Turkey, US officials in first operational meeting on Syria
The meeting is expected to coordinate military, intelligence
and political responses to the crisis in Syria where a deadly crackdown
on peaceful protests that began in March 2011 has according to activists
claimed more than 23,000 lives.
The officials are also due to discuss contingency plans in the case
of potential threats including a chemical attack by the regime in
Damascus which Washington has called a “red line”.
Turkish foreign ministry deputy under-secretary Halit Cevik and US
ambassador Elisabeth Jones are leading the delegations made up of
intelligence agents, military officials and diplomats at the meeting in
Ankara, a foreign ministry source told the news agency.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Turkey’s Foreign Minister
Ahmet Davutoglu had announced their plans for such a mechanism to
hasten the end of President Bashar al-Assad’s regime on August 11.
Today’s meeting come just days after US President Barack Obama
warned Syria that any movement or usage of its chemical weapons would be
a “red line” that would change his perspective on how to respond to the
conflict.
A chemical attack would also trigger a refugee influx to
neighbouring countries including Turkey which is already hosting more
than 70,000 Syrians.
On Monday, Davutoglu said Turkey can handle no more than 100,000
Syrian refugees and has proposed setting up a UN buffer zone inside
Syria to shelter them.
The exodus of refugees to Turkey has intensified recently as a
result of a Syrian army offensive and fighting in the northern city of
Aleppo between regime forces and rebels.
The growing flow of refugees has raised fears of a repeat of the
1991 Gulf War, when half a million Iraqi Kurds massed along the common
border.
The threat of armed groups including the outlawed Kurdistan
Workers’ Party (PKK) and Al-Qaeda which could exploit a power vacuum in
Syria is also expected to figure high on the agenda of the Ankara
meeting.
In Istanbul, Clinton had said she shared “Turkey’s determination
that Syria must not become a haven for PKK terorrists whether now or
after the departure of the Assad regime.”
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