Reuters BEIRUT: The U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) alliance
of Kurdish and Arab armed groups said Thursday it would reject Turkish involvement in the operation
to drive ISIS from its Syrian capital Raqqa.
U.S. officials have said they
hope to start an offensive against ISIS in Raqqa within weeks, and have said that the SDF will play
a big role, but Washington's ally Turkey has also insisted that it take part in the
operation.
"The Syrian Democratic Forces are the only force that will take
part in the operation to liberate Raqqa and we informed the (international U.S.-led) coalition
forces that we reject any Turkish role in the Raqqa liberation operation," SDF spokesman Talal Silo
told Reuters.
Turkey's military and allied Syrian rebel groups last week
fought against Kurdish forces allied to the SDF in northwest Syria, where both sides are seeking to
take territory from their mutual enemy ISIS.
Ankara is dismayed at the
prominent role in the SDF played by the Kurdish YPG militia, which it sees as a front for the
Kurdistan Workers Party that has waged a three-decade insurgency inside
Turkey.
Since it was formed in early 2015, the SDF has seized large swathes
of territory along the Syria-Turkey border from ISIS and pushed the extremist group back to within
30km (18 miles) of Raqqa.
An offensive by the Iraqi army and Kurdish
forces, backed by the U.S., started last month to reclaim Mosul, the largest city under the control
of the extremist group, and one whose capture would leave Raqqa as ISIS' most important
possession. |