Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Manbij"


5 mentions found


With the balance of power in northern Syria swinging toward the rebels who toppled the Assad regime, U.S.-backed Kurdish forces and their ability to contain ISIS may now be under threat. Suspected ISIS fighters in a prison cell in northeastern Syria in 2019. “One camp recognizes the historic fight with the Kurds against ISIS … and of course the other camp — where Trump probably lands — is to try and move out of Syria,” he said. Syrian Kurds fleeing areas north of Aleppo walk to the western outskirts of Raqa, on Dec. 3. Delil Souleiman / AFP via Getty ImagesIf a second Trump administration were to pull out of Syria, it would leave Kurdish forces without a major international ally.
Persons: Assad, , Mazloum Abdi, Ugur Yildirim, Hayat Tahrir, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Fadel Senna, , Renad Mansour, Mansour, Erik Kurilla, State Anthony Blinken’s, “ We’ve, Lloyd Austin, , Delil Souleiman, Donald Trump, Trump, Farhad Shami Organizations: ISIS, Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces, Islamic State, Syrian National Army, Getty, Kurdistan Workers Party, House, NBC, U.S . Central Command, State, , Syrian Democratic Forces, ISIS …, Reuters, NBC News Locations: Syria, U.S, Kurdish, Turkey, Manbij, Israel, Damascus, Turkish, Iraq, East, North Africa, London, Japan, Aleppo, AFP, United States, Syria’s, , Raqa,
The SDF’s top commander in Syria, General Mazloum Abdi, told CNN on Wednesday that the SDF has had to begin relocating ISIS detainees because the prisons have been threatened. The fighting has also forced the SDF to halt its anti-ISIS operations, Abdi told Sky News on Wednesday. “At the moment, joint operations against ISIS are halted, this is not a decision, but a military reality,” he said. ISIS is now stronger in the Syrian desert.”Abdi said that previously, ISIS was hiding, but their activities have now “increased” in areas under SDF control. Austin told reporters in Japan on Wednesday that the US will continue to work with the SDF going forward.
Persons: Bashar al, Assad, can’t, General Mazloum Abdi, ” Abdi, Abdi, , Ian Moss, Jenner, ” Moss, Defense Lloyd Austin, Staff CQ Brown, Antony Blinken, Austin, ” Austin, CNN’s Jennifer Hansler Organizations: CNN, ISIS, Peoples ’, , Sky News, State Department, SDF, ” Senior, Defense, Joint Chiefs, Staff, Turkish, Syrian National Army, US Air Force, US Air Forces Central, US, Coalition Locations: Syria, Turkey, Turkish, Manbij, , reconstituting, Japan
ISTANBUL, Jan 5 (Reuters) - Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan told Vladimir Putin in a phone call that peace efforts in the Russia-Ukraine war should be supported by a unilateral ceasefire and a "vision for a fair solution", the Turkish presidency said on Thursday. Erdogan and the Russian president have spoken repeatedly since Russian forces invaded Ukraine in February. "President Erdogan said calls for peace and negotiations should be supported by a unilateral ceasefire and a vision for a fair solution," the readout said, adding that Erdogan reminded Putin of the positive outcomes of the grains corridor deal. Ukraine is a major global grain producer and exporter, but production and exports have fallen since Russia invaded and started blockading its seaports. The two leaders also discussed Syria, with Erdogan telling Putin that concrete steps needed to be taken to clear Kurdish militants from the Syrian border region, the readout said.
Howitzers fired daily from Turkey have struck Kurdish YPG targets for a week, while warplanes have carried out airstrikes. The escalation comes after a deadly bomb attack in Istanbul two weeks ago that Ankara blamed on the YPG militia. President Tayyip Erdogan has said Turkey would launch a land operation when convenient to secure its southern border. Erdogan said back in May that Turkey would soon launch a military operation against the YPG in Syria, but such an operation did not materialise at that time. The defence ministry said on Saturday three Turkish soldiers had been killed in northern Iraq, where the military has been conducting an operation against the PKK since April.
"We are continuing the air operation and will come down hard on the terrorists from land at the most convenient time for us," Erdogan told his AK Party's lawmakers in a speech in parliament. Meanwhile, the United States has conveyed serious concerns to Turkey, a NATO ally, about the impact of escalation on the goal of fighting Islamic State militants in Syria. Turkey has previously launched military incursions in Syria against the Kurdish YPG militia, regarding it as a wing of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which Turkey, the United States and the European Union designate as a terrorist group. NEARLY 500 TARGETS HITTurkish Defence Minister Hulusi Akar said the army had hit 471 targets in Syria and Iraq since the weekend in what he said was Turkey's biggest air operation of recent times. It cited him as saying 254 militants had been "neutralised" in the operation, a term generally used to be mean killed.
Total: 5