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WAR REPORT
Turkey, US troops train for joint patrols in Syria's Manbij
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 2, 2018

Turkey parliament extends mandate for troop deployment in Syria, Iraq
Ankara (AFP) Oct 3, 2018 - Turkish parliament on Wednesday approved a motion to extend the deployment of troops in neighbouring Syria and Iraq for another year, the official Anadolu news agency reported.

The mandate, first approved by parliament in October 2014, has been renewed every year since then.

It allows military action in Turkey's two southern neighbours against Islamic State (IS) extremists and other groups deemed by Ankara to be terror organisations.

The approved motion said it was "essential for Turkey's national security to take all necessary measures ... in the face of any threats."

Ismet Yilmaz, head of parliament's defence committee, said there would be no let-off in Turkey's fight against terror.

"We will not allow terror groups to shelter or be trained in our country's southern borders, or stage attacks against our country utilising the instable political situation in Iraq and Syria," Yilmaz was quoted as saying by Anadolu.

Troops from NATO allies Turkey and the United States have started training together ahead of conducting joint patrols around the northern Syrian city of Manbij, a US official said Tuesday.

The move comes even as relations between Washington and Ankara have soured in recent months over a number of issues, including Turkey's potential purchase of a Russian air-defense system.

Manbij, once in the hands of the Islamic State group, is now held by a US-backed alliance dominated by the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG).

Ankara considers the YPG "terrorists" and had previously threatened to attack the city.

US support for the YPG has strained relations with Turkey, which fears the emergence of an autonomous Kurdish region on its southern border.

Under an agreement with the United States to reduce tensions, Turkey started military patrols around Manbij in June, while the US conducted its own patrols.

Now troops from both countries are training together in Turkey to conduct joint patrols, US Army spokesman Colonel Sean Ryan said.

"Right now, they are still operating independent, coordinated patrols but they are also starting... the joint training," Ryan told Pentagon reporters. He did not say when the joint patrols would begin.

The Turkish and US troops are studying communications, rules of engagement and are undergoing medical training.

Fueling tensions, Turkey is embroiled in a dispute with Washington over the detention of a US pastor, and is in talks with Russia to buy the S-400 missile system.

President Donald Trump in August signed a defense authorization act that prohibits the delivery of F-35 stealth aircraft to Turkey if it goes ahead with the S-400 purchase.


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WAR REPORT
Three years of Russia strikes on Syria kill 18,000: monitor
Beirut (AFP) Sept 30, 2018
More than 18,000 people, nearly half of them civilians, have been killed in Russian air strikes on Syria since Moscow began its game-changing intervention exactly three years ago, a monitor said Sunday. Russia, for its part, said its "accurate" strikes had killed 85,000 "terrorists". A steadfast ally of Syria's ruling regime, Russia began carrying out bombing raids in the country on September 30, 2015 - more than four years into the devastating conflict. Since then, they have killed 18,096 ... read more

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