Could Turkey’s misstep in Manbij provide template for Raqqa?
Turkish move blocked by Syrian forces
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is not winning friends with US military planners
by threatening to attack Manbij, a predominantly Arab town controlled
by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), the Pentagon’s partner of choice
among armed groups battling the Islamic State.
The SDF is primarily made up of the Syrian
Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), which Turkey claims is linked
to the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and therefore a terrorist group on a
par with the Islamic State (IS). The SDF, led by the YPG, drove IS
forces from Manbij last year.
Erdogan’s threat if the YPG does not leave
Manbij is hardly a surprise, as Operation Euphrates Shield, launched in
August 2016, always had the dual purpose of defeating both the YPG and
IS.
Amberin Zaman
notes that Turkey’s latest lurch in its Syria campaign is already being
blocked, another sign of the limitations of its forces and proxies
relative to other Syrian parties.
“Turkish-backed Free Syrian Army (FSA) fighters
seemed to be carrying out Turkey’s threats March 1 as they moved on a
cluster of villages west of Manbij,” Zaman writes. “But the SDF thwarted
these moves with one of its own. The Manbij Military Council set up by
the SDF and trained by the United States to secure Manbij following the
town’s liberation announced that it would surrender the targeted
villages to Syrian regime forces and Russia to prevent a confrontation
with Turkey and the FSA. Regime forces have been advancing with Russian
air support for some time, initially toward the IS-held city of al-Bab,
over which Turkish forces and their FSA allies finally won control last
week. Regime forces have since fanned out northward from al-Bab, linking
up with SDF forces south of Manbij.”
Despite their victory over IS forces in al-Bab
last month, the Turkish military has few good options for its next moves
in its disastrous Syria campaign. Nobody in Syria is clamoring for
Turkish forces. Fehim Tastekin
writes that the region surrounding Manbij “has many deterrent factors.
Also, the YPG and the local military council are not the only ones who
would see Turkey’s interference as occupation action. There is a diverse
collection of local militias that will confront Turkey. Of course it is
not possible to predict how far these local forces can get against
Turkey unless the Kurds are involved on their side.”
Zaman asks “why the SDF’s top ally, the United
States, has remained silent in the face of Turkish and regime
advances.” No doubt Washington would prefer some face-saving
accommodation, such as a choreographed YPG exit, which would avoid a
battle.
“There may be several reasons,” Zaman continues.
“For one, Turkey has always made it clear that it will not tolerate any
YPG advances west of the Euphrates River, where Manbij lies. The YPG
and its political affiliates were supposed to leave once the town was
fully freed. The United States offered guarantees to that effect. But
the Syrian Kurds did not leave, and the Manbij Military Council is
widely viewed as a YPG front. … The deal between the regime and the SDF
will surely reinforce critics' long-running claims that the YPG is
colluding with the regime, but it gets Washington off the hook.”
Zaman suggests, however, that some creative
choreography in defusing a confrontation in Manbij may provide a
“template” for Raqqa. “A nagging problem in plans to overrun the
jihadis’ so-called capital is the lack of adequate manpower. … Turkey’s
offer to take Raqqa with the FSA is likely to be ignored because the US
military planners remain unimpressed. … While the United States would
never want to cooperate directly with the regime, any help it can get on
Raqqa would clearly not be unwelcome. And as recent developments in
Manbij have shown, with Russia pulling the strings, the SDF and the
regime are capable of working together when need be. It may not be all
that bad an outcome for Turkey, either, for the alternative, a deeper US
footprint in alliance with the Kurds, is viewed by Ankara as the
biggest threat of all.”
United States backs Iraqi strike in Syria
For the first time ever, Iraqi warplanes attacked IS forces inside Syria, and did so by coordinating with both the US and Syrian governments.
Ali Mamouri
suggests that “there have been indications that the United States would
like to give Iraq a role in the fight against IS in the Syrian
territories.”
The Iraqi attack Feb. 24 occurred one day before
the unannounced visit of Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir
to Baghdad, the first visit by a senior Saudi official since 1990. The
two events seem to be linked to a more assertive regional posture by
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi.
Mamouri reports, “Abadi tasked the Iraqi
intelligence apparatus with improving relations in the region.” He also
wrote, “Saudi Arabia might be thinking of arrangements for the post-IS
period and is seeking to extend its influence in Iraq to find a balance
with the broad Iranian influence.”
Mamouri adds, “Rapprochement with Iraq comes in
the context of the US administration's keenness on curtailing Iran's
role in Iraq. … There is a joint vision among Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the
United States to neutralize the role of Shiite militias affiliated with
the PMU [Popular Mobilization Units], to prevent them from moving
beyond Iraqi territories and advancing Iran’s agendas in the region.
Last year, Abadi merged all the PMU militias into an official government
security institution under his direct leadership and integrated Sunni
militias into the PMU to create a political balance, ward off Iranian
influence and prevent them from carrying out military missions outside
the official framework of the Iraqi government. Although the PMU agreed
to operate under Abadi's leadership, some Iran-affiliated militias did
not hide their dissatisfaction with some of his policies, noting that
they are not obliged to follow his orders beyond the Iraqi territories.”
With regard to Iraqi-Syrian coordination against IS, this column
in February 2014 identified the need for “a new, regionally based
mechanism to address counterterrorism taken up by those countries most
affected by the rise of forces affiliated with al-Qaeda and jihadis,
including Turkey, Iraq, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon. Such an effort, which
would include regular meetings and intensive cooperation among the
security heads of these five countries, could complement both the Geneva
talks and international efforts to address the terrorist threat from
foreign fighters. Over time, this dialogue could be expanded to bring in
Iran and Saudi Arabia as well as other countries affected by the
growing terrorist threat from Syrian-based jihadis.”
Al-Monitor
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