Türkİye, Americas

US: Jarabulus operation sign of ‘important progress’

'Our NATO allies in Turkey have made valuable contributions to the counter-ISIL campaign,' White House says

24.08.2016 - Update : 25.08.2016
US: Jarabulus operation sign of ‘important progress’ White House spokesman Josh Earnest

Washington DC

By Michael Hernandez

WASHINGTON

Turkey’s recent incursion into Syria to strike Daesh positions is an “indication of important progress” in securing the Turkish-Syrian border, the White House said Wednesday.

“Our NATO allies in Turkey have made valuable contributions to the counter-ISIL campaign, and this is just the latest example of it,” spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters.

Earnest acknowledged that “tension between Turks and Kurdish forces” in Syria has “been simmering for a long time,” but said the U.S. would continue its support for “unified forces” fighting Daesh in Syria.

Those forces include the YPG that Turkey considers to be the Syrian branch of the PKK. Turkey, the U.S. and EU consider the PKK a terrorist group, but Washington has refrained from listing the YPG similarly.

The YPG is the primary force within the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, which has been supported by coalition airstrikes and special operators in their fight against Daesh.

“The fact is there have been diverse forces inside of Syria that, yes, that include some Kurds, but also are Arabs and Turkomen and others who have been an effective fighting force against ISIL and have been responsible for significant gains on the ground inside of Syria,” he said, referring to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, an alternate name for Daesh.

Regarding the ongoing process to extradite Fetullah Gulen, who Turkey blames for the failed July 15 coup attempt, Earnest said Ankara has “presented significant evidence” for his extradition.

Justice Department officials are currently reviewing the information and a U.S. official said earlier Wednesday that Turkey has presented four separate extradition requests, but all the information related to “allegations of criminal behavior that predated the coup.”

Given the “high evidentiary standard” that is required for an extradition request to be approved in U.S. courts, Earnest said it is “understandable that Turkey wouldn't be able to build a robust case, if there is one to be presented, against Mr. Gulen” in the month and a half since the coup attempt transpired.

The decision ultimately falls to the independent U.S. justice system, not President Barack Obama or his administration, Earnest said.

“The decision about the evidence that Turkey has compiled is one that will follow the guidelines of the extradition treaty and will ultimately involve a federal judge who will have to render their own judgment, their own assessment of the situation, consistent with U.S. law and consistent with the terms of the extradition treaty,” he said.

Asked if he thought U.S.-Turkish relations are "fraying", Earnest said that such statements are "overstating" the situation, and "strong" ties remain.

"That government was threatened by an attempted military coup just a month or two ago and it's important for the people of Turkey, and for the government of Turkey, to understand that the most influential democracy in the world here in the United States is strongly supportive of their democracy," he said.

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