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Turkish tanks roll into Syria, opening new line of attack

By Reuters - Sep 04,2016 - Last updated at Sep 04,2016

Children play along a street in the rebel-held Al Sheikh Said neighbourhood of Aleppo, Syria, on Friday (Reuters photo)

ELBEYLI, Turkey/BEIRUT — Turkey and its rebel allies opened up a new line of attack in northern Syria on Saturday as Turkish tanks crossed the frontier from Kilis province, making a western thrust in an operation to sweep militants from its border.

The incursion from Kilis — which has been repeatedly targeted by Daesh rockets from inside Syria over the last year — coincided with a push elsewhere in the region by the Turkish-backed Syrian rebels, who seized several villages further east from the Sunni hardliners.

By supporting the rebels, mainly Arabs and Turkmen fighting under the loose banner of the Free Syrian Army, (FSA) Turkey is hoping to push out Daesh militants and check the advance of US-backed Syrian Kurdish fighters.

The rebels last week took the frontier town of Jarablus with Turkish support, marking Ankara's first full-scale Syrian incursion since the start of the five-year-old war.

On Saturday the tanks crossed the border and entered the Syrian town of Al Rai to support the new offensive, a rebel spokesman and monitors said. Now under rebel control, Al Rai had previously been in the hands of Daesh.

Al Rai is about 55km west of Jarablus, and part of a 90-km corridor near the Turkish border that Ankara says it is clearing of extremists and protecting from Kurdish militia expansion.

A rebel commander said they would aim to push east from Al Rai, in the direction of Jarablus, which would put pressure on Daesh from both east and west of a stretch of territory it controls along the border between the towns.

"The operations are to work from Al Rai towards the villages that were liberated to the west of Jarablus," Colonel Ahmed Osman of the Sultan Murad rebel group told Reuters, adding that the offensive was backed by Turkey.

 

Villages captured

 

The Hamza Brigade, part of the FSA, said it had taken control of Arab Ezza, a village about 30 km west of Jarablus and near where Turkish warplanes carried out air strikes on Friday.

FSA factions had also captured the villages of Fursan, Lilawa, Kino and Najma just south of Arab Ezza, a source in the Failaq Al Sham rebel group said.

US forces also hit Daesh targets overnight near Turkey's border with Syria.

"US forces struck ISIL targets near Turkey's border in Syria last night via newly deployed HIMARS system," Brett McGurk, the special presidential envoy for the coalition fighting Daesh, said on his Twitter account.

HIMARS refers to a High Mobility Artillery Rocket System. It was not immediately clear when the system was deployed at Turkey’s border.

While Turkey’s Operation Euphrates Shield initially targeted Daesh in Jarablus, most of the focus since has been on checking the advance of US-backed Syrian Kurdish fighters, to the alarm of NATO ally Washington.

Turkey disagrees with its ally’s support for the Syrian Kurdish YPG militia, which it considers a terrorist group. The YPG has been among the most effective partners on the ground in the US-led fight against Daesh.

The United States has voiced concerns about Turkish strikes on Kurdish-aligned groups that Washington has backed in its battle against Daesh. Germany said it did not want to see a lasting Turkish presence in an already tangled conflict.

Turkey has said it has no plans to stay in Syria and simply aims to protect its frontier from the militant group and the Kurdish YPG militia, which it sees as an extension of the outlawed Kurdish PKK group fighting an insurgency on Turkish soil.

Activists have reported protests in some Syrian towns near the Turkish border in recent days against what demonstrators have called Turkish imperialism.

 

Turkish security forces used tear gas and water cannon to disperse protesters along the border on Friday. 

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