Monday, February 18, 2019

Assad warns Kurds: The US won't protect you

Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad on Sunday warned the country’s Kurds that their ally the United States would not protect them against any Turkish offensive as Washington looks to withdraw its troops.
 
The US is set to pull out its soldiers from Syria after allied Kurdish-led forces captured the Islamic State (ISIS) group's last holdout in the war-torn country.
 
Any withdrawal risks leaving the Kurds exposed to a long threatened attack by neighboring Turkey.
 
The US’s main allies on the ground fighting ISIS in Syria are the Kurdish led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), who are led by the People's Protection Units (YPG), a mostly Kurdish militia.
 
The US makes a distinction between the YPG and the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) which is considered a terrorist organization in Turkey.
 
Turkey has more than once expressed its outrage over the American support for YPG, which it also views as a terrorist organization.
 
"We tell those groups who are betting on the Americans that the Americans will not protect you," Assad said in a televised speech on Sunday, according to AFP.
 
"The Americans do not hold you in their heart... They will put you in their pocket so you can be a bargaining chip," he warned.
 
Apart from fighting ISIS, the Kurds have largely stayed out of Syria's civil war, working towards semi-autonomy in the northeast of the country.
 
The looming prospect of a US withdrawal, announced in December, has sent them scrambling to rebuild ties with the Damascus regime, but talks so far have failed to reach a compromise.
 
"If you don't prepare yourselves to defend your country and resist, you will be nothing but a slave to the Ottomans," Assad warned, using a historic term for Turks.
 
"No one will protect you except your state. No one will defend you except the Syrian Arab army," he added.
 
Nearly eight years into the civil war that has killed more than 360,000 people and displaced millions, Assad's forces control almost two thirds of the country.
 
Just two areas remain beyond its control: the jihadist-held northwestern region of Idlib, and around a third of the country under control of Kurdish-led forces.
 
"Every inch of Syria will be liberated," Assad said in Sunday's speech.