23 Apr 2024
Monday 26 September 2016 - 13:18
Story Code : 232699

FM: Turkey may send troops deeper into Syria



Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu says Turkey is planning to send troops deeper into Syrian territory to establish what it calls asafe zone.

"Initially, we may move at least 45 kilometers down and we must move further down in order to seal off the Manbij region. Then, a 5,000-kilometer de facto safe zone can be established," he told English-language France 24 television on Sunday.

Manbij in northern Syria nearthe border with Turkey is currently controlled by US-backed Kurdish militantswhocaptured it in August after Daesh terrorists left it.

Turkish troops, backed by tanks and warplanes,entered the Syrian territory in September in a sudden incursion which resulted in the occupation of Jarablus after Daesh left the city without resistance.

In his interview, Cavusoglu suggested that Turkish troops would march ahead to take the Syrian city of Raqqah. He toutedthe so-calledFree Syrian Army (FSA) forces which helped Turkish troops in the incursion, saying they should serve as a model for the campaign to take back Raqqah.

He also denied allegations that Turkey had entered Syria to attack the PYD/YPG Kurdish group, but warned that the US had not fulfilled its promise to Turkey that those groups would not cross the Euphrates.

Cavusoglu also blasted Washington for arming the PYD/YPG group, calling it"unacceptable."

On Saturday, head of FSA's northern divisionColonel Fares al-Bayoush said militants in Syria were about to receive new types of heavy weapons from their foreign supporters.

The United States, Saudi Arabia and Turkeyhavebeen channeling military support to militants fighting under the banner of the FSA for several years.

The support for the militants described by Washington as moderate also includes training by the Central Intelligence Agency.

The fresh arming of the militants comes as the Syrian army is pushingahead with a large-scale operation to driveTakfiri terrorists out ofAleppo.

Cavusoglusquarely blamed Syrian President Bashar al-Assadand his allies for the failure of a recent ceasefire which collapsed after the US and its allies killed 82 Syrian soldiers in airstrikes.

Turkey and the US, however, are at odds over Washington's supply of weapons to Kurdish militants. Tensions, meanwhile, have escalated since a July 15 failed coup which Ankara claims was masterminded by US-based cleric Fetullah Gulen.

On Sunday, Cavusoglu saidTurkey has provided the US with solid evidence of Gulen's role in the coup, saying Ankara expects Washington to extradite himsoon.



[caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="555"] This file photo shows US-based Turkish Muslim preacher Fethullah Gulen at his residence in Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania, the United States. (By AFP)[/caption]

"We expect our ally the USto complete this process and extradite him [Gulen] to Turkey as soon as possible," the foreign minister said.

Asked when the extradition would happen, Cavusolgu saidrelevant courts would decide it.

By Press TV

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