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THE STANS
Erdogan tells visiting US defence chief 'uneasy' over arming Kurds
By Paul Handley and Raziye Akkoc
Ankara (AFP) Aug 23, 2017


Top Turkish diplomat in Iraq to warn against Kurdish vote
Baghdad (AFP) Aug 23, 2017 - Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu was in Iraq on Wednesday to warn Iraqi and Kurdish leaders against next month's independence referendum in the country's Kurdish region.

Cavusoglu had already warned last week that the vote planned for September 25 could even bring Iraq "to civil war".

After holding talks in Baghdad, the Turkish minister was due to meet Iraqi Kurdistan president Massud Barzani in Arbil, the capital of the autonomous region.

"The decision to hold this referendum is a mistake," Cavusoglu told a joint news conference with Iraqi counterpart Ibrahim al-Jaafari.

"We have said it before (to Iraqi Kurdish leaders) and today during my visit to Arbil I will repeat that it is a mistake."

The referendum is non-binding but goes against the Iraqi constitution and has faced criticism from Turkey and Iran, which fear it could encourage secession in their own Kurdish regions.

"We hope that all the problems between Baghdad and Arbil will be settled within the borders of Iraq and in the unity and security of Iraqi territory," said Cavusoglu.

"I repeat to Arbil that (Kurdistan) can enjoy the rights it claims in the borders of a united Iraq," he said, adding that Turkey could "play a role" if the two sides wanted it.

Cavusoglu said the presence in Iraq of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which is outlawed in Turkey, "endangers the unity and security of Iraqi territory."

The minister said Ankara would support Baghdad "by all means to rid Iraqi territory of the PKK".

After meeting Jaafari, Cavusoglu was scheduled hold talks in Baghdad with Iraqi President Fuad Massum and Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi before travelling to Arbil.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday told visiting Pentagon chief Jim Mattis of Turkey's uneasiness over Washington arming a Syrian Kurdish militia viewed as a terror group by Ankara, a policy which has strained ties between the NATO allies.

Mattis made the one-day visit after stopping in Iraq to review progress in the campaign against the Islamic State group, urging coalition partners to prevent other political issues from disrupting the growing momentum against the jihadists.

He met with Erdogan at the presidential palace after talks with Defence Minister Nurettin Canikli in Ankara.

Turkey, an important NATO ally of the United States and part of the coalition fighting the IS militants, is incensed that Washington has been arming the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) in the assault on the jihadists' stronghold of Raqa, in northern Syria.

Turkey regards the YPG as the Syrian affiliate of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), but Washington has been impressed with its ability to combat IS on the ground.

In May, the Pentagon said it had begun transferring small arms, including AK-47s, and vehicles to the YPG to support its role as a leading player in the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a Kurdish-Syrian Arab alliance fighting IS.

During the meeting, Erdogan told Mattis that Turkey was "uneasy over the US support" for the YPG, presidential sources said.

The Pentagon said Mattis addressed Turkey's "legitimate" security concerns in the meeting and both men expressed a shared interest for their countries "to create conditions for a more stable and secure region."

- 'Whatever the price' -

Erdogan has repeatedly vowed that Turkey will thwart any attempt by the YPG to carve out a Kurdish state in northern Syria, leaving open the possibility of a cross-border operation to prise the town of Afrin from Kurdish control.

"Turkey will not allow a terror corridor reaching the Mediterranean in northern Syria," Erdogan told reporters on his plane back from a visit to Jordan.

"Whatever the price, we will conduct the necessary intervention," he said, quoted by the Hurriyet newspaper on Wednesday.

Last August, Ankara launched a cross-border operation in northern Syria aimed at clearing the border zone of both YPG fighters and jihadists.

Complaining about Washington's arming of the YPG, Erdogan said up to 1,000 trucks had crossed from Iraq to Syria carrying weapons for the SDF, which Turkey fears will reach the PKK.

The rise of jihadists in the Syrian northwestern province of Idlib has also caused concern in Ankara, Moscow and Tehran.

Erdogan alluded to plans for Idlib, controlled by the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham jihadist alliance, but would not elaborate, only saying: "What is there now? There is Idlib."

- 'Cancel Kurdish referendum' -

US officials said Tuesday that the grinding fight was the "priority" in the campaign against IS since the fall last month of Mosul, the jihadists' Iraqi hub.

The Kurdish regional government in northern Iraq -- whose peshmerga security forces are playing a key role in the fight against IS -- is planning its own independence referendum in September.

But at the date approaches, the plan is fuelling increasing discomfort in the region.

Mattis met Tuesday with Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani in Erbil to express US opposition to the referendum.

Erdogan and Mattis reaffirmed their opposition to the vote, Turkish presidential sources said on Wednesday.

And Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, in Baghdad to meet Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi and other Iraqi officials, reiterated Turkey's opposition to the "wrong" decision to hold the referendum.

Cavusoglu also held talks with Barzani in Arbil.

The US is concerned at signs of warming ties between Iran and Turkey, whose relationship in the past has been far from straightforward.

The Pentagon said Mattis and Canikli discussed "concern over Iran's malign influence in the region", without giving further details.

Iranian armed forces chief General Mohammad Hossein Bagheri visited Turkey last week, with both sides agreeing to step up regional security and oppose the Kurdish referendum.

Erdogan on Monday said a joint operation with Iran against Kurdish militants based in Iraq was "always on the agenda", but Iran's Revolutionary Guards denied the claim.

THE STANS
Trump backs off Afghan withdrawal, lambasts Pakistan
Washington (AFP) Aug 22, 2017
President Donald Trump cleared the way for the deployment of thousands more US troops to Afghanistan Monday, backtracking from his promise to rapidly end America's longest war, while pillorying ally Pakistan for offering safe haven to "agents of chaos." In his first formal address to the nation as commander-in-chief, Trump discarded his previous criticism of the 16-year-old war as a waste of ... read more

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