Tag: Rojava

  • Why Turkey is invading Syria

    Why Turkey is invading Syria

    Türkiye neden Suriye’yi işgal ediyor

    … and how it’s getting what it wanted.

    On Oct. 9, 2019, Turkey launched an attack in northeastern Syria. Turkey made the move shortly after the US announced it would remove some of its troops from the region.

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan had his eyes on the region for years. Turkey, he argued, needed a “safe zone” to serve as a buffer against the Syrian War happening just across the border. Yet back home in Turkey, there were other factors at play that accelerated his calls for an invasion that involved Erdoğan’s own political survival.

    The move has recalibrated alliances in the Syrian War and added new uncertainty on the future of the region.

    To learn more, check out these additional resources:

    Vox’s previous reporting on the conflict:
    https://www.vox.com/world/2019/10/16/20908262/turkey-syria-kurds-trump-invasion-questions
    https://www.vox.com/world/2019/10/23/20928769/trymp-syria-turkey-doctrine

    The Institute for the Study of War’s reports on the US withdrawal from Syria:

    Vox Atlas demonstrates where conflicts occur on a map and the ways in which foreign policy shapes a region. Watch all the episodes here:

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  • A Call to Defend Rojava  TURKIYE ALEYHINE BIR PROPOGANDA VE BIR GIRISIM

    A Call to Defend Rojava TURKIYE ALEYHINE BIR PROPOGANDA VE BIR GIRISIM

    A Call to Defend Rojava

    An Open Letter
    Nazeer al-Khatib/AFP/Getty Images

    A Syrian man resting amid the rubble of a home in Afrin, March 31, 2018

    When Raqqa fell in 2017, after a long siege by the US-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), it was generally thought that ISIS was defeated, save for some mopping up. But in January of this year, Turkey invaded Afrin—one of three cantons in Rojava, also called the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria. This meant that scores of SDF fighters had to leave the battle against ISIS in order to defend their homes, families, and neighbors in Afrin. After extensive air strikes, the city of Afrin fell on March 18—confronting the already troubled region with yet another humanitarian crisis, as thousands fled to escape the Turkish army and its Syrian National Army allies (which include jihadist rebel groups and some fighters who are either openly aligned with al-Qaeda or even recent members of ISIS).

    Many of those who fled Afrin are now sleeping in open fields or in tent cities, lacking the most elementary necessities. Those who remain have been subjected to the same kind of ethnic discrimination, looting, and sexual violence that ISIS perpetrated against the Yazidis in Iraq. At least fifteen girls have been reported as having been abducted, and their families fear they are being held as sex slaves.

    We, the undersigned, are launching the Emergency Committee for Rojava as part of a global campaign to draw attention to this new crisis and to Afrin’s call for support.

    The Turkish attack on Afrin was entirely unprovoked. In fact, Afrin was so peaceful for most of the Syrian war that it became a safe haven for tens of thousands of refugees—some of whom are now refugees for a second time. In the cantons they controlled, the Kurdish-led forces had established an oasis, unique in Syria, of local self-government, women’s rights, and secular rule. Yet the Turkish government cynically claims that it is threatened by Rojava because the people leading it—who have been the US’s leading allies in the fight against ISIS in Syria—are “terrorists.”

    While the attack on Afrin is a violation of international law comparable to those of the Assad government, the Trump administration has made only feeble protests against President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s depredations. By accepting Turkey’s attack, the US has become complicit in Erdoğan’s ethnic cleansing plan to expel the Kurds once and for all from a part of Syria where they have lived for centuries, and to eradicate the democratic experiment developing in Rojava.

    Encouraged by the lack of response from the US, Erdoğan is threatening to take his military campaign deeper into Syria, to Manbij, and even into Iraqi Kurdistan. It is clear that this campaign is already benefiting ISIS in multiple ways. To stop this madness, Turkey must be isolated economically, diplomatically, and militarily until it withdraws its troops and its proxy militias from Kurdish Syria. In the long run, there can be no peace in the region until Turkey is willing to reopen negotiations with its own Kurds and grant all its citizens democratic rights, including freedom of expression and the right to form political parties and win elections without reprisals.

    The Emergency Committee for Rojava is calling on the US government to:

    • impose economic and political sanctions on Turkey’s leadership;
    • embargo sales and delivery of weapons from NATO countries to Turkey;
    • insist upon Rojava’s representation in Syrian peace negotiations;
    • continue military support for the SDF.

    Please join us as signatories and supporters in our call for the US and its allies to end their tacit acquiescence in Turkey’s military adventure and restore peace and safety to the people of Rojava. And visit our website, DefendRojava.org to see other supporters, sign up for more information, and help organize an ongoing effort to support Rojava by spreading the word on your campus and in your community.

    Emergency Committee for Rojava

    Debbie Bookchin, journalist, co-editor of The Next Revolution: Popular Assemblies and the Promise of Direct Democracy
    Charlotte Bunch, Distinguished Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies, Rutgers University
    Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor of Comparative Literature, UC Berkeley
    Noam Chomsky, Institute Professor & Professor of Linguistics Emeritus, MIT
    Bill Fletcher Jr., writer, former director of Trans-Africa Forum
    Todd Gitlin, Professor of Journalism and Sociology, Columbia University
    David Graeber, Professor of Anthropology, London School of Economics
    Michael Hardt, Professor of Literature, Duke University
    David Harvey, Distinguished Professor of Anthropology and Geography, CUNY
    Sally Haslanger, Ford Professor of Philosophy and Women’s and Gender Studies, MIT
    Robert Hockett, Edward Cornell Professor of Law, Cornell University
    Chad Kautzer, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Lehigh University
    Anna-Sara Malmgren, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Stanford University
    Edress Othman, physician, Director of Afrin Fund, board member of New England Kurdish Association
    Marina Sitrin, Assistant Professor of Sociology, SUNY Binghamton
    Gloria Steinem, feminist writer, journalist, and activist, co-founder of Ms. Magazine
    Asta Kristjana Sveinsdottir, Associate Professor of Philosophy, San Francisco State University
    Latif Tas, Assistant Professor at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University
    Meredith Tax, writer and activist, author of A Road Unforeseen: Women Fight the Islamic State
    Michael Walzer, Professor Emeritus of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University