US and Turkey to create 'Islamic State-free zone' in Syria
Ankara: The US and Turkey have agreed to work together to drive Islamic State (IS) jihadists from northern Syria, senior US officials said on Monday, as Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu vowed to press ahead with parallel strikes against Kurdish militants.
The potentially game-changing accord with the US was revealed as Turkey fuelled the growing anger of its Kurdish minority by shelling a Kurdish-held village in northern Syria while its warplanes continued to pound Kurdish targets in northern Iraq.
Referring to Islamic State by the acronym ISIL, a senior US official told AFP that Ankara and Washington aimed "to establish an ISIL-free zone and ensure greater security and stability along Turkey's border with Syria."
Details of the zone "remain to be worked out", the official, who asked not to be named, said during a visit by President Barack Obama to Ethiopia, while adding that "any joint military efforts will not include the imposition of a no-fly zone" -- a long standing Turkish demand.
It would however entail Turkey, NATO'S only mainly Muslim member, supporting US "partners on the ground" already fighting IS extremists.
But many question whether Turkey is more interested in limiting Kurdish capabilities in Syria and Iraq than tackling IS.
Davutoglu said Turkey would press ahead with military operations against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) until the group disarmed.
"We will continue our fight until we obtain a certain result," he told ATV television, urging the Kurdish separatists, who have waged a decades-long insurgency in southeastern Turkey, to deliver on its 2013 promise to lay down arms.
US State Department spokesman John Kirby reiterated that Turkey had a "right to defend itself" against the PKK, which the US also labels a terrorist organisatio.
Kirby said the US-led "fight against ISIL is not in cooperation with, coordination with or communication with the PKK. Our fight against ISIL is with 62 other nations in this coalition who are helping us go after these guy."
Turkey has called an extraordinary NATO meeting for Tuesday over its "anti-terror" offensive against the Kurdish rebels and IS.
French President Francois Hollande, in a telephone call on Monday with Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, "thanked his counterpart for the vigorous action against Daesh and for strengthening Turkey's engagement alongside the (anti-IS) coalition", his office said. The French statement made no mention of the anti-Kurdish strikes.
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg backed Turkey's right to defend itself but told the BBC Sunday "of course self-defence has to be proportionate".
He also cautioned Ankara about burning bridges with the Kurds. "For years there has been progress to try to find a peaceful political solution," he told Norwegian state broadcaster NRK.
The Syrian Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) -- which routed IS from the flashpoint Syrian town of Kobane early this year with the help of Western air strikes -- said Turkish tanks hit its positions and those of allied Arab rebels overnight in Zur Maghar village in Aleppo province, wounding four rebels and several villagers.
But Turkish officials denied the military was deliberately targeting Syrian Kurds and said it was responding to fire from the Syrian side of the border.
Deal With US
Davutoglu told a group of Turkish newspaper editors that Ankara's intervention in Iraq and Syria would "change the balance" in the region, but ruled out sending ground troops into Syria.
Turkey has given the United States the green light to use its Incirlik air base to attack IS after months of tough negotiations.
Davutoglu said Ankara's demands for a no-fly zone were addressed "to a certain extent", according to the Hurriyet daily.
"Air cover is important, the air protection for the Free Syrian Army and other moderate elements fighting Daesh," he said.
"If we will not send ground forces -- and that we will not do -- then certain elements that cooperate with us on the ground must be protected," Davutoglu added.
The cross-border violence has sent tensions soaring in Turkey, with police using water cannon to disperse nightly protests in Istanbul and other major cities against IS and the government's policies on Syria.
Kurdish Fury
Davutoglu ordered the air strikes and artillery barrages after a devastating suicide bombing last week in a Turkish town close to the Syrian border that killed 32 people. Ankara blamed the attack on IS.
The bombing in the predominantly Kurdish town of Suruc incensed Turkey's Kurds, who have long accused the government of colluding with IS, allegations it categorically denies.
Protests in Istanbul left one policeman dead. More than 1,000 people with alleged links to IS, the PKK or other far-left groups had been rounded up nationwide.
The PKK said a truce between the government and the militants that has largely held since 2013, while peace talks were ongoing, had been rendered meaningless by the attacks.
On Sunday, the PKK's military wing, the People's Defence Forces (HPG), claimed the killing of two Turkish soldiers in a car bombing in Diyarbakir province.
The PKK syas four PKK fighters have been killed in Turkish air strikes in recent days.
Two Turkish policemen were shot dead in their beds last week in the southeast, in killings claimed by the PKK.