Turkey won Russia’s backing to block a deal that would have seen Syrian
pro-government forces enter territory held by Kurdish militia fighters
to help them resist an advance by Turkish troops, Ankara said on
Tuesday.
The move illustrates the increasingly tangled battlefield in
northern Syria, where local alliances and rivalries in a multi-sided
civil war now entering its eighth year are coming into collision with
the diplomatic maneuvers of global powers.
Turkey
launched an assault last month to drive the Kurdish YPG militia, which
it considers a threat, out of northern Syria’s Afrin region.
The
YPG asked Damascus - a political rival in the war - to send soldiers to
help repel the Turkish attack, and a Kurdish official said on Sunday
that an agreement had been reached for the army to deploy there.
“The
(deployment) was seriously stopped yesterday,” Turkish President Tayyip
Erdogan told reporters. He said the decision was taken after he asked
for Russia to intervene in a phone call with President Vladimir Putin.
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