Erdogan did not get support from Tehran or Moscow for an attack on Syria, according to Damascus

Syrian Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad, who is visiting Iran, said today that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan could not get the support of Iran or Russia for an attack on Syria that he has been threatening to launch since May.

The Syrian official made this statement the day after the tripartite summit held yesterday, Tuesday, in Tehran with the presidents of Turkey, Russia Vladimir Putin and Iran’s Ibrahim Raishi.

Russia, Iran and Turkey are major players in the conflict that broke out in Syria in 2011, with Tehran and Moscow supporting the Bashar al-Assad regime and Turkey supporting the rebels.

At the Tehran summit on Tuesday, Erdogan’s goals “they were not reached after talks and opinions expressed by the friends, the Iranian and the Russians,” Mekdad said at a press conference in Tehran with his Iranian counterpart Hossein Amir-Abdollahian.

At the summit, the president Erdoganwhich wants to create a 30 km buffer zone along the Syrian border, expressed his determination to launch a new military operation “soon”. against the Kurdish forces that control the area.

“It must be clear to all that there is no place in the region for separatist terrorist movements and their accomplices. We will soon continue our battle against terrorist organizations”, warned the Turkish president, who considers “terrorists» the Kurdish fighters.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei opposed a Turkish operation in Syria

In a meeting with the Turkish president, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei had underlined his country’s opposition to a Turkish operation in Syria, calling it “harmful” for the region and calling for a settlement through dialogue between Ankara, Damascus, Moscow and Tehran.

Moscow had also called on Ankara to refrain from such an operation in Syria.

In their joint statement at the end of the summit, the three countries implicitly support Ankara in its fight against the Kurds, expressing “(their) will to oppose separatist aspirations that could undermine the sovereignty and integrity of Syria” and to threaten the security of neighboring countries.

For the head of Syrian diplomacy, any Turkish invasion would cause a “another form of conflictbetween the two countries.

His Iranian counterpart, on the other hand, spoke of the need to withdraw US forces deployed in the Syrian areas east of the Euphrates, echoing a call made by Ayatollah Khamenei on Tuesday during a meeting with President Putin.

The presence of American armed forces east of the Euphrates is one of the region’s problemss,” said Amir-Abdollahian.

Source: News Beast

You may also like