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Turkey, Iran, Russia say will work for stability in Syria


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Turkey, Iran, Russia say will work for stability in Syria

By Parisa Hafezi and Tulay Karadeniz

 

2018-04-04T145550Z_1_LYNXNPEE331GQ_RTROPTP_4_MIDEAST-CRISIS-SYRIA-TURKEY.JPG

Presidents Hassan Rouhani of Iran, Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey and Vladimir Putin of Russia pose before their meeting in Ankara, Turkey April 4, 2018. Tolga Bozoglu/Pool via Reuters

 

ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey, Iran and Russia pledged on Wednesday to accelerate efforts to bring stability to Syria, underlining their joint commitment to the country a day after President Donald Trump raised the prospect of withdrawing U.S. troops.

 

A statement by the three countries after a summit meeting of their leaders in the Turkish capital Ankara said they were determined to "speed up their efforts to ensure calm on the ground" in Syria.

 

While their decision to work together has done little to reduce violence, in part because of their own military interventions on opposing sides, it underlined their central role just as questions grow over Washington's presence in Syria.

 

A senior U.S. official said Trump wanted U.S. forces out of Syria relatively soon. "We're not going to immediately withdraw but neither is the president willing to back a long-term commitment," the official said.

 

Around 2,000 U.S. troops are deployed in northern Syria on a mission to battle the remnants of an Islamic State force that once controlled the area. Trump had said on Tuesday it was time to pull them out.

 

Iran's President Hassan Rouhani said developments in Syria, where the Syrian army and its allies have driven back rebels in recent years, showed that the United States had "failed to topple the Syrian government" of President Bashar al-Assad.

 

"They wanted to fuel insecurity in order to maintain their own interests but they have gained no success," he told a news conference after talks with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan and Russian President Vladimir Putin. He added, however, that he believed U.S. forces would stay in Syria.

 

RIFTS CONTINUE

 

Iran and Russia have both strongly supported the Syrian president, while Turkey backed anti-Assad rebels. Those differences have continued on the ground despite their political cooperation aimed at winding down some of the violence.

 

Turkey has waged a military campaign to drive Kurdish YPG fighters from northwestern Syria's Afrin district, while Russian air power and Iran-backed militias have supported Syrian army offensives in the Idlib and Ghouta regions.

 

Iran's state television quoted Rouhani as telling Erdogan and Putin that Afrin should be handed over to Syria's army.

 

"The developments in Afrin can only be useful if they do not violate Syria's territorial integrity, and control of these areas should be handed over to the Syrian army," Rouhani said.

 

Erdogan has said the Turkish army will extend its military operation after Afrin to the town of Tel Rifaat and then further east along Syria's border with Turkey - a prospect which has angered Tehran.

 

"Whatever the intentions are, Turkey's moves in Syria, whether in Afrin, Tel Rifaat or any other part of Syria, should be halted as soon as possible," a senior Iranian official told Reuters before Wednesday's talks.

 

Seated alongside Putin and Rouhani, Erdogan focused on areas of common ground, saying that Turkey wanted to build a mobile hospital to help treat civilians coming from formerly rebel-controlled parts of eastern Ghouta, on the edge of Damascus, which the Syrian army has taken over.

 

Rebel fighters and civilians who were evacuated from eastern Ghouta have been taken to the northwestern Syrian province of Idlib, which borders Turkey.

 

Erdogan proposed providing a bakery to help feed refugees and build housing on both sides of the border.

 

"We can save these people from tents and container cities by building housing. We can, all together, make that zone safe," Erdogan said.

 

(Additional reporting by Denis Pinchuk, Ece Toksabay and Tuvan Gumrukcu; Writing by Dominic Evans; Editing by Catherine Evans and Richard Balmforth)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters
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'Work for stability in Syria' my eye, these are a pack of vultures,  plotting how to divide Syria among them, the destruction that Russia and Iran have unleashed

on the poor people of Syria helping the Assad the madman will never be forgotten of forgiven...

Edited by ezzra
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They are almost there.  ISIS run to ground.  US rebel supported groups all but starved.  All that is left is to grind down the Kurds.  They won’t give in easily or quickly but with no support from anyone the end is in sight.  So stability under Assad ensured by Russia, Iran and Turkey is in the cards.  The US is long past caring about the removal of Assad.  What a tragic mess.  All that death and destruction only to end up back in the same place as it was before recent events unfolded.

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6 hours ago, ezzra said:

'Work for stability in Syria' my eye, these are a pack of vultures,  plotting how to divide Syria among them, the destruction that Russia and Iran have unleashed

on the poor people of Syria helping the Assad the madman will never be forgotten of forgiven...

 

At least two of the parties involved (Russia, Iran) are not about "dividing Syria", quite the opposite. I don't know that Iran unleashed all that much "destruction" in Syria - feel free to correct me. Like it or not, some of the "poor people of Syria" do support Assad, and others see him as the lesser of a few possible evils. Not singing his praises, just saying reality doesn't necessarily correspond to the above.

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2 hours ago, chilli42 said:

They are almost there.  ISIS run to ground.  US rebel supported groups all but starved.  All that is left is to grind down the Kurds.  They won’t give in easily or quickly but with no support from anyone the end is in sight.  So stability under Assad ensured by Russia, Iran and Turkey is in the cards.  The US is long past caring about the removal of Assad.  What a tragic mess.  All that death and destruction only to end up back in the same place as it was before recent events unfolded.

 

What "US rebel supported groups" would these be? Do tell. I don't think the Assad regime and Russia are particularly interested in entering a lengthy campaign against the Kurds. Considering the power balance (if and when the US pulls out), more likely that some sort of agreement will be reached, although the conditions will be nowhere near what the Kurds hoped for a while back.

 

As for "assured stability" - Erdogan's position differs from Russia's and Iran's. While he does not have the power to affect Assad's removal, he's by no means a supporter. Turkey's ambitions with regard to the border area (and by implication, Syrian sovereignty) will most likely cause some friction among parties.

 

 

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