[If we set aside the routine rhetorics, at the core of the article
below lies a rather detailed factual account of the situation actually
obtaining.
It highlights the considerable tensions between the US and Turkey, and
yet the insistence of the US to go ahead with providing critical
supports to the the PKK-affiliated Kurdish group in its valiant fight
against the monstrous ISIS in Kobane despite vehement Turkish
opposition, and also the limited success achieved as yet by the US in
arm-twisting Erdogan to allow Kurdish peshmerga fighters from Iraq to
transit via Turkey to reinforce Syrian Kurds (PYD) in Kobane.
It also talks of US efforts to facilitate the formation of a broader
Kurdish front in the regionand a more inclusive government in Iraq to
fight the ISIS effectively.
(It, however, does not mention the recent pact, of considerable
import, between the YPG and the FSA.)]

http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2014/10/21/syri-o21.html

US boosts support for Kurdish militia in Syria
By Peter Symonds
21 October 2014

The Obama administration has stepped up its war inside Syria with air
drops of military and medical supplies on Sunday to beleaguered
Kurdish forces holding the town of Kobani against a sustained
offensive by Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) militia. At the
same time, the US is putting intense pressure on the Turkish
government to assist in preventing Kobani, near the Turkish border,
being overrun by ISIS fighters.

Lahur Jangi Talabani, director of the intelligence agency of the
Kurdish regional government in northern Iraq, told the Guardian that
three US military transports delivered 24 tonnes of small arms and
ammunition as well as 10 tonnes of medical supplies to Kobani. The
Turkish press reported that the US aircraft did not cross Turkish
airspace en route from Iraq.

Turkey, which has long borders with Syria, Iraq and Iran is the only
NATO ally in the Middle East. It has adamantly opposed providing any
support for the Kurds against ISIS, revealing deep tensions within the
anti-ISIS coalition. Turkey's air force even carried out strikes on
positions in south east Turkey of the outlawed separatist Kurdistan
Workers Party (PKK), who were crucial in pushing back ISIS in northern
Iraq.

The PKK's affiliate in Syria is the Kurdish Democratic Union Party
(PYD), whose armed wing, the YPG, has borne the brunt of the fighting
against ISIS in Kobani. The fear in Ankara is that the consolidation
of the YPG's hold in northern Syria will strengthen the PKK's position
inside Turkey, including through the provision of arms.

Speaking on Saturday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan flatly
ruled out facilitating the transfer of American arms to Kobani. "There
has been talk of arming the PYD to form a front against ISIS. For us,
the PYD is the same as the PKK. It is a terrorist organisation. It
would be very, very wrong to expect us to say 'yes' to our NATO ally
America to give this kind of support. To expect something like this
from us is impossible," he said.

Erdogan also continued to insist that US demands for the use of
Turkish air bases were contingent on US support for imposing no-fly
and buffer zones in Syria and explicitly targeting the Syrian
government of President Bashar al-Assad. Turkey, along with other
regional allies such as Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States, signed up to
the new US war understanding that its main aim was the ouster of
Assad. Turkish tensions with the US reflect tactical differences over
the timing and means for regime change in Damascus.

Nevertheless, within hours of the airdrops, the Turkish government
announced that it will allow Kurdish peshmerga fighters from Iraq to
transit Turkey to reinforce Syrian Kurds in Kobani. The decision
followed a phone conversation between US President Barack Obama and
Erdogan in which Obama was said to have described the situation in
Kobani as desperate and warned Erdogan of the planned arms drops.

US Secretary of State John Kerry stated on Monday that the Turkish
president had been told that the action was "not a shift in policy by
the United States," but rather a "momentary effort." He dismissed
Turkish objections, saying that "while they [the YGP] are an offshoot
group of the folks that our friends the Turks oppose, they are
valiantly fighting ISIL [ISIS] and we cannot take our eye off the
prize here."

Kerry's comments underscore the utter cynicism behind US support for
the YGP and other Kurdish militias. The battle for Kobani presents an
opportunity for the US not only to inflict significant losses on ISIS,
but potentially to establish a base for US operations inside Syria
against the Assad regime. While the PYD and the PKK are still on the
US State Department's list of terrorist organisations, Kerry is
rebadging the Syrian Kurds as Washington's latest "valiant" freedom
fighters.

While welcoming the US air drops, the PYD in Kobani greeted the
Turkish announcement of peshmerga fighters coming to their relief as
"Turkish propaganda." There are significant divisions between the
Turkish and Syrian Kurdish groups, on the one hand, and the Kurdish
Regional Government in Iraq, which has forged close ties to Ankara.

The Al Jazeera news agency reported that there has been no official
decision by Iraq's Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) to send its
fighters, who are already stretched very thin combating a renewed ISIS
offensive. Yesterday, ISIS launched a wave of around 15 near
simultaneous attacks on Kurdish peshmerga positions in northern Iraq,
including the strategic Mosul Dam.

The US is clearly seeking to turn the various Kurdish militias, which
have been the only ground forces able to stem ISIS advances, into a
reliable proxy force to advance its strategic ambitions in Iraq and
Syria. The US State Department held formal direct talks with the PYD
just over a week ago.

At the same time, the various Kurdish organisations, which have always
sought the support of imperialism to secure their aims, have been
seeking to accommodate. The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday
that about 20 Syrian Kurdish factions, including the groups fighting
in Kobani, have been meeting in the Kurdish autonomous region in
northern Iraq to thrash out a common agenda. As one PYD leader Sinam
Mohamad told the newspaper, the aim is to fashion a front that will
attract "more international support."

The US is continuing its bombing campaign with 10 strikes in Iraq and
13 in Syria over the weekend. The air attacks in Iraq focussed on the
western province of Anbar where ISIS and its Sunni militia allies
control large swathes of territory and threaten to encroach on the
capital Baghdad. The strikes in Syria were directed predominantly
against ISIS positions around Kobani.

The sectarian character of the war in Iraq and Syria was underscored
by the Iraqi parliament's approval on Saturday, after a lengthy delay,
of Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's appointees to the key
ministerial posts of defence and interior. Under pressure from
Washington to include Sunni politicians into his predominantly Shiite
government, Abadi nominated Sunni parliamentarian Khalid al-Obeidi as
defence minister. However, his appointee as interior minister--Badr
Organisation member Mohammed Salem al-Ghabban--is sure to fuel
sectarian tensions. The Shiite Badr brigades were notorious for
sectarian violence against Sunnis under the US occupation of Iraq.

Yesterday four car bombs exploded near two important Shiite shrines in
the southern Iraqi city of Karbala, killing 22 people and wounding
another 51. Another attack involving a suicide bomber killed at least
18 people and wounded 33 more at a Shiite mosque in Baghdad.



-- 
Peace Is Doable

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