Turkey’s Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said Wednesday that talks with the US aimed at averting Turkish plans to carry out military intervention into northern Syria had been “positive”, according to state news agency Anadolu.
“We witnessed with satisfaction that our partners grew closer to our position. The meetings were positive and quite constructive,” Akar was quoted as saying as the talks in Ankara entered a third day.
Turkey has repeatedly warned that it is preparing an offensive into Syria against the Kurdish YPG militia, which it sees as a terrorist organization.
The US has supported the YPG as the main fighting force against the ISIL Takfiri group, and its defense officials have been meeting their Turkish counterparts in Ankara since Monday in a bid to prevent an intervention.
“We would prefer to act together with our American ally. If that isn’t possible we have said multiple times that we will do what is necessary,” Akar told Anadolu.
All sides agreed to create a “safe zone” in northern Syria to keep the YPG away from Turkey’s borders.
But Turkey, the US and the YPG differ on how large the neutral zone should be, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has warned in recent days that “patience is running out”.
“Turkey has the right to eliminate all threats against its national security,” he said in a televised speech on Tuesday. “God willing, we will carry the process started with (previous offensives into Syria) to the next stage very soon.”
US Defense Secretary Mark Esper countered that any unilateral action by Turkey would be “unacceptable”.
Damascus has repeatedly denounced Turkish and US agreements on creating “safe zone” in Syria, stressing that such understandings violates the Syrian sovereignty.
Source: Agencies