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Asharq Al-Awsat
Asharq Al-Awsat
World
Asharq Al-Awsat

Syria Opposition Uneasy after Turkish, Syrian Defense Ministers Meet

Türkiye-backed Syrian fighters deploy in vehicles in al-Bab in the northern rebel-held part of Syria's Aleppo province on January 3, 2023. (AFP)

Syria's political and armed opposition are urging their decade-long backer Türkiye to reaffirm its support for their cause, after the highest-level talks in public between Ankara and the Damascus government since the Syrian war began in 2011.  

Türkiye has provided steadfast support and a home base for political opponents of the regime of President Bashar al-Assad while training and fighting alongside armed opposition factions against Syrian government troops.  

But the Turkish and Syrian defense ministers met in Moscow on Dec. 28, with migration and Kurdish militants based on Syria's border with Türkiye on the agenda, according to a Turkish official. 

That has prompted unease within Syria's armed and political opposition.  

The head of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, a hardline insurgent group, said in a recorded video address published on Monday that talks between Syria, Russia and Türkiye were a "dangerous deviation."  

Ahrar al-Sham, another extremist faction, said that while it "understood the situation of our Turkish ally," it "cannot even think of reconciling" with the Syrian government.  

The Syrian National Coalition, an opposition umbrella organization, met Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu on Tuesday.  

He had assured it of Türkiye’s continued support "to Syrian opposition institutions and Syrians in the opposition-held areas," said Abdurrahman Mustafa, the head of the Türkiye-backed opposition's "interim government."  

A senior Turkish official told Reuters that it had seen the "reactions" of opposition factions to the meeting but that " Türkiye determines its own policy."  

"It is unrealistic to expect an immediate result from the first meeting of ministers," the official said. 

Turkish-Syrian rapprochement seemed unthinkable earlier in the conflict, which has killed hundreds of thousands of people, drawn in numerous foreign powers and splintered Syria into various zones of influence.  

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has called Assad a terrorist and said there could be no peace in Syria with him in office, while Assad has called Erdogan a thief for "stealing" Syrian land. 

But meetings between the two countries' security chiefs last year paved the way for the defense minister summit.

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