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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
World
Chris Hughes & Milo Boyd

Turkey refuses to halt bloody offensive against Syrian Kurds 'until ultimate victory'

President Bashar al-Assad has deployed Syria’s forces to defend Kurds from Turkey’s brutal blitz.

The two sides appeared to be lining up against each other in the border town of Manbij as Assad’s tanks were filmed rolling into the area.

But defiant President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has vowed to fight on “until ultimate victory is achieved”.

The Turkish leader claims he is targeting terrorists but world leaders have accused him of a campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Kurds.

President Bashar al-Assad deployed troops (AFP/Getty Images)
Recep Tayyip Erdogan is determined to achieve 'ultimate victory' (Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

And his posturing yesterday came as claims emerged of Turkey-backed rebel groups executing prisoners.

Erdogan said: “We are determined to continue the operation until the end, without paying attention to threats. We will finish the job we started.”

On Sunday, the Kurds agreed a rescue pact with the Russia-backed Assad regime, allowing its forces to head into the north-east of the war-torn country and take control at Manbij and Kobane.

Kurdish forces warn that Turkey’s strikes have allowed as many as 1,000 Islamic State members to escape prisons – sparking fears of the terror group’s resurgence in the region and a fresh wave of atrocities in Europe.

Turkish-backed Syrian fighters take part in a battle in Syria's northeastern town of Ras al-Ain (AFP via Getty Images)

But President Donald Trump , accused of abandoning the Kurds by pulling out troops, yesterday claimed the Kurds may have freed jihadis to bait the US into staying.

He said: “Kurds may be releasing some to get us involved.”

 IS was defeated by Western-trained Syrian Democratic Forces, mostly made up of YPG Kurdish fighters – wrongly identified as terrorists by Turkey.

Erdogan’s blitz is aimed at the PKK, a Kurdish group proscribed by the UK that has operated in Syria.

He fears Turkey’s 14 million Kurds will be emboldened if Syria’s two million make their north-eastern state of Rojava a democratic success.

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