Turkey, Russia agree to cooperate with eye on US withdrawal

The meeting came as Syrian government troops reportedly entered Kurdish areas under invitation

An armed vehicle driven by Turkey-backed Syrian fighters is seen in a village overlooking the Euphrates river near the rebel-held border town of Jarabulus in northern Syria, on December 29, 2018. Pro-Turkish armed groups have reinforced their presence on the outskirts of the city of Manbij in northern Syria as Ankara threatens a new offensive against Kurdish forces. / AFP / Bakr ALKASEM
Powered by automated translation

Top Russian and Turkish ministers have agreed to maintain cooperation in northern Syria as US forces prepare to withdraw and Ankara threatens to launch a military operation against the American-backed Kurdish forces controlling nearly a third of the country.

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said before the talks began that they would focus on the situation in and around Idlib, as well as "what can and should be done" when the US withdraws from Syria.

After the meeting, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters that much of the discussion focused on the pending American withdrawal and that Russia and Turkey managed to agree on coordinating their steps in Syria "to ultimately eradicate the terrorist threat."

Russia is a key ally of Damascus who have reportedly sent forces into northern Syrian areas at the invitation of the Kurdish majority Syrian Democratic Forces – until now a strong ally and partner of the US in the fight against ISIS. The move by the Kurds is seen as an attempt to head off a Turkish military push across the border by creating a buffer zone of Syrian government forces and also as means of bolstering relations between the Kurds and the government ahead of possible talks on the future of the region.

Turkey's official Anadolu news agency said the meeting lasted an hour and a half. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Russia and Turkey have a "shared will on cleaning Syria from all terror organizations," and added Turkey would continue its "close cooperation" with Russia and Iran in Syria and the region.

The Syrian military said it entered the Kurdish stronghold of Manbij on Friday as part of an apparent agreement between the two sides.

______________

Read more: 

Russia: The US should transfer its territory in Syria to Assad

Iraq considers deploying troops to Syria after US withdrawal 

Departing US envoy Brett McGurk’s legacy in Iraq and Syria

______________

With President Donald Trump's surprise decision to withdraw troops earlier this month, Turkey announced it will hold off on a threatened offensive against Kurdish militants that it considers terrorists. It has, however, continued amassing troops at the border as it monitors the situation.

The movements follow days of equipment transfers across the border into a Turkish-held area of northern Syria near Manbij. Turkish-backed Syrian opposition fighters said they have started moving along with Turkish troops to front-line positions near the town as a show of readiness.

A statement released by the rebels said they are ready to "begin military operations to liberate the city in response to calls by our people in the city of Manbij."

Turkish news agency IHA showed video of at least 50 tanks arriving at a command post in Sanliurfa province early on Saturday. The province borders Kurdish-held areas east of the Euphrates river in Syria.

The Russian side was represented in Saturday's talks by Mr Lavrov, Mr Shoigu, and Kremlin foreign affairs aide Yuri Ushakov. The Turkish delegation includes Mr Cavusoglu, presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin, intelligence chief Hakan Fidan and Defence Minister Hulusi Akar.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in Moscow on Saturday that, in addition to the foreign and defence ministers of each country, the meeting was attended by intelligence chiefs from both sides.

Presidents Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip Erdogan did not attend the meeting. Mr Peskov said the two would later schedule a separate meeting.

In Syria, opposition activists said the head of a local council allied with the Kurds was assassinated in the eastern province of Deir Ezzor. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Marwan Fatih, head of the Deir Ezzor Council, was shot dead in the province by unknown assailants. The activist collective DeirEzzor24 said he was killed when a roadside bomb exploded on the highway linking the cities of Ezzor and Hassakeh in the northeast.