Trump Endorses Turkish Military Operation in Syria, Shifting
U.S. Policy
Turkish military vehicles patrolling in northeastern Syria
this month as part of joint patrols with the United States.CreditCreditDelil
Souleiman/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
By Eric Schmitt, Maggie Haberman and Edward Wong
Oct. 7, 2019
Updated 8:39 a.m. ET
WASHINGTON — In a major shift in United States military
policy in Syria, the White House said on Sunday that President Trump had given
his endorsement for a Turkish military operation that would sweep away
American-backed Kurdish forces near the border in Syria.
Turkey considers the Kurdish forces to be a terrorist
insurgency, and has long sought to end American support for the group. But the
Kurdish fighters, which are part of the Syrian Democratic Forces, or S.D.F.,
have been the United States’ most reliable partner in fighting the Islamic
State in a strategic corner of northern Syria.
Now, Mr. Trump’s decision goes against the recommendations
of top officials in the Pentagon and the State Department who have sought to
keep a small troop presence in northeast Syria to continue operations against the
Islamic State, or ISIS, and to act as a critical counterweight to Iran and
Russia.
Administration officials said that Mr. Trump spoke directly
with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey on the issue on Sunday. And the
officials indicated that the 100 to 150 United States military personnel
deployed to that area would be pulled back in advance of any Turkish operation
but that they would not be completely withdrawn from Syria.
On Monday, witnesses in Syria saw United States forces
withdrawing from two positions in northeastern Syria: observation posts in Tel
Abyad and Ein Eissa.
“Turkey will soon be moving forward with its long-planned
operation into Northern Syria,” the White House said in a statement released
just before 11 p.m. in Washington. “The United States Armed Forces will not
support or be involved in the operation, and United States forces, having
defeated the ISIS territorial ‘Caliphate,’ will no longer be in the immediate
area.”
It was unclear how extensive the Turkish operation would be,
or whether Turkish forces would clash with the American-backed Kurds, a
development that could jeopardize many of the counterterrorism gains achieved
by the American military in the fight against ISIS.
ImageFighters with the Syrian Democratic Forces during a
battle against the Islamic State in Raqqa, Syria, in 2017.
Fighters with the Syrian Democratic Forces during a battle
against the Islamic State in Raqqa, Syria, in 2017.CreditIvor Prickett for The
New York Times
Soner Cagaptay, the director of the Turkish Research Program
at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, and author of “Erdogan’s
Empire: Turkey and the Politics of the Middle East,” said in a telephone
interview that a Turkish incursion uncontested by the United States would allow
Turkey to cut another swath into Kurdish-controlled territory in Syria. That
would give Mr. Erdogan a ready place to send hundreds of thousands of Syrian
refugees and prove yet again his influence with Mr. Trump on Syria policy.
“It’s quite a
significant development,” Mr. Cagaptay said.
Many Syria experts criticized the White House decision and
cautioned that American abandonment of its Kurdish allies could widen the
eight-year Syrian conflict and prompt the Kurds to ally with the Syrian
government of President Bashar al-Assad to combat the much larger and more
technologically advanced Turkish army.
“Allowing Turkey to move into northern Syria is one of the
most destabilizing moves we can do in the Middle East,” Representative Ruben
Gallego, an Arizona Democrat and former Marine who served in the Iraq war, said
on Twitter on Sunday night. “The Kurds will never trust America again. They
will look for new alliances or independence to protect themselves.”
The announcement by the White House came as a shock to the
S.D.F., Kurdish officials said on Monday. In a statement, the S.D.F. said that
it had fulfilled its obligations in the efforts to reduce tensions with the
Turks but that the United States had not.
The statement warned that a Turkish incursion could endanger
the progress made to establish security in the wake of the battle against the
Islamic State. It also called on Kurdish forces to “defend our homeland from
the Turkish aggression.”
Mr. Erdogan has demanded a “safe zone” for his nation to run
20 miles deep and 300 miles along the Turkish-Syrian border east of the
Euphrates. That area, he has said, would be reserved for the return of at least
a million Syrian refugees now inside Turkey. Mr. Erdogan has threatened to send
a wave of Syrian migrants to Europe instead if the international community does
not support the initiative to send them back to Syria.
Since early August, the American and Turkish militaries have
been working together on a series of confidence-building measures — including
joint reconnaissance flights and ground patrols — in a 75-mile-long strip of
that 300-mile border area.
