Lavrov: ISIL Leaders Remain in Close Contact with Ankara
Moscow has intelligence that ISIL command
continues to hold backdoor negotiations with the Turkish leadership,
Lavrov told Russian newspaper MK in a vast interview in honor of
Diplomats’ Day, RT reported.
The airstrikes of the Russian Air Force in Syria
have severely disrupted “traditional smuggling routes,” so the Turks are
discussing in all seriousness creation of “ISIL-free zones” in Syria.
“Of course [such zones] would be a violation of
all principles of the international law and also escalate tensions,
substantially and fundamentally,” Lavrov said, adding the Turks are
constructing tent camps and some kind of “engineering structures” on the
Syrian side of the border, some 200 meters inside the country’s
territory.
At the same time the Russian FM does not believe
that a full-scale Turkish invasion into Syria is possible; Ankara is
expected to limit its actions to “small provocations.”
“I do not believe that the US-led [anti-ISIL]
coalition, which includes Turkey, would allow such desperate schemes to
take shape,” Lavrov said.
According to Lavrov, Moscow was “astonished” by
the position voiced by the German Chancellor Angela Merkel during Turkey
voyage about Russian airstrikes being to blame for the growing influx
of refugees from the Middle East to Europe.
The German leader did not say a word about
terrorists in Syria being supported by the trafficking of arms,
munitions and other necessary supplies from Turkey, which openly
blackmails the EU over the refugee problem, Lavrov said.
Lavrov called attention to the fact that the
growing tide of asylum seekers rushed to Europe after the elimination of
the Libyan state, which took place well ahead of the Russian warplanes
being deployed to Syria.
“I’d like to note that we had called attention to
Turkey’s actions becoming inappropriate… long before our Air Force
became operable in Syria,” Lavrov said, recalling incidents with Turkey
creating obstacles with international projects and scandalous statements
made by the Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan during his 2015
visit to Moscow.
“Of course we paid attention to that incongruity,
but assumed that common sense would prevail and Turks realize we’re
neighbor and had done nothing wrong to them,” Lavrov said, quoting
President Vladimir Putin’s words about Moscow putting a blind eye on
many of Ankara’s escapades.
Lavrov agreed that probably that position was a
mistake, since it ended up with the “Turkish leaders falling out of the
real world completely.”
The veteran foreign minister does not exclude
attempts to put the boots on the ground in Syria from some countries of
the Persian Gulf.
“If the [Syria peace] talks bring no fruit or are
not allowed to begin, then it is possible that some countries, directed
by personal hatred towards [President Bashar] Assad, would go for a
head-on solution by force,” Lavrov acknowledged, recalling some
countries of the region “empathetically rejecting Russia-US-EU
initiative to declare the Syrian crisis “militarily unsolvable” in a UN
Security Council resolution.
“So this [a military intervention in Syria] is
quite possible,” Lavrov said, mentioning Saudi Arabia’s openly declared
plans to send troops to Syria should an international coalition invade.
The developments of the Turkish-Syrian border
serve proof that Ankara’s primary concern is making direct contacts
between the Syrian and Turkish Kurds possible.
The ISIL-free strip along the border is called to
prevent that Kurdish reunion Ankara finds totally unacceptable, as it
would disrupt Turkish supplies to ISIL terrorists and getting oil and
other contraband goods once and for all.
In this light, Ankara, as well as some other
capitals in the region, believes Russia to be the biggest problem in the
Middle East.
“I can understand that,” Lavrov said, “The Turks
say openly that we have blown their plans [for Syria] wide open and now
are trying to nail the Americans to the barn door, too,” the Russian FM
commented on Ankara’s recent demarche towards Washington, which was
thrown into a dilemma to “choose between Turks and Kurds.”
Ankara also insisted on expelling Kurds from the
Syria peace talks, which is “Turkey’s arrogant position not seeing
eye-to-eye by anybody else,” Lavrov stressed, noting that Washington has
already, though anonymously, proclaimed the Kurds being allies against
ISIL.
“We work with them [Kurds], too,” the minister mentioned.
“Honestly speaking, I do not consider the
situation as irretrievable one,”Lavrov said, adding that at present
close cooperation between Washington and Moscow in Syria is not possible
due to a “restrain factor” of the US relations with allies in the
Middle East region perceiving Russia as being a threat to their plans
for Syria.
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