Türkİye, Operation Spring Shield

Turkey-Russia agreement not to change refugee policy

Turkish presidential sources evaluate Thursday's meeting between Turkey and Russia, which agreed on a ceasefire in Idlib

Enes Kaplan  | 06.03.2020 - Update : 06.03.2020
Turkey-Russia agreement not to change refugee policy

ANKARA

Turkey and Russia’s agreement on a ceasefire in Syria’s Idlib province does not require Ankara to change its refugee policy, Turkish presidential sources said Thursday.

"The Russia-Turkey agreement does not require the rollback of changes made to Turkey's refugee policy and does not change the fact of the European Union's non-compliance with its promises as part of the 2016 refugee deal,” they said.

“The EU should take the necessary steps in cooperation with Turkey, and not against Turkey, to end the humanitarian crisis in Syria. The agreement reached today showed that leadership diplomacy is yielding its fruits. Russia has chosen to agree in order not to sacrifice our multi-dimensional relations for the regime’s ambitions and whims."

The sources said the talks on Syria earlier in the day between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin and their respective delegations were held in a positive environment in Moscow.

The meeting resulted in an agreement on a ceasefire in Idlib.

While noting that Turkey welcomed Putin’s condolences over the martyrdom of Turkish troops in a regime attack last week, the sources said Erdogan made Turkey’s stance clear that if there is no agreement, the country would eliminate regime elements from Idlib through its own means.

Turkey announced the launch of Operation Spring Shield on Sunday after at least 34 Turkish soldiers were martyred in late February in an Assad regime airstrike in Idlib.

Idlib, just across Turkey’s southern border, falls within a de-escalation zone laid out in a deal between Turkey and Russia in late 2018.

But the Syrian regime and its allies have consistently broken the terms of the agreement, launching frequent attacks inside the territory, where acts of aggression are expressly prohibited.

On the results of the talks, the sources said Turkey’s independent foreign policy, which it adopts in line with its national interests, has achieved a new success. They added that Turkey held negotiations with Russia and also hosted U.S. Special Envoy for Syria James Jeffrey in Istanbul the same day.

“We protected our national interests by preventing a new irregular migrant wave that could come from Syria and we have made the West, especially the United States of America, support us.

“Turkey has shown its determination to have a say in the future of Syria by dealing a heavy blow to the Assad regime with its own resources. It is now well understood that any attack against Turkish soldiers will not be left unanswered,” they said.

Also noting that Turkey showed that it would not allow Western countries to dictate conditions on the ground in Idlib, they said Ankara proved that it would not be anyone’s “pawn” in the region by taking the matter into its own hands.

It emphasized that Turkey’s defense industry has "proven its adequacy" in the Idlib crisis, adding the investments made in this area were in the right place.

"The Turkey-Russia agreement is not an obstacle for the U.S. and EU to support Turkey. Confidence-building steps such as the deployment of air defense systems and intelligence sharing should take place. We should not forget that more than 3 million civilians are still stuck in a small area in Idlib. The risk of irregular migration from the region continues. European countries should not give a chance to Russia to use migrants as weapons against European democracies. What happened in recent days has revealed the need for a comprehensive and deep-rooted solution to the humanitarian crisis in the region,” the sources added.

*Writing by Sena Guler and Jeyhun Aliyev

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