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http://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-compromises-won-turkeys-backing-for-kurdish-led-offensive-1468539313
Turkey agreed to back a pivotal offensive in Syria led by its Kurdish adversaries after intense U.S. lobbying that culminated in a secret May meeting, according to U.S. officials, an agreement that could lead to wider cooperation in the fight against Islamic State militants.
The U.S. won Turkish backing for the assault on the Syrian city of Manbij with a series of political and tactical compromises to rein in the Kurds, Turkish, U.S. and British officials said. That included having U.S. special-operations forces and local Arabs play an important role in the fight and arranging for a mostly Arab council to rule the city if it was retaken, U.S. officials said.
The breakthrough came after talks between President Barack Obama and PresidentRecep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey and culminated in the previously unreported May meeting at Turkey’s Incirlik Air Base with U.S. and Turkish officials and representatives of the force seeking to liberate Manbij, according to U.S. and Turkish officials.
Backing the offensive marked a meaningful shift for Turkey, which is fighting Kurdish separatists at home and has long voiced fears that Kurds want to carve out an independent homeland in parts of Turkey and Syria. Turkey had previously threatened to shell a Kurdish-led force if it advanced close to Manbij, Western officials said. Turkish officials didn’t respond to requests to comment.
The deal cleared the way for the Syrian Democratic Forces, largely commanded by a Kurdish militia, to try to capture Manbij and sever one of Islamic State’s last bridges to the outside world. The operation began in late May and the forces are currently about a mile from the city center, according to local residents.
Manbij is an Islamic State stronghold and is important as a potential gateway for attacking Raqqa, the de facto Syrian capital of the extremists’ self-declared caliphate. U.S. officials have also said that Islamic State used Manbij as a hub to dispatch foreign fighters to travel via Turkey to carry out recent attacks in Brussels and Paris.
ENLARGE
Fighters sit in a military vehicle as they advance on the Islamic State stronghold of Manbij, in Syria. PHOTO: DELIL SOULEIMAN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
U.S. officials said that if the Manbij operation goes according to plan, more Arabs may be willing to join the Syrian Democratic Forces, which is vital to retaking Raqqa, a larger city with a stronger militant force.
In addition, they said, Ankara may be willing to broaden cooperation if its concerns about the Kurds are allayed. Ankara currently bars the U.S. from resupplying Kurdish ground forces using Incirlik, the base from which the Pentagon spearheads its anti-Islamic State campaign in Syria.
Turkish officials said the deal reflects the consensus in Ankara that Islamic State poses a major threat to Turkish citizens, and a desire for Turkey to boost its counterterrorism efforts.
Turkish military officials and representatives of the Syrian Democratic Forces attended the May meeting at Incirlik, according to U.S. officials.
Ankara had blocked the offensive for months because of concerns that a Kurdish group known as YPG, which commands the Syrian Democratic Forces, would push out Arabs who represent the majority of the city’s population and repopulate it with Kurds, according to Turkish officials and Western officials from three countries involved in the military campaign.
Ankara sees the YPG as the Syrian branch of the PKK, a Kurdish separatist group it is fighting in Turkey’s southeast that Turkey and the U.S. consider a terrorist group. But the Pentagon sees the YPG as the best partner on the ground to help defeat Islamic State in Syria.
Turkey agreed to a U.S. formula for the composition of the Manbij fighting force, according to a Turkish official, with YPG units acting as front-line forces and Arab rebel groups taking logistical and support roles, similar to a U.S. Army battalion.
At Incirlik, U.S. officials provided assurances that 300 members of U.S. special-operations forces currently based in Syria would help conduct the offensive, which was crucial to securing Ankara’s approval for the Manbij operation, according to a senior U.S. official.
U.S. aircraft also flew members of a mostly Arab body called the Manbij Military Council from Syria’s battlefield to Incirlik for the meeting. The U.S. helped set up the council in April. The U.S. and Turkey agreed that the council will administer the city if it is retaken.
“The point of the meeting was to show that the bulk of the force we want to use are Arabs from Manbij and would include a smaller YPG element to fortify the force militarily as they’re good at calling in airstrikes,” said the senior U.S. official.
