Turkey nearing military intervention
in Syria: Buffer Zones
Defense officials in Israel say Turkey is likely to set up
secure buffer zones in Syria, near the border, to allow armed Syrian opposition
groups to battle against the regime.
Israeli security forces officials said Wednesday that they
believe Turkey is nearing a military intervention in Syria, in order to create
a secure buffer zone for opposition activists.
Thus far, Ankara has given shelter to some 20,000 refugees
who escaped the deadly crackdown by Syrian President Bashar Assad's security
forces, and also housed Syrian opposition groups.
In recent days, however, Israeli officials said that
according to an updated assessment of the situation, Turkey is expected to set
up secure buffer zones on its border with Syria that would allow armed opposition
groups to organize against the Syrian regime from bases that would be protected
by the Turkish army.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has recently
hardened his stance against Assad and suggested for the first time the
possibility of foreign intervention in Syria.
Wide protests against Assad's regime have been ongoing
across Syria, but in recent weeks the focal point of the armed resistance by
army defectors was in the three northern cities close to Turkey's border –
Idlib, Homs, and Hama.
According to various reports, there is an area in Idlib
where the Syrian army lost control and has the potential to become an
independent, rebel-controlled area, such as the Libyan city of Benghazi, which
was seized by the rebels early in the revolution and became the temporary base
for the opposition movement.
No comments:
Post a Comment