Beirut: Syria`s Kurds, long held in disdain by Damascus, are edging towards autonomy in their heartland along Turkey`s border as they capitalise on the tactical goals of both Washington and Moscow.


COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING

To the dismay of Ankara, Kurdish forces have seized on the collapse of rebels in the northern province of Aleppo in the face of Russian-backed regime gains to advance to within 20 kilometres (12 miles) of the border.


From the outset of the Syrian conflict in 2011, the Kurds benefited from the regime`s pullback from their regions to establish a local administration spanning from northwest to northeast Syria.


According to Syria analyst Fabrice Balanche, the Kurds who have gained ground mostly from Islamic State jihadists who now control 14 percent of Syrian territory, or 26,000 square kilometres (10,000 square miles), compared with nine percent in 2012.


The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group, says Kurdish forces also hold three quarters of the 800-kilometre border with Turkey.


Their long-cherished ambition is to set up an autonomous region like their Kurdish brethren across the border in Iraq by connecting the three Kurdish "cantons" of Afrin and Kobane in Aleppo province with Jazira in Hasakeh province.


"The Kurds` main aim is to annex the cantons... They want a decentralised Syria, perhaps their canton system can be a model for the rest of Syria," said Mutlu Civiroglu, a Washington-based analyst on Syria and the Kurds.


Balanche said they want to link up Kobane and Afrin to ensure that their "`Rojava` (Syrian Kurdistan) has territorial continuity".In the battle for Aleppo which has raged since the start of February, the Kurds have broken a more than year-long siege of Afrin by Islamist rebels and Al-Nusra Front jihadists with the key support of Russian air strikes.


To join Afrin and Kobane, their next battle will be fought against the Islamic State group, mainly in eastern Aleppo.


On the battlefield, the Kurds have linked up neither with the regime nor rebel forces fighting to oust President Bashar al-Assad.


"From the very beginning, the Kurds have followed what they call `the third path`. They are neither with the regime nor with the opposition because neither of them acknowledge Kurdish rights," said Civiroglu.


As a result, "neither the regime nor the rebels are happy with them".


Rebel forces have also accused the People`s Protection Units (YPG), the Kurdish fighting force, of merely serving regime interests by expelling them from strategic areas of Aleppo such as the town of Tal Rifaat and Minnigh air base.