Turkey, Syria Defense Chiefs Hold First Meeting Since Syrian Civil War Began

(Bloomberg) — Defense Ministers from Turkey and Syria met for the first time since the civil war erupted in the Arab state in 2011, the high point so far in a rapprochement that’s been months in the making.

(Bloomberg) — Defense Ministers from Turkey and Syria met for the first time since the civil war erupted in the Arab state in 2011, the high point so far in a rapprochement that’s been months in the making.

Erdogan Urges Meeting With Putin and Assad in Syria Policy Shift

Turkey’s Hulusi Akar and his Syrian counterpart Ali Mahmoud Abbas held talks at a summit in Moscow on Wednesday hosted by Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu. The Turkish and Syrian intelligence chiefs also took part. 

The discussions focused on the Syrian civil war and collaboration against “all terrorist groups” in the Middle East state, Turkey said, in a thinly-veiled reference to Kurdish militia in Syria. 

Russia’s Defense Ministry said in a statement that the meeting focused on combating “extremist groups on Syrian territory,” without identifying any organization.

All About the YPG, the Syrian Kurds Vexing Turkey: QuickTake

Turkey has lately indicated that it was preparing to put aside hostilities with neighboring Syria, where Turkish officials fear the emergence of a budding Kurdish state backed by the US government. Frustrated by Washington’s refusal to end military assistance to Kurdish militia in Syria, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is seeking to resolve the matter through other brokers in the conflict.

Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered his military to intervene in support of Syrian President Bashar al Assad in 2015, helping to tip the balance in the civil war in favor of the regime. 

Russian troops have continued to support Syria’s army, even as Putin and Erdogan have joined with Iran to try to broker an agreement to end the conflict.

For months, Erdogan has threatened to unleash a new military offensive to expand a Turkish buffer zone inside Syria and push the Kurdish YPG and PYD groups away from their shared border. Those plans triggered criticism from the US, which said a unilateral Turkish action would undermine operations against Islamic State, carried out jointly with groups that include the YPG.

Turkey regards the YPG as an extension of Kurdish separatist group PKK that it fights at home. The US and the European Union both consider the PKK to be a terrorist organization, just as Turkey does.

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