At the meeting, at least one Kurdish member of the Manbij Military Council promised that the city would be handed over to its majority Arab population after the offensive, according to two Western officials.
Turkish and U.S. officials said the crucial element to securing Ankara’s backing was a U.S. commitment that the Kurds wouldn't try to make Manbij part of an autonomous quasi-state called Rojava they are trying to establish along the Turkish border in northern Syria.
ENLARGE
U.S.-backed fighters advance into Manbij, Syria, in June. PHOTO: DELIL SOULEIMAN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
“Turkey welcomes ongoing efforts to liberate Manbij from ISIS,” said a Turkish official, using an acronym for Islamic State. “However, we are concerned about YPG militants staying in and around the city permanently.”
Representatives of the Manbij Military Council and the Syrian Democratic Forces declined to comment on the Incirlik meeting.
Participants in the Incirlik meeting drew up a tactical plan to retake Manbij, which has about 100,000 residents and is 25 miles from the Turkish border. If the offensive is successful, Manbij would be the largest population center in Syria to be retaken from Islamic State.
The Turks agreed to a two-pronged assault, allowing the Syrian Democratic Forces to cross the Euphrates River, just east of Manbij, Turkish and U.S. officials said. Ankara had previously warned the YPG not to cross the river out of concern Kurdish forces would link areas they control in Syria’s northeast and northwest.
The offensive began on May 31, roughly a week after the meeting. The Kurdish-led forces have been advancing slowly because of mines and Islamic State resistance.
An offensive to capture Raqqa largely hinges on success in Manbij and whether the Kurds keep their promises to hand over the city to Arabs, Western officials said. If so, officials hope more Arabs will join the Syrian Democratic Forces.
“The SDF as a force has been majority Kurdish. But as we move into Arab areas, it is shifting,” said the senior U.S. official. “As we move on Raqqa, everybody recognizes that we don’t want to use Kurds to lead the assault.”
—Carol E. Lee in Washington and Raja Abdulrahim and Noam Raydan in Beirut contributed to this article.
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Im sure the promises they made will be kept....
Turkey agreed to back a pivotal offensive in Syria led by its Kurdish adversaries after intense U.S. lobbying that culminated in a secret May meeting, according to U.S. officials, an agreement that could lead to wider cooperation in the fight against Islamic State militants.
The U.S. won Turkish backing for the assault on the Syrian city of Manbij with a series of political and tactical compromises to rein in the Kurds, Turkish, U.S. and British officials said. That included having U.S. special-operations forces and local Arabs play an important role in the fight and arranging for a mostly Arab council to rule the city if it was retaken, U.S. officials said.
The breakthrough came after talks between President Barack Obama and PresidentRecep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey and culminated in the previously unreported May meeting at Turkey’s Incirlik Air Base with U.S. and Turkish officials and representatives of the force seeking to liberate Manbij, according to U.S. and Turkish officials.
Backing the offensive marked a meaningful shift for Turkey, which is fighting Kurdish separatists at home and has long voiced fears that Kurds want to carve out an independent homeland in parts of Turkey and Syria. Turkey had previously threatened to shell a Kurdish-led force if it advanced close to Manbij, Western officials said. Turkish officials didn’t respond to requests to comment.
The deal cleared the way for the Syrian Democratic Forces, largely commanded by a Kurdish militia, to try to capture Manbij and sever one of Islamic State’s last bridges to the outside world. The operation began in late May and the forces are currently about a mile from the city center, according to local residents.
Manbij is an Islamic State stronghold and is important as a potential gateway for attacking Raqqa, the de facto Syrian capital of the extremists’ self-declared caliphate. U.S. officials have also said that Islamic State used Manbij as a hub to dispatch foreign fighters to travel via Turkey to carry out recent attacks in Brussels and Paris.

Fighters sit in a military vehicle as they advance on the Islamic State stronghold of Manbij, in Syria. PHOTO: DELIL SOULEIMAN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
U.S. officials said that if the Manbij operation goes according to plan, more Arabs may be willing to join the Syrian Democratic Forces, which is vital to retaking Raqqa, a larger city with a stronger militant force.
