How Donald Trump's shift on Syria could have a profound impact on ethnic Kurds

Questions surround the fate of ethnic Kurds in northern Syria after US President Donald Trump announced plans to withdraw from the region.

Members of the Syrian Democratic Forces preparing to return to the front line in Raqqa, Syria, in 2017.

Members of the Syrian Democratic Forces preparing to return to the front line in Raqqa, Syria, in 2017 Source: CreditIvor Prickett for The New York Times

President Donald Trump’s instantly casts doubt on the fate of ethnic Kurds who have been the United States’ closest allies in the fight against the Islamic State group.

Now, the question of who could provide a long-term deterrent to Iranian and Russian interests in the area — and help ensure that the Islamic State does not rebound in Syria — is suddenly very much in play again.
A group of men were detained and questioned by the S.D.F. in January for links to the Islamic State in southeastern Syria.
A group of men were detained and questioned by the S.D.F. in January for links to the Islamic State in southeastern Syria. Source: Ivor Prickett for The New York Times

What now for US allies?

The prospect of a Turkish military push into northern Syria has caused deep fear in Kurdish areas, as well as a burning sense Kurds have been betrayed by the United States after years of partnership on the battlefield.

The Syrian Democratic Forces — a loose coalition of militias that is led by Syrian Kurdish fighters and came together expressly to fight the Islamic State with US backing, training and air support — accused the United States on Monday of failing to fulfil its obligations, paving the way for Turkey to invade.

The SDF also warned that a Turkish incursion could undo the gains made against the Islamic State.

“This military operation in northeast Syria will have a great negative effect on our war against the ISIS organization and will destroy all that has been achieved in terms of stability over the past years,” the group said in a statement, using an alternative name for the Islamic State.

It said it would “not hesitate for one instant to defend ourselves” and called on the area’s people to “defend our homeland from Turkish aggression.”

It was unclear when and where Turkish forces would cross into Syria, but the sense of betrayal by the United States among Syrian Kurds was clear.
Turkish artillery deployed near the border with Syria in Sanliurfa Province, Turkey, on Sunday.
Turkish artillery deployed near the border with Syria in Sanliurfa Province, Turkey, on Sunday. Source: AP
“US forces on the ground showed us that this is not how they value friendship and alliance,” Mustafa Bali, a spokesman for the SDF, wrote on Twitter on Monday.

Mr Bali added that Trump’s decision was “about to ruin the trust and cooperation between the SDF and US".

Still, the Syrian Kurds have few other supporters to turn to.

Inside Syria, most of what remains of the country’s rebel movement is backed by Turkey and opposes the SDF, and its relations with the government of President Bashar Assad are chilly.

Some analysts speculate that the Kurds will be forced to court Assad’s government for protection.

What role do the Kurds play in Syria?

The Kurds are the driver within the Syrian Democratic Forces, which came together to help the United States fight the jihadis of the Islamic State.

Its fighters received air support and training from the United States and fought together on the ground with US Special Operations forces against the jihadis, losing thousands of fighters.

That has won the group praise from a range of top US officials, and after eight years of war in Syria, the SDF remains the only significant armed group still aligned with Washington.

While many of the group’s fighters and most of its leaders are ethnic Kurds, the SDF also includes Arabs and members of Syria’s other religious and ethnic minorities.

Its ideology is secular, and it promotes a form of democracy characterized by rule at the community level.

The United States has given the SDF generous military support, but it has not endorsed the group’s political project, in part to keep from alienating Turkey even more.

Since the official destruction of the Islamic State caliphate early this year, the SDF has continued to pursue Islamic State remnants in cooperation with US forces while seeking to strengthen the network of local councils that have been established to govern areas liberated from the jihadis.

The Kurdish forces have also become the de facto guardians of tens of thousands of former Islamic State residents and jailed fighters in northern Syria, and they receive limited aid to do so.

If a new conflict breaks out in the area, the question of what happens to those Islamic State prisoners and their family members will become urgent.
A military base from which United States forces pulled out in the town of Tel Arqam, near Syria’s border with Turkey, on Monday.
On Monday United States forces pulled out of this military base in the town of Tel Arqam, near Syria’s border with Turkey. Source: Delil Souleiman/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images.

Why does Turkey want to invade?

The United States’ close cooperation with the SDF has angered Turkey, a US ally in NATO.

Turkey accuses the Kurdish fighters of being terrorists and closely linked to the PKK, a guerrilla organization that has fought a bloody, decades-long insurgency against the Turkish state.

Both Turkey and the United States consider the PKK a terrorist organization.

But US officials have publicly tried to play down the links between that group and the SDF while privately acknowledging that they exist.

While there are few clear examples of militant attacks on Turkey originating from SDF-controlled territory, Turkey has watched the growth of Kurdish autonomy across its southern border with a rising sense of alarm, fearing that it could pose a national security threat.

Turkey has often raised these concerns with the United States, and in recent weeks US officials had sought to bring down tensions by brokering security arrangements near the Syrian-Turkish border with both sides.

But those measures failed to satisfy Turkish officials, prompting the country’s president, Sunday that he planned to send his forces into Syria to root out the Kurdish forces.

Ben Hubbard - New York Times copyright 2019


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5 min read
Published 8 October 2019 11:38am
Updated 8 October 2019 11:50am
By Ben Hubbard
Source: The New York Times


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