in jail and send the other ones to their countries of origin, if those countries accept them,” he said.

Turkish officials said that 109 Kurdish fighters had been killed since Wednesday, though independent monitors reported lower estimates. At least 16 Kurds were reported to have been killed, one monitoring group said.

Members of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces were killed in the Tel Abyad and Ras al-Ain areas of northeastern Syria, along with six attackers of unknown identity, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. American troops had withdrawn from both areas on Monday.

An additional 33 members of the Syrian Democratic Forces were wounded, the monitoring group said.

Mr. Trump condemned Turkey’s operation as a “bad idea” on Wednesday and said this week that Turkey, a NATO ally, would face economic punishment if it did anything he considered “off limits.”

In a statement on Wednesday, Turkey’s defense minister, Hulusi Akar, said the aims of the operation were to “ensure the security of our borders and the safety of our people,” naming Kurdish militias and Islamic State militants as threats.

Six hours of airstrikes ensued, followed by Turkish and Syrian Arab ground troops crossing the border into Syria.

Reached by telephone inside Syria, a member of a Syrian Arab militia said around a brigade of around 1,000 Turkish-backed Syrian fighters had taken the town of al-Yabseh, after meeting no resistance.

“We captured the town an hour ago without any clashes,” said al-Hareth Dahdouni, 31, a representative of the Shami Front, a Turkish-backed Syrian militia. “The town was totally empty. It is just one minute away from the border.”

The fighting threatens to create a humanitarian crisis for hundreds of thousands of people who have been cut off from Syrian assistance for years. Most rely on the Kurdish forces and aid groups for basic services. Civilians jammed roads while fleeing with their possessions on Wednesday.

Henrietta Fore, the executive director of UNICEF, said in a statement on Wednesday that the military escalation would have “dramatic consequences” on the ability to provide aid.

“I urge all parties to protect children and the civilian infrastructure on which they depend, in accordance with international human rights and humanitarian law,” she said. “The use of explosive weapons in populated areas causes unacceptable harm to children.”

Inside Turkey, families also began loading up their belongings and leaving town to travel away from the border. “We are going west because people were hit on the east side of town,” said Ayse Kaya as she piled her family into a small car.

But others, including Syrian refugees now living in Turkey, were less concerned.

“I have seen this before, I am from Syria, I am going to prepare a shisha,” said Mustafa Ali, an old man in a long cotton robe, referring to a traditional tobacco pipe. “I came from Aleppo, I saw many of these in Aleppo. I am going to prepare a pipe at home.”

Mr. Ali also expressed support for the Turkish operation, which he hoped would allow Syrian Arabs to regain control of Kurdish-held territory. “What we need is for Turkey to clean our land and then we can go back to our land,” he said.

Carlotta Gall reported from Akcakale, and Patrick Kingsley from Istanbul. Daniel Victor contributed reporting from Hong Kong, Karam Shoumali from Berlin, and Hwaida Saad from Beirut, Lebanon.