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Sunday, May 26, 2024

Ankara action in northern Syria, security or anti-security!

Pak Sahafat –  Floating policies of Ankara on various issues are not complete, and in recent years, especially in relation to Turkey’s relationship with the Zionist regime and the killing of Syrian Muslims by Takfiri terrorists and Ankara’s support for them and dozens of other issues indicate a change of position.

While the people of the region have high expectations of the Turkish authorities to resolve regional issues and problems, it seems that the Ankara authorities are not paying attention to the concerns of the Muslims in the region and the aim of the Turkish officials is only to solve the Turkish economic problems.

Anyway, including establishing a friendly relationship between Ankara and Tel Aviv is a way that experts on regional issues believe will only bring losses to the region and even to the Turkish people.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who himself criticizes the standards and double standards of some European countries, spoke last Monday at the inauguration of a local submarine in the province of Govci.

The Turkish president, who had previously accused Finland and Sweden of supporting terrorism and opposed the two countries joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), did not see NATO development in the interests of his country and the alliance (NATO).

Erdogan’s remarks and sensitivities came a few days ago when he and other Turkish officials intervened in Syrian affairs to announce the creation of a seemingly “safe” zone in northern Syria without Damascus’ consent.

Erdogan also announced last Monday that Turkey soon launches operation to create “Safe Zone!” It will operate at a depth of 30 km from the Turkish border with Syria in the south of the country, and the final decision will be made at a meeting of the Turkish National Security Council on Thursday.

Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu recently announced that Ankara was planning to build about 250,000 homes in northern Syria with the aim of voluntarily returning half a million displaced Syrians.

Stating Turkey has developed 13 projects to build 250,000 houses in the Al-Bab, Jarablus, Ras Al-Ain and Tel Abyad regions in northern and northwestern Syria,” he said: These projects are aimed at settling Syrian citizens with temporary residence in Turkey, and Syrians are given the right to use these houses for 5 or 10 years.

The intervention of Turkish officials in Syria, which has reached its peak in the last 11 years, with the beginning of terrorist acts in Syria and Ankara’s support for terrorists, has met with a strong reaction from Damascus and the United Nations.

A spokesman for the UN Secretary-General on Tuesday evening said in response to the Turkish president’s call for a safe zone in northern Syria that Syria did not need further military action by either side.

“Asked about Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s recent announcement to establish a safe zone in northern Syria,” Stephen Dujarric told a news conference in New York: We adhere to and emphasize our positions in defense of Syria’s territorial integrity.

He added: Syria does not need more military operations from either side, but what it needs is more political solutions and humanitarian aid; these are the two things we are working on.

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Erdogan called the Israeli president’s visit to Ankara “historic.”

 The Syrian Foreign Ministry also issued a statement rejecting Turkey’s comments and actions in northern Syria that “Turkish President Sakhif’s statements about creating a safe zone in northern Syria are hostile toys that the country has played against Syria and its territorial integrity.”

A statement from the Syrian Foreign Ministry stressed that “Damascus urges the international community not to bargain with Erdogan on the soil of other countries in order to achieve short-sighted goals that will have catastrophic effects on security, peace and stability in the region and the world.”

Syrians’ negative view of Turkish officials

The Syrians and the Damascus authorities do not have a good view of the current and past Turkish authorities because of their anti-Syrian actions, such as the secession and annexation of the Syrian province of Iskenderun (Hatay) to Turkey in 1939.

The province of Iskenderun, which Turkey called the Republic of Hatay, became independent in September 1938, but was declared Turkish territory in 1939 under an agreement between France and Turkey, but Syria, has always denied this claim.

Sixty years later, in 1998, the crisis in relations between the two countries escalated to the point that then-Turkish Prime Minister Massoud Yilmaz claimed on the 60th anniversary of Alexander’s accession to Turkey: “Ankara has no eyes on the soil of any country, but we are determined to blind the eyes of those who have their eyes on our soil.”

In response to the Turkish authorities, the Syrians have always emphasized their historical right and that they will never give it up.

The Syrian People’s Assembly stressed last year that the breakaway region of Iskenderun is an integral part of the country’s territory, and the Syrians will do their utmost to return the stolen rights to their owners.

The Syrian People’s Assembly issued a statement on the 82nd anniversary of Alexander’s secession from Syria, stating that “The Syrian people are determined to retake all the occupied lands and win, thanks to the efforts of the men of the Syrian Arab Army; “They also emphasize the reconstruction and reconstruction of Syria.”

The statement also stressed that the tripartite agreement between the French, British and Turkish occupiers in 1939 to secede from Alexandria was a shameful agreement and a gross violation of the French government’s commitments, as well as a clear violation of the 1936 treaty that France signed with the Syrian government; The treaty stipulates in the true sense of the word that Syria will assume all its obligations under its tutelage, including administratively independent territories.

The Syrian People’s Assembly noted that the suspicious role of the Ottoman descendants in Turkey (the Brotherhood Erdogan government) and its terrorist mercenaries has returned today, after all these years. “Erdogan’s regime continues its terrorist attacks on Syrian territory, occupying parts of the country, looting its factories, facilities and factories, and smuggling stolen property into Turkey.”

In its statement, the Syrian People’s Assembly also called the Turkish regime’s actions against Syria a clear violation of the simplest rules and principles of human rights and international and humanitarian law.

Turkey’s usurpation in Syria and the annexation of Iskenderun to Turkey show that the people and officials of Damascus do not have a good view of the current and past leaders of Turkey due to their anti-Syrian actions, and the claim of Ankara officials about creating a safe zone in northern Syria is in line with the usurpation of some other northern regions in Idlib province. The Turks have established 40 bases in the province, bringing in hundreds of troops and destabilizing northern Syria.

Therefore, the new plan of Turkey is faced with many doubts by many analysts, especially that with the implementation of the safe zone plan, the relative security created after the victory over ISIS and terrorist groups will be destroyed.

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