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Turkey, US-Led Coalition Launch Anti-IS Operation

Turkish military sources said a ground incursion had yet to start, but a group of Turkish special forces had entered Syria while Turkish and US-led coalition jets hit four IS targets and Turkish artillery struck more than 60 targets
A Turkish Army tank and an armored vehicle are stationed near the border with Syria, in Karkamis, Turkey, Aug. 23.
A Turkish Army tank and an armored vehicle are stationed near the border with Syria, in Karkamis, Turkey, Aug. 23.

Turkish special forces units and jets supported by warplanes from the US-led coalition launched an operation in northern Syria on Wednesday to wipe out the self-styled Islamic State terrorist group along the border with Turkey, Turkish officials said.

The Turkish Army began firing artillery rounds into the Syrian border town of Jarablus at around 0100 GMT and Turkish and US warplanes pounded IS targets with airstrikes as part of the operation, Turkish military sources said, Reuters reported.

It was the first time warplanes from NATO member Turkey have struck in Syria since November, when Turkey downed a Russian jet near the border and the first significant incursion by Turkish special forces since a brief operation to relocate the tomb of Suleyman Shah, a revered Ottoman figure, in February 2015.

Turkey and the United States hope that by sweeping IS from the border, they can deprive it of a smuggling route that long saw its ranks swollen with foreign fighters and its coffers boosted by illicit trade.

White and grey plumes of smoke rose from atop the hills of Jarablus, visible from the Turkish town of Karkamis across the border. The boom of artillery fire was audible as tanks opened fire from just inside Turkish territory.

Turkish military sources said a ground incursion had yet to start, but a group of Turkish special forces had entered Syria while Turkish and US-led coalition jets hit four IS targets and Turkish artillery struck more than 60 targets. Tanks were being positioned to secure the border, they said.

“The aim of the operation is to ensure border security and Syria’s territorial integrity while supporting the US-led coalition against Islamic State,” one military source said, adding work to open a passage for ground forces was underway.

US Vice President Joe Biden is due in Turkey later on Wednesday, the most senior US official to visit since a failed July 15 coup shook confidence in the ability of the NATO member to step up the fight against IS.

Turkey had vowed on Monday to “completely cleanse” IS militants from its border region after a suicide bomber suspected of links to the group killed 54 people at a Kurdish wedding in the southeastern city of Gaziantep.

Military sources said the airstrikes hit 12 IS targets, while artillery fire hit 70 targets. Counter-terrorism police launched dawn raids targeting IS members across Istanbul on Wednesday, the Dogan news agency said.

Turkey is also concerned about the growing influence of Syrian Kurdish militant groups along its border, where they have captured large areas of territory since the start of the Syrian war in 2011. Ankara sees them as tied to the Kurdish militants fighting an insurgency in Turkey.

At least nine mortar shells from Jarablus landed in Karkamis and nearby on Tuesday, forcing many residents to flee, a Reuters witness said. Another hit an empty field on Wednesday.

Turkey has ordered residents of Karkamis to evacuate after it was hit by mortars from IS militants in Syria.

The Syria operation came as Syrian militants backed by Turkey had said they were in the final stages of preparing an assault from Turkish territory on Jarablus, aiming to preempt a potential attempt by Syrian Kurdish YPG militia to take it.

  Preempting Kurdish Forces

The Kurdish YPG militia, a critical part of the US-backed campaign against IS, took near complete control of Hasaka city on Tuesday. The group already controls swathes of northern Syria where Kurdish groups have established de facto autonomy since the start of the Syria war.

Their growing influence has alarmed Ankara, which is fighting its own insurgency with militants from the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party or PKK, who officials blame for an escalation of attacks in the southeast of Turkey.

Ankara is focused on preventing YPG or its allies building on recent advances against IS by capturing Jarablus. The US-backed Syria Democratic Forces alliance, including YPG, captured the city of Manbij, just south of Jarablus, from IS earlier this month.

A Syrian militant with one of the Turkey-backed groups said the fighters were waiting for the signal to enter Jarablus and a second militant said around 1,500 fighters were now gathered at a location in Turkey to take part.

Turkey is still in shock after the failed July coup by rogue solders who tried to overthrow President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the government, killing 240 people and triggering a purge of suspected coup supporters in the army and civil service.

Angered by a perceived lack of western sympathy over the coup, Turkey has chilled ties with Washington and the European Union while ending a diplomatic row with Russia and proposing more military cooperation with Moscow in fighting IS. Those growing ties between Ankara and Moscow are worrying Turkey’s western allies.

Turkish Deputy PM Numan Kurtulmus said this week that northern Syria should not become the domain of one group and that a “secure zone”, an internationally policed buffer area Turkey proposed in the past, should be reconsidered.

Financialtribune.com