American-backed Kurdish forces have pulled back several
miles and destroyed fortifications in that area.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey and President Trump
at the Group of 20 summit meeting in Japan in June.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey and President Trump
at the Group of 20 summit meeting in Japan in June.CreditErin Schaff/The New
York Times
The pace of these operations has not been fast enough for
Mr. Erdogan, and last week he began indicating that he planned to launch an
incursion across the border. He did the same thing over the summer, prompting a
flurry of American diplomatic activity bolstered by the military
confidence-building measures.
Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper and Gen. Mark Milley, the
new chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, both called their Turkish
counterparts last week to try and reduce tensions. But unresolved threats from
Turkey apparently resulted in the decision by Mr. Trump on Sunday.
American officials contacted late Sunday would not say how
far back from the Turkish border American troops would redeploy, or whether
this signals the beginning of a larger overall withdrawal of the 1,000 American
troops now in northeast Syria conducting and supporting counterterrorism
operations. Those troops rely on their partnership with the S.D.F. which has
60,000 total fighters, including both Kurdish and Arab militias.
One official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to
describe a fluid military situation, said that American forces were pulling
back from northeast Syria to “get out of the way.”
Officials described a military and political tension as the
American military is pulled between two important allies in the civil war in
Syria. Turkey is a major NATO ally, but the Kurdish S.D.F. forces have been a
partner in the fight against ISIS.
“We are not going to
support the Turks and we are not going to support the S.D.F.,” the official
said. “If they go to combat, we’re going to stay out of it.”
There has been grave tension over Syria within the
administration, as well.
In late December 2018, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis resigned
over Mr. Trump’s surprise order of a full withdrawal of 2,000 American troops
from Syria. Two days later, Brett McGurk, the special presidential envoy for
the coalition to defeat ISIS, also resigned. In the months afterward, American
officials quietly worked behind the scenes to ensure that some level of troops
would remain in northeast Syria.
As recently as the week of the United Nations General
Assembly summit in late September, senior American officials were saying there
was consensus across the United States government, including Mr. Trump, on
ensuring the welfare of the Kurdish forces and warding off Turkey’s persistent
desire to attack those forces.
But around that same time, Turkish officials were privately
saying that they saw things very differently: They said they perceived a sharp
division between Mr. Trump and other American officials — most notably generals
in the United States Central Command, which oversees troops in the Middle East.
While it was clear the generals wanted to bar Turkey from the safe zone and
keep American troops there, Mr. Trump clearly wanted the troops out, they said,
and in the end he might get his way.
Mr. Erdogan had traveled to New York with the intention of talking
about Syria and the Kurds with Mr. Trump in a private meeting. He attended a
group dinner hosted by Mr. Trump, but the two did not have a formal meeting
there. Mr. Trump did say at one event that Mr. Erdogan had “become a friend of
mine.” The telephone call between the two on Sunday might have been organized
as a substitute for the meeting that never took place.
“This looks to be another reckless decision made without
deliberation or consultation following a call with a foreign leader,” Mr.
McGurk said after hearing of Mr. Trump’s decision on Sunday. “The White House
statement bears no relation to facts on the ground. If implemented, it will
significantly increase risk to our personnel, as well as hasten ISIS’s
resurgence.”
Turkish officials pointed to Mr. Trump’s favorable exchanges
with Mr. Erdogan during the G20 summit meeting in Japan in June as another sign
of a strong relationship between the two leaders. That bilateral meeting was
more about a different security flash point between the United States and
Turkey — the purchase by Turkey of the Russian S-400 missile defense system.
But Mr. Trump has largely brushed that issue aside.
The White House statement on Sunday came as the Islamic
State is gathering new strength, conducting guerrilla attacks across Iraq and
Syria, retooling its financial networks and targeting new recruits at an
allied-run tent camp, American military, counterterrorism and intelligence
officers say.
Though Mr. Trump hailed a total defeat of the Islamic State
this year — and asserted its territorial demise in Sunday night’s statement —
defense officials in the region see things differently, acknowledging that what
remains of the terrorist group is here to stay.
Over the past several months, ISIS has made inroads into the
sprawling Al Hol tent camp in northeast Syria, and there is no ready plan to
deal with the 70,000 people there, including thousands of family members of
ISIS fighters.
American intelligence officials say the Al Hol camp, managed
by Syrian Kurdish allies with little aid or security, is evolving into a hotbed
of ISIS ideology. The American-backed Syrian Kurdish force also holds more than
10,000 ISIS fighters, including 2,000 foreigners, in separate makeshift
prisons.
The custody of all these people could be in jeopardy,
American officials said Sunday night, depending on whether any Turkish
incursion sets off a much larger conflict in northeast Syria.
Eric Schmitt and Maggie Haberman reported from Washington,
and Edward Wong from Hong Kong. Ben Hubbard contributed reporting from Beirut.
© 2019 The New York Times Company
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