Turkey to continue Syria op if U.S. fails to deliver, Erdogan says

Turkey will continue its anti-terror operation in northeast Syria if an agreement with the United States to pause the operation and allow the withdrawal of People’s Protection Units (YPG) terrorists is not fully implemented, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Friday.

“If promises (given by the U.S.) are not fulfilled, our operation will continue the minute the 120th hour ends,” Erdogan stressed.

A U.S. delegation led by Vice President Mike Pence met with Turkish leaders, including Erdogan, for more than four hours Thursday and agreed to a five-day pause in the Turkish operation. The arrangement said the YPG would withdraw from what has been called a safe zone that is about 20-miles deep into Syria and stretches across about 78 miles (125 kilometers) of the central portion of the border between the two countries.

The president also told journalists that it was not a problem for Turkey if forces loyal to the regime of Bashar Assad, backed by Russia, were to enter areas cleared of the YPG, adding that Ankara had no intention of staying in areas under its control in northern Syria.

Erdogan said he had informed U.S. President Donald Trump about the operation in a phone call a day before launching it.

He also said his country “cannot forget” the bizarre letter from Trump about the Turkish operation but added that the mutual “love and respect” between the two leaders prevents him from keeping it on Turkey’s agenda.

These are Erdogan’s first comments concerning the Oct. 9 letter from Trump, in which, among other things, he warned Erdogan not to be a “tough guy.”

Erdogan said that Turkey would “do what’s necessary” concerning the letter “when the time comes.” He did not elaborate.

He added: “President Trump’s letter, which did not go hand in hand with political and diplomatic courtesy, has appeared in the media. Of course, we haven’t forgotten it. It would not be right for us to forget it.”

Leaders of France, Germany, UK to meet Erdogan over Syria op

Leaders of France, Germany and the United Kingdom will soon meet with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan over Turkey’s Operation Peace Spring in Syria, French President Emmanuel Macron said Friday.

Macron said he would use a NATO summit in London in December to confront Erdogan over the operation against People’s Protection Units (YPG) terrorists.

In the meantime the three countries will coordinate closely on contacts with Erdogan, U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, the French president said.

The quadrilateral meeting will also help “achieve coherence” about what the transatlantic military alliance NATO “can and should be at this moment,” Macron said.

He added that he wants to remind “anyone who might forget, which would not be completely unjustifiable in this period, that Turkey is a NATO member, something that should normally call for a certain form of solidarity.”

Turkey launched Operation Peace Spring, the third in a series of cross-border anti-terror operations in northern Syria targeting terrorists affiliated with Daesh and the PKK’s Syrian offshoot the People’s Protection Units (YPG), on Oct. 9.

The operation, conducted in line with the country’s right to self-defense borne out of international law and U.N. Security Council resolutions, aims to establish a terror-free safe zone for Syrians return in the area east of the Euphrates River controlled by the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), which is dominated by YPG terrorists.

The PKK — listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the U.S. and the European Union — has waged a terror campaign against Turkey for more than 30 years, resulting in the deaths of nearly 40,000 people, including women, children and infants.

The operation was paused for five days following U.S.-Turkish talks in Ankara on Thursday.