Hundreds of Kurdish forces remain near to Syriaโs northeast border despite a U.S.-brokered truce demanding their withdrawal and Turkey could resume its offensive in the area when the ceasefire expires, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said.
The five-day truce in Turkeyโs cross-border offensive to allow the withdrawal of Kurdish YPG fighters from the border area ends at 10 pm (1900 GMT) on Tuesday.
Turkey says Kurdish YPG militia forces, which it views as terrorists because of their links to Kurdish militants waging an insurgency in southeast Turkey, must leave a โsafe zoneโ it wants to establish inside Syria.
โThe withdrawal is continuing,โ Erdogan told reporters at Ankara airport before flying to Russia for talks with President Vladimir Putin on Syria.
โAccording to the information I have received from my defence minister we are talking about 700-800 already withdrawn and the rest, around 1,200-1,300, are continuing to withdraw. It has been said that they will withdraw,โ Erdogan said. โAll will have to get out, the process will not end before they are out.โ
Turkey began its cross-border operation nearly two weeks ago following U.S. President Donald Trumpโs decision to withdraw American troops from northern Syria.
The American withdrawal from Syria has been criticized by U.S. lawmakers, including some of Trumpโs fellow Republicans, as a betrayal of Kurdish allies who have helped the United States fight Islamic State in Syria.
Trump said on Monday it appeared that the five-day pause was holding despite skirmishes, and that it could possibly go beyond Tuesdayโs expiry, but Erdogan said the fighting may resume.
โIf the promises given to us by America are not kept, we will continue our operation from where it left off, this time with a much bigger determination,โ he said.
โSAFE ZONEโ
Turkey says it wants to set up a โsafe zoneโ along 440 km (275 miles) of border with northeast Syria, but its assault so far has focused on two border towns in the centre of that strip, Ras al Ain and Tel Abyad, about 120 km apart.
A Turkish security source said the YPG was initially pulling back from the 120 km border strip. He said Erdogan and Putin would discuss a wider withdrawal from the rest of the border in their talks on Tuesday in the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi.
Syrian and Russian forces have already entered two border cities, Manbij and Kobani, which lie within Turkeyโs planned โsafe zoneโ but to the west of Turkeyโs military operations.
Erdogan has said he could accept the presence of Syrian troops in those areas, as long as the YPG are pushed out.
โMy hope is that God willing we will achieve the agreement we desire,โ he said before leaving for Sochi.
The Kremlin said it hoped Erdogan would be able to provide Putin with more information about Ankaraโs plans for northeast Syria, and was also studying what it described as a new idea from Germany for an internationally controlled security zone in northern Syria involving Turkey and Russia.
German Defence Minister Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer said the step should stabilise the region so that civilians could rebuild and refugees could return on a voluntary basis.
Russia is a close ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Turkey has backed rebels seeking to oust Assad during Syriaโs more than eight-year-long civil war but has dropped its once-frequent calls for Assad to quit.
Turkey is holding covert contacts with Syriaโs government, partly via Russia, to avert direct conflict in northeast Syria, Turkish officials say.
Some 300,000 people have been displaced by Turkeyโs offensive and 120 civilians have been killed, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based war monitor. It said on Sunday 259 fighters with the Kurdish-led forces had been killed, and 196 Turkey-backed Syrian rebels. Turkey says 765 terrorists but no civilians have been killed in its offensive.
The U.S. withdrawal has left a vacuum into which Turkish forces have pressed in from the north, while from the southwest Russian-backed Syrian troops have swept back into territory they were driven from years ago.
On Monday, U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper said the Pentagon was considering keeping some U.S. troops near oilfields in northeastern Syria alongside Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) to help deny oil to Islamic State militants.
There was confusion on Tuesday over the status of nearly 1,000 troops pulling out of Syria into neighbouring Iraq. The Pentagon had said they were expected to move to western Iraq to continue the campaign against Islamic State, but the Iraqi military said they had no permission to stay in Iraq.
REUTERS