In addition, they said, Ankara may be willing to broaden cooperation if its concerns about the Kurds are allayed. Ankara currently bars the U.S. from resupplying Kurdish ground forces using Incirlik, the base from which the Pentagon spearheads its anti-Islamic State campaign in Syria.
Turkish officials said the deal reflects the consensus in Ankara that Islamic State poses a major threat to Turkish citizens, and a desire for Turkey to boost its counterterrorism efforts.
Turkish military officials and representatives of the Syrian Democratic Forces attended the May meeting at Incirlik, according to U.S. officials.
Ankara had blocked the offensive for months because of concerns that a Kurdish group known as YPG, which commands the Syrian Democratic Forces, would push out Arabs who represent the majority of the city’s population and repopulate it with Kurds, according to Turkish officials and Western officials from three countries involved in the military campaign.
Ankara sees the YPG as the Syrian branch of the PKK, a Kurdish separatist group it is fighting in Turkey’s southeast that Turkey and the U.S. consider a terrorist group. But the Pentagon sees the YPG as the best partner on the ground to help defeat Islamic State in Syria.
Turkey agreed to a U.S. formula for the composition of the Manbij fighting force, according to a Turkish official, with YPG units acting as front-line forces and Arab rebel groups taking logistical and support roles, similar to a U.S. Army battalion.
At Incirlik, U.S. officials provided assurances that 300 members of U.S. special-operations forces currently based in Syria would help conduct the offensive, which was crucial to securing Ankara’s approval for the Manbij operation, according to a senior U.S. official.
U.S. aircraft also flew members of a mostly Arab body called the Manbij Military Council from Syria’s battlefield to Incirlik for the meeting. The U.S. helped set up the council in April. The U.S. and Turkey agreed that the council will administer the city if it is retaken.
“The point of the meeting was to show that the bulk of the force we want to use are Arabs from Manbij and would include a smaller YPG element to fortify the force militarily as they’re good at calling in airstrikes,” said the senior U.S. official.
At the meeting, at least one Kurdish member of the Manbij Military Council promised that the city would be handed over to its majority Arab population after the offensive, according to two Western officials.
Turkish and U.S. officials said the crucial element to securing Ankara’s backing was a U.S. commitment that the Kurds wouldn't try to make Manbij part of an autonomous quasi-state called Rojava they are trying to establish along the Turkish border in northern Syria.

U.S.-backed fighters advance into Manbij, Syria, in June. PHOTO: DELIL SOULEIMAN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
“Turkey welcomes ongoing efforts to liberate Manbij from ISIS,” said a Turkish official, using an acronym for Islamic State. “However, we are concerned about YPG militants staying in and around the city permanently.”
Representatives of the Manbij Military Council and the Syrian Democratic Forces declined to comment on the Incirlik meeting.
Participants in the Incirlik meeting drew up a tactical plan to retake Manbij, which has about 100,000 residents and is 25 miles from the Turkish border. If the offensive is successful, Manbij would be the largest population center in Syria to be retaken from Islamic State.
The Turks agreed to a two-pronged assault, allowing the Syrian Democratic Forces to cross the Euphrates River, just east of Manbij, Turkish and U.S. officials said. Ankara had previously warned the YPG not to cross the river out of concern Kurdish forces would link areas they control in Syria’s northeast and northwest.
The offensive began on May 31, roughly a week after the meeting. The Kurdish-led forces have been advancing slowly because of mines and Islamic State resistance.
An offensive to capture Raqqa largely hinges on success in Manbij and whether the Kurds keep their promises to hand over the city to Arabs, Western officials said. If so, officials hope more Arabs will join the Syrian Democratic Forces.
“The SDF as a force has been majority Kurdish. But as we move into Arab areas, it is shifting,” said the senior U.S. official. “As we move on Raqqa, everybody recognizes that we don’t want to use Kurds to lead the assault.”
—Carol E. Lee in Washington and Raja Abdulrahim and Noam Raydan in Beirut contributed to this article.
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Im sure the promises they made will be kept....
