WED 27 - 11 - 2024
 
Date: Jul 30, 2015
Source: The Daily Star
Will the U.S. and Turkey help Syria?
Rami G. Khouri

The historic developments this week along the western portion of the Turkish-Syrian border pack more drama than a hundred Turkish television soap operas. And like those dramas, we will have to wait until the end to see if this all ends in tragedy, war and death, or peace, love and happiness. The agreement between Turkey and the United States on a yet-to-be-defined plan to establish a 96-kilometer-long zone in northern Syria adjacent to the frontier with Turkey anticipates that their troops, artillery, drones and fighter jets, working with selected Syrian rebels on the ground inside Syria, will keep the area free of ISIS control. 

This move is at once decisive and dangerous. It positions two of the world’s leading military powers, both NATO members, within half a dozen major local fighting forces of very different ideologies, and hundreds of smaller units with equally kaleidoscopic goals, identities and allegiances. If you thought that NATO attacks in Libya in 2011 were a risky venture, this plan for northern Syria is potentially more dangerous and destabilizing if it goes wrong. Aleppo and Damascus, indeed all of Syria, are significantly more strategically important than Tripoli, Benghazi and Libya, so the outcome of this dramatic move in northern Syria will be a game-changer. However, it remains unclear if action might help to wind down the war and chaos in Syria or exacerbate and expand it even more. 

The basic concept of keeping ISIS out of this stretch of northwestern Syria is a sensible one, for it would allow Syrian refugees and displaced people to find decent shelter there in their own country. It would also provide rebel groups with important safe havens for planning, training and other purposes in their battles against both ISIS and the Syrian government in Damascus. That’s the easy part.

The hard part is that the political-military-demographic situation in the area in question captures the critical and often confounding complexities of the war in Syria, where many different local, regional and global powers are involved in multiple parallel conflicts on superimposed battlefields. For starters, it is not clear if the U.S. and Turkey, and some of their NATO partners, plan mainly to fight and defeat ISIS or topple the Assad regime in Damascus, which will be further weakened psychologically by this initiative.

On the other hand, as the U.S. and Turkey work with local Syrian rebels that they vet and approve to establish a zone free of ISIS control, it will be difficult to know who are the good guys and the bad guys in the eyes of Turkey, the U.S. and NATO. Some of the leading rebel groups that are fighting against both Assad and ISIS are Islamists that the U.S. and partners shun (except when the U.S. embraces them, as it did in Afghanistan; but that was a long time ago, in a faraway land that the U.S. is trying to leave forever). 

Equally problematic will be how the U.S. and Turkey look on some of the Kurdish fighters who have pushed back ISIS in parts of northern Syria, and who also would fight the Syrian government if need be to maintain control of their growing Kurdish region. The key Kurdish military force here is the People’s Protection Units (YPG) that has fought well against ISIS, and also covets control of the same 96-kilometer stretch that NATO armies now will patrol from the skies. The United States supports the YPG as a valuable partner whose forces on the ground have worked well in coordination with U.S. airstrikes against ISIS. But Turkey views the YPG as bad guys associated with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, who have been engaged in an on-and-off war with the Turkish government for decades.

How the U.S. and Turkish militaries operate in and near the new zone, and whom they support, ignore or attack, will determine the impact of this bold move. A senior Obama administration official told the New York Times Monday, “The goal is to establish an [ISIS]-free zone and ensure greater security and stability along Turkey’s border with Syria.”

The glaring dilemma here is that military force that the Turks have used against Kurds for decades, and the Americans against Islamists for a quarter century, has produced neither stability nor security. Rather, it has contributed to making the region one of the most violent, fractured, polarized, militarized and unstable landscapes of mass human misery in modern times. 

Any move to protect civilians and assist refugees in Syria is sensible, certainly requires international assistance, and deserves widespread support. We will soon find out if this week’s Turkish-American decision falls into that category.

Rami G. Khouri is published twice weekly by THE DAILY STAR. He can be followed on Twitter @RamiKhouri.

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on July 29, 2015, on page 7.

The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the Arab Network for the Study of Democracy
 
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