French President Emmanuel Macron warned Turkey that its operation against Kurdish militias in northern Syria should not become an excuse to invade the country and said he wanted Ankara to coordinate its action with its allies.
Turkey last week launched an air and ground offensive in northwest Syria, targeting the Kurdish YPG militia in the Afrin region. That has opened a new front in the seven-year-old civil war and strained ties with Turkey’s NATO allies.
“If it turns out that this operation takes a turn other than to fight a potential terrorist threat to the Turkish border and becomes an invasion operation, (then) this becomes a real problem for us,” Macon said in an interview with Le Figaro newspaper published on Wednesday.
Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim defended the operation saying it was solely aimed at securing his country’s security and protecting Arabs, Kurds and Turkmens from “terrorist organizations.”
“If France is interpreting this issue as such (invasion operation), we need to assess what they have done in Syria accordingly,” Yildirum said at a news conference alongside Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri in Ankara.
“This is a crooked idea from the start. The whole world knows that Turkey is not acting with an invasive mind. They should know it.”
Macron has made it clear that he will reach out to Erdogan as to the nature of this current operation to say that there should be better communication between European countries but among allies as well. And that had to do with the United States.
While the Turks equate the YPG with the outlawed PKK within their borders as a terrorist organization, both France and the United States have armed, supported and advised the YPG in fighting the Islamic State terrorists during the war in Syria.
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