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First US drone strike from Turkey against Daesh in Syria

By Reuters - Aug 05,2015 - Last updated at Aug 05,2015

A mourner touches the grave of Vatan Budak, a victim of the suicide bomb attack in Suruc on July 22, during his funeral on Tuesday (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON/ANKARA — The United States has conducted its first drone strike into northern Syria from a base in Turkey, the Pentagon said on Wednesday, ahead of what Ankara said would soon be a “comprehensive battle” against Daesh militants there.

A spokesman in Washington said the raid by an unmanned drone was launched on Monday from the Incirlik Airbase near the southern city of Adana in Turkey, a US ally with the second largest armed forces in NATO. Preparations were under way for strikes inside Syria by manned US warplanes.

Until recently, only reconaissance drones flew missions from Incirlik.

But Turkey formally agreed to open its air bases to US and coalition strike aircraft last month, a major policy change after years of reluctance to take a frontline role against the Islamist fighters pressing on its borders.

Ankara and Washington have been working on plans to provide air cover for a group of US-trained Syrian rebels and jointly sweep Daesh from a strip of territory stretching about 80km along the Turkish frontier.

“As part of our agreement with the US we have made progress regarding the opening up of our bases, particularly Incirlik,” Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu earlier told state broadcaster TRT, referring to a major air base near the southern city of Adana.

“We’re seeing that manned and unmanned American planes are arriving and soon we will launch a comprehensive battle against Islamic State [Daesh] all together,” he said during a trip to Malaysia.

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Al Moualem was quoted by state television on Wednesday as saying Syria supported efforts to combat Daesh provided they were coordinated with Damascus.

“For us in Syria there is no moderate opposition and immoderate opposition. Whoever carries weapons against the state is a terrorist,” he was quoted as saying during a visit to ally Iran, adding Damascus had been informed about the presence of the US-trained rebels.

“The United States contacted us before they sent in this group and said they are fighting against Daesh and not the Syrian army at all,” he said.

“We said we support any effort to combat Daesh in coordination and consultation with the Syrian government, otherwise it will be a breach of Syrian sovereignty.”

Potential ‘game-changer’

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan spoke by phone with his Iranian counterpart Hassan Rouhani, informing him of Turkey’s latest military operations and reiterating his view that there can be no peace in Syria without the removal of President Bashar Assad, sources in Erdogan’s office said.

Tehran, which has stood by Assad through more than four years of civil war, said it would present the United Nations with its own peace plan for Syria.

Russia, another Assad ally, meanwhile said it had not been able to agree on a common approach to fighting Daesh after its foreign minister met US Secretary of State John Kerry for the second time in recent days.

Diplomats familiar with the US-led coalition’s plans say cutting off Daesh’s access to the Turkish border, over which foreign fighters and supplies have flowed, could be a game-changer in the fight against the insurgents.

The core of the US-trained rebels, who number fewer than 60, will be well equipped and be able to call in close air support when needed, they say.

But there are major challenges.

Washington said on Tuesday it had indications some of the rebels trained by its military were captured by fighters from Al Qaeda’s Syria wing, Al Nusra Front, underscoring the vulnerability of a group only deployed to the battlefield in recent weeks.

Turkey is meanwhile distrustful of the Syrian Kurdish YPG militia, which has proved a useful US ally in fighting Daesh, and which controls adjacent territory. Ankara wants the Kurdish guerrillas to advance no further than the Euphrates River, on the eastern fringe of the planned “safe zone”.

 

Coalition forces

 

Turkey launched several air strikes against Daesh militants in northern Syria just under two weeks ago after one of its soldiers was killed in cross-border fire. It also carried out near-simultaneous attacks on camps belonging to the PKK Kurdish militant group in northern Iraq.

Turkey fears Kurdish fighters could build on Syrian Kurdish gains and move towards creation of a Kurdish state embracing Iraqi, Syrian and Turkish territory.

Opponents have accused President Erdogan of using the war against Daesh as a cover for preventing Kurdish gains, pointing out the air strikes against the PKK have so far been heavier than those against the Islamist radicals.

Turkish officials deny the campaign against Daesh is a cover, saying the offensive is a joint operation with the coalition and will only begin in earnest when Washington and its allies are ready.

“There are other countries within the coalition... interested in joining such as Britain and France, while among the countries in the region, there is a possibility that Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Jordan will take part,” Cavusoglu said.

“Daesh poses the biggest threat to Turkey both because it is right on the other side of our border and also due to the flow of foreign fighters. It has to be eliminated.”

Daesh has seized large parts of Syria and neighbouring Iraq in its drive to create a caliphate.

 

Erdogan has said a “safe zone” created by pushing out Daesh could allow 1.7 million refugees in Turkey to start going home. US officials say this is not the main aim, while the United Nations has warned against calling it a “safe zone” unless the protection of civilians can be guaranteed.

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