Senior Kurdish Official Predicts Syrian War to Continue to Next Decade

  • 1/14/2018
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A senior Kurdish official predicted that the Syrian conflict will continue into the next decade. Aldar Khalil, an architect of Kurdish-led plans for autonomous rule in northern Syria, also predicted that Russian efforts to end the war will fail. The United States appears in “no hurry” to leave areas where it has helped Kurdish-led forces fight ISIS, he told Reuters, expecting ties with Washington to develop as US recovery efforts proceed. The Syrian Kurds are among the few winners in the almost seven-year-old war, having established control over large parts of the north with a powerful militia that has partnered with the US-led coalition against ISIS. Russia, Bashar al-Assad’s ally, has asked them to take part in an international peace conference on Syria for the first time -- a peace congress scheduled in the Russian city of Sochi on Jan. 29-30. “Yes, we are invited and we might take part in the show but it will not succeed,” Khalil, co-chair of the Movement for a Democratic Society, a coalition of Syrian Kurdish parties, said by telephone. He questioned what the hundreds of anticipated attendees could accomplish in two days and said more preparation was required. UN-led diplomacy in Geneva was also set for more failure, he said, adding that the war would “ebb and flow” until at least 2021, the end of Assad’s current seven-year term. “I don’t expect any breakthrough in the Syrian situation before 2021 ... it might even go on until ‘25,” he said. “ISIS might expand in other areas, and of course the Turks might try to stir up problems in some areas.” The Syrian Kurds’ ascendancy in Syria has alarmed neighboring Turkey. Ankara views the dominant Syrian Kurdish groups as an extension of Kurdish parties in Turkey that have been fighting Ankara for more than three decades. US support for Syrian Kurdish fighters has also strained ties between the NATO allies: Turkey on Wednesday summoned a top US diplomat in Ankara to protest over US support of Kurdish fighters in Syria. Khalil is seen as a key figure in plans to establish a federal region in northern Syria - a plan Washington has opposed despite backing the Syrian Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) in the war with ISIS. The Syrian Kurds say independence is not their goal. But Khalil said the Kurdish-led authorities would press ahead with unilateral autonomy plans, though elections to a new regional parliament have been postponed to allow more time to prepare. With the fight against ISIS winding down, US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said last month he expected to see a larger US civilian presence in Syria, including contractors and diplomats to focus on stabilization and ensuring ISIS does not return. Khalil declined to say how long the United States might maintain a foothold in northern Syria, but said that achieving US goals of helping cities such as Raqqa to recover implied a commitment of at least 18 months to two years. “These matters will not be completed in less time than this,” he said. “I can’t confirm to you a long-term relationship, but at least for the foreseeable time, it seems they are not in a hurry to leave,” he said. Pointing to the Mattis remarks, he said he expected US ties to northern Syria to develop further. The Kurdish-led authorities have held two local elections since September, part of their plan to build new governing structures. Discussions are underway to decide when a third vote -- aimed at electing a regional parliament -- will happen. Khalil said the delay was aimed partly at giving a chance for areas recently captured from ISIS to decide whether to participate. Though Assad recently condemned the US-backed Kurdish forces and their allies as “traitors”, Khalil said the Syrian regime was incapable of attacking areas they control and warned that if it tried to “all its forces will be killed”. He warned that ISIS sleeper cells posed a big threat. “The ISIS campaign is not over, now the more difficult phase has started,” he said.

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