The Russian strikes at the Islamic State came after two days in which its aircraft attacked locations belonging to other fighting groups opposed to Syrian President Bashar Assad, including CIA-supported rebels, sparking calls for the Obama administration to do something to protect fighters it had trained and equipped.
But President Barack Obama made clear that the U.S. had no plans to deepen its role in Syria.
“We’re not going to make Syria into a proxy war between the United States and Russia,” Obama said at a White House press conference. “That would be bad strategy on our part.”
He also rejected calls he should act to preserve U.S. credibility and influence.
“This is not some, you know, superpower chess board contest, and anybody who frames it in that way isn’t paying very close attention to what’s been happening on the chess board,” he said.
But there were signs that U.S. influence over events in Syria was eroding, with the Kurdish militia that has been Washington’s closest ally on the ground there extending a public welcome to Russia and offering to fight alongside Russia against the Islamic State. It also asked Moscow for weapons.
We want Russia to provide us air support as well as weapons in our fight against the ISIL militants. Sipan Hemo, YPG commander
“We will fight alongside whoever fights Daesh,” Salih Muslim, co-president of the Democratic Union Party, the Kurdish political party whose militia, the People’s Protection Units, or YPG, have closely coordinated its operations with the United States, told the online magazine Al Monitor in an interview. Daesh is an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State, which is also known as ISIS and ISIL.
“We want Russia to provide us air support as well as weapons in our fight against the ISIL militants,” a YPG commander, Sipan Hemo, was quoted as telling the Russian Sputnik news portal. “We can organize an effective cooperation with Russia on the issue.”
The United States and the YPG have been close allies for the past year after their coordination broke an Islamic State siege of the Kurdish city of Kobani, and U.S. airstrikes are credited with helping the YPG seize an estimated 6,800 square miles of northern Syria from the Islamists in recent months. U.S. officials in recent weeks have pointed to the YPG as the most effective anti-Islamic State group in Syria.
But the YPG recently has slowed its offensive after Turkey, a U.S. NATO ally and bitter rival of the Kurds, objected to its success, and U.S. bombing missions over northern Syria have dropped precipitously.
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Some analysts speculated that the YPG was interested in Russian support because Moscow was unlikely to respond to Turkey’s worries that the Kurds’ success would fuel a push for independence among its own Kurdish minority.
Russian involvement might also discourage Turkey from entering Syria to squelch any cooperation between the YPG and the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, whose guerrillas have been battling Turkish authorities for 30 years. On Friday Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, warned the YPG not to support the PKK offensive in Turkey. “If there is any leakages from Syria like in Iraq . . . we would not hesitate to strike at any group that poses a threat to our national security.”
“The U.S. is active in the north. The Russians will not meddle in the north. But should Turkey attempt to intervene, they will,” Muslim said. “They will prevent Turkish intervention, not to defend us but to defend Syria’s border.”
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Ten Islamic State targets were struck Friday primarily in the wcountryside outside Raqqa, according to Sarmad Aljilany, an activist with the “Raqqa is being slaughtered silently” Internet portal.
There were no estimates of damages or deaths, but the Islamic State canceled Friday prayer services at the four main mosques in Raqqa – where attendance is usually obligatory.
The Syrian Opposition Coalition, the anti-Assad civilian political group, said Russian aircraft also bombed Islamic State positions in Qaryatain, a city in eastern Homs province that the Islamic State captured in August.
There were also reports of Russian attacks on locations where no Islamic State forces were present. Local activists said aircraft targeted the hospital in Latamneh, the headquarters for a CIA-backed unit known as the Al Izza Brigade in northern Hama province and also struck Maarat al Numan in Idlib province.
Syrian and American aircraft also undertook bombing runs. The Syrian air force conducted 15 airstrikes in the Islamic State-held town of Al Bab, hitting many civilian targets including the main market and a hospital, according to the Al Bab Local Coordination Committee, an anti-Assad group.
An attempt by Russia and Iran to prop up Assad and try to pacify the population is just going to get them stuck in a quagmire. Barack Obama
Meanwhile, U.S. aircraft carried out eight airstrikes against Islamic State targets in eastern Syria, well away from Russian and Syrian government aircraft. Six were carried out in Hasaka province, where the U.S. has worked closely with the YPG, and there was one each in Palmyra, an Islamic State-held city that dates back to Roman times, and Deir el Zour, another Islamic State bastion.
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The YPG’s embrace of the Russian intervention came as seven members of the U.S.-led anti-Islamic State coalition urged Russia to target the Islamic State and not other fighting groups in its attacks.
In a statement, the United States, France, Germany, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Britain expressed the “deepest concern” about the bombing of Hama, Homs and Idlib provinces “which led to civilian casualties and did not target Daesh.”
“These actions constitute a further military escalation and will only fuel more extremism and further radicalization,” the seven countries said.
Obama also struck that theme at his new conference.
“A military solution alone, an attempt by Russia and Iran to prop up Assad and try to pacify the population, is just going to get them stuck in a quagmire, and it wont work,” Obama said he told Russian President Vladimir Putin when the two men met at the United Nations earlier this week.
His remarks came as Republicans looking to replace him have stepped up their criticism of his Syria policy. Even as his former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she would push for a no-fly zone and humanitarian corridors in the country.
But Obama dismissed much of the criticism as “half baked ideas” and “mumbo jumbo.”
As for Clinton’s suggestions, he said there was a difference between running for president and being president.
“The decisions that are being made and the discussions that Im having with the Joint Chiefs become much more specific and require, I think, a different kind of judgment,” he said.
Lesley Clark contributed from Washington. Special correspondent Zakaria Zakaria contributed from Istanbul.
Roy Gutman: @roygutmanmcc
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