TURKISH PM CALLS FOR STRATEGY TO END SYRIA POWER VACUUM

Photo: Anadolu Agency
Photo: Anadolu Agency

New York, 28 Muharram 1437/10 November 2015 (MINA) –  Turkey’s prime minister said Monday that the fight against Daesh terrorist group requires an “integrated strategy” that will end the power vacuum in Syria.

Ahmet Davutoglu’s remarks during a sit-down with CNN International came in his first television interview since his Justice and Development (AK) Party won an outright majority in Nov. 1 parliamentary elections, Anadolu Agency quoted by Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA) as reporting.

Asked whether Turkey would agree to a ground force to fight Daesh, Davutoglu said there was a need for “an integrated strategy including air campaign and ground troops”.

“But Turkey alone cannot take all this burden. If there is a coalition and a very well-designed, integrated strategy, Turkey is ready to take part in all sense,” he said.

“Otherwise, just to make a ground attack against ISIL, but continue to have a power vacuum on the ground, instead of ISIL another terrorist group may emerge,” he added, using an alternative acronym for Daesh. “We have to solve the Syrian crisis in a comprehensive manner.”

Syria’s devastating civil war, now in its fifth year, has claimed more than 250,000 lives, according to UN figures, and created conditions that have allowed Daesh to gain a foothold in the region.

For Turkey to be more involved in the prosecution of Daesh, an agreement is needed by the international coalition to fight “all groups and regimes creating this vacuum and creating this problem,” said Davutoglu, including the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, whose forces have been accused of killing tens of thousands of civilians with indiscriminate attacks.

“Many days in a week, we are conducting air campaigns against ISIL in the coalition. It is not enough, we are observing this,” he said, reiterating Turkey’s call to establish a safe haven “to push ISIL far away from our border”.

Davutoglu challenged assertions that the U.S., Europe and Russia have suggested Assad can remain in power for some time.

“The question is when and how Assad will go,” he said. “What is [the] solution? … When one day millions of Syrian refugees decide to go back to Syria, assuming that there is a peace in Syria, then this is a solution. If Assad stays in power in Damascus, I don’t think any refugee will go back,” he added.

The civil war, which started in March 2011 when the Assad regime responded to anti-government protests with a violent crackdown, made Syria the world’s single-largest source of refugees and displaced people.

Nearly 4 million Syrians have become refugees and at least 7.6 million have been internally displaced, according to UN figures.

Neighboring Turkey is now the world’s largest refugee-hosting country with more than 2 million Syrian refugees on its soil.

The prime minister also reiterated Turkey’s objection to providing arms and ammunition to the armed wing of PYD, a Syria-based Kurdish group that is affiliated with the PKK – a designated terrorist organization by Turkey, the U.S., EU and other nations.

He said Turkey would be ready to help if the U.S. chose to arm Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga fighters.

“We allowed peshmerga to go through Turkey to Kobani in order to help Kobani to be freed,” he said, referring to a four-month battle to drive Daesh militants from the northern Syrian town that ended earlier this year.

“If they want to help Barzani and peshmerga groups in Iraq and help them go to Syria to fight against ISIL, we are ready to help,” he said.

“But everybody must understand today PKK is attacking Turkish citizens, civilians, soldiers and they are attacking our cities, they are attacking our villages, they are attacking our civilians. We cannot and will not tolerate any help to any PKK-related groups in Syria and or Iraq. If that happens, Turkey will take all the measures to stop this.”

Asked about his comments on the recent Russian plane crash in Egypt’s Sinai peninsula, Davutoglu said it was “a big crime against humanity”.

“This is not an attack against a Russian plane. This is an attack against all of us. Therefore it shows that if a crisis is not being solved in a particular country or region, it is difficult to contain it in other countries as well. Therefore it is right time to act together,” he said. (T/P010/R03)

Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA)