US to stop arming anti-IS Syrian Kurdish
YPG militia - Turkey
The US is to stop supplying arms to the Syrian
Kurdish militia the YPG, Turkey has said.
Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said President
Donald Trump had made the promise in a phone
call to his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip
Erdogan.
The White House said it was making "adjustments"
to its support for partners inside Syria but did not
explicitly name the YPG.
Turkey has long complained about US support for
the group.
Washington has viewed the YPG as a key player in
the fight against so-called Islamic State (IS), but
Ankara brands the group's fighters as terrorists.
Turkey says the YPG is as an extension of the
outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), a group it
has been fighting for decades in south-eastern
Turkey.
The US, however, has seen the YPG as distinct from
the PKK. In May it announced it would supply arms
to the Kurdish elements of the Syrian Democratic
Forces (SDF), which were poised to drive IS from
its stronghold of Raqqa. It had previously armed
only Arab elements of the SDF.
"President Trump instructed [his generals] in a very
open way that the YPG will no longer be given
weapons," Mr Cavusoglu was quoted as saying in
the Turkish Hurriyet Daily News .
He said Mr Trump gave his assurances after
President Erdogan reiterated his concern over the
continued supply of weapons and armoured
vehicles to the YPG.
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A major shift
Analysis: The BBC's Laura Bicker in Washington
If this is true, it would be a major shift in US policy.
The Kurds have proved to be valuable partners in
the fight against IS.
It is notable that Washington's account of the call
does not mention taking away the arms that the
Trump administration agreed to give the YPG earlier
this year - something Ankara has called for. Turkey
feared the weapons would end up in the hands of
fighters intent on creating an independent Kurdish
state.
The Pentagon is likely reassessing its needs in
Syria as the fight against IS has waned in recent
months. But whatever adjustments are being made,
it is clear the US military has no plans to leave the
war-torn country. It has been revealed that about
2,000 US troops are now based there - a significant
increase since the Obama administration.
The White House confirmed the two leaders had
spoken by phone and said Mr Trump "reaffirmed
the strategic partnership" between the US and
Turkey.
"Consistent with our previous policy, President
Trump also informed President Erdogan of pending
adjustments to the military support provided to our
partners on the ground in Syria, now that the battle
of Raqqa is complete," the statement said.
"We are progressing into a stabilisation phase to
ensure that Isis [IS] cannot return. The leaders also
discussed the purchase of military equipment from
the United States."
The SDF, an alliance of Kurdish and Arab militias,
has driven IS militants from much of the land it
once controlled.
The YPG and its political arm, the Democratic Union
Party (PYD), denies any direct links with the PKK,
whose insurgency has left thousands dead.
But Mr Cavusoglu has previously said that every
weapon obtained by the YPG constituted "a threat
to Turkey".
The SDF declared victory in Raqqa last month after
a four-month battle to retake the city from IS, which
had ruled it for three years.
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