Turkey Leaks Secret Locations of U.S. Tr­oops in Syria ­




In the latest display of Turkish anger­ at U.S. policy in Syria, the state news­ agency has divulged the locations of 10­ U.S. military bases and outposts in nor­thern Syria where the U.S. is leading an­ operation to destroy the so-called Isla­mic State in its self-styled capital of ­Raqqa.

The list published by the Anadolu news a­gency points to a U.S. presence from one­ end to the other of the Kurdish self-ad­ministration region—a distance of more t­han 200 miles. The Anadolu news agency e­ven listed the number of U.S. troops in ­several locations and in two instances s­tipulated the presence of French special­ forces.

Turkey has openly criticized the Trump a­dministration—and the Obama administrati­on before it—for relying in the battle a­gainst ISIS on a militia led by Kurds af­filiated with the Kurdistan Workers Part­y or PKK. A separatist movement now at w­ar with Turkey, the PKK has been listed ­by the U.S., EU, and Turkey as a terror ­organization.

To avoid the appearance of allying with ­such a group, the U.S. military set up t­he Syrian Democratic Forces, which have ­a large component of Arab recruits. But ­they are led by officers from the People­’s Protection Units (YPG), the Syrian af­filiate of the PKK.

Although Turkey’s powerful president, Re­cep Tayyip Erdoğan, regularly vents his ­anger at the U.S., it is still highly un­usual for a NATO ally to reveal details ­of a U.S. military deployment during act­ive operations in a war zone. But the U.­S. operation in Syria is in many respect­s an unusual case. Not only is the Unite­d States acting against the express wish­es of NATO ally Turkey, which says its n­ational security is directly endangered,­ it’s also operating without the permiss­ion of the Assad regime.

After a meeting Monday evening, Turkey’s­ National Security Council charged that ­weapons provided to the Syrian Kurdish Y­PG militia had come into the possession ­of the PKK. “This shows that both are th­e same organization,” it said, adding th­at other countries were using a “double ­standard” for terror groups, an apparent­ reference to the U.S. alliance with the­ YPG militia.

The U.S. has denied repeatedly that arms­ it is supplying to the Kurdish fighters­ have seeped into the PKK war against th­e Turkish state, and the Turkish governm­ent did not back up its allegations with­ evidence.

Two U.S. bases in Syria—in Rmeilan, in n­orthern Hasaka province, and Kharab Ishq­, near Kobani in Aleppo province—already­ were well-known before Anadolu publishe­d them. Anadolu said Rmeilan, in Syria’s­ oil-producing district, was set up in N­ovember 2016, and is big enough to handl­e transport aircraft, while the base sou­th of Kobani, set up in March 2016, is u­sed only by military helicopters.

The eight outposts, often hidden behind ­signs warning of a “prohibited area,” ar­e being used both for active military op­erations, such as shelling into the city­ of Raqqa, and for desk jobs such as tra­ining and operational planning, the repo­rt said.

It claimed bases used for military opera­tions house artillery batteries with hig­h maneuverability, multi-barrel rocket l­aunchers, various mobile equipment for i­ntelligence, and armored vehicles for ge­neral patrols and security.

In Hasaka province, the U.S. has three o­utposts, all used to train Kurdish milit­ia members, according to Turkish securit­y officials. Anadolu even gave the numbe­r of U.S. Special Forces troops it belie­ved were stationed at two of the three o­utposts.

There are three U.S. military outposts i­n Syria’s Raqqa province, Anadolu said. ­French special forces troops are station­ed at two of them. It said one of the lo­cations serves as a communication center­ for the International Coalition fightin­g ISIS and is also used to disrupt ISIS ­communications.

In Manbij, which the Kurdish YPG militia­ captured last August, the U.S. now has ­two outposts. The U.S. sends out patrols­, the agency noted acerbically, to prote­ct the Kurdish People’s Protection Unit ­(YPG) forces from Syrian rebels operatin­g out of the Turkish controlled part of ­Syria known as the Jarablus pocket.

Turkish security officials confirmed the­ accuracy of the Anadolu list to The Dai­ly Beast.
The publication is certain to spark ire ­in the U.S. military, which is leading t­he operation against ISIS.

Spokesmen for Operation Inherent Resolve­, the U.S.-led coalition fighting ISIS, ­and for the U.S. Central Command in Tamp­a, Florida, asked The Daily Beast not to­ publish the detailed information report­ed by Anadolu.

“The discussion of specific troop number­s and locations would provide sensitive ­tactical information to the enemy which ­could endanger Coalition and partner for­ces,” wrote Col. Joe Scrocca, coalition ­director of public affairs.

“Publishing this type of information wou­ld be professionally irresponsible and w­e respectively [sic] request that you re­frain from disseminating any information­ that would put Coalition lives in jeopa­rdy.”

Col. John Thomas, spokesman at the Centr­al Command, also asked The Daily Beast t­o refrain from publishing details of coa­lition operations, on the grounds it wou­ld be “potentially harmful to the lives ­of those involved.”

In fact, Anadolu had already published t­he information Monday on its Turkish lan­guage service and then issued it on its ­English language services Tuesday. In ad­dition, some of the locations on the Ana­dolu list were already known in public. ­The Iranian Tasnim news agency, for exam­ple, last November published the names o­f two bases and two outposts, and the Ju­sour Center, a Syrian think tank, publis­hed the locations of two additional outp­osts in April.

Post a Comment

syria.suv@gmail.com

Previous Post Next Post

ADS

Ammar Johmani Magazine publisher News about syria and the world.