Turkish Defence Minister Hulusi Akar (L) and the Supreme Allied Commander Europe, U.S. Air Force General Tod Wolters, speak at a NATO meeting in Brussels |
Turkish drones have started operating in northern Syria where Washington and Ankara have agreed to create a safe zone, Turkeyโs Defence Ministry said on Wednesday.
Turkey and the United States agreed last week to set up a joint operations centre regarding the safe zone to be established in northern Syria. No agreement has been announced on key details such as the size of the zone and the command structure of joint patrols that would be conducted there.
A six-person U.S. delegation arrived in the southern Turkish province of Sanliurfa on Monday to work on the establishment of the operations centre.
The Defence Ministry said in a statement on Wednesday that work was continuing to make the joint operations centre in Sanliurfa operational.
It added that Turkish drones had started carrying out work in the area where the safe zone will be created, but did not provide further information on the dronesโ operations.
Washington and Ankara have been at odds over plans for northeastern Syria, where U.S. allies on the ground in the battle against Islamic State include the Kurdish YPG militia, which Turkey considers an enemy and a terrorist group.
The allies have been discussing a safe zone near the Turkish frontier that would be kept free of combatants and heavy weapons, but Turkey wants it to extend more than twice as far into Syrian territory as the United States has proposed.
Turkey has suggested it will act militarily if the United States fails to agree a solution that will safeguard the border.
Turkey says the YPG is an extension in Syria of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has waged an insurgency against the Turkish state since the 1980s.
Washington and Ankara are also at odds over other issues, including Turkeyโs purchase of the Russian S-400 missile defence system, as well as the trial of local U.S. consulate employees in Turkey on terrorism charges.