It was reported that very few Turkish soldiers actually entered Syria, somewhere around 200 special forces units. The rebels they were accompanying numbered around 2-5000. If you are talking about inside Turkey then I have no clue.anyone have any idea how many brigades turkeys deployed?
It was reported that very few Turkish soldiers actually entered Syria, somewhere around 200 special forces units. The rebels they were accompanying numbered around 2-5000. If you are talking about inside Turkey then I have no clue.
Apparently it also freed up around 8 thousand troops the SAA had manning the front line in that area too. They announced that the majority of those troops would be moving to the East Ghouta front.Well some good news for the regime among this , besieged suburb of daryaa finaly taken
4 years of siege and starvation and amazing amounts of explosives rained down on such a small area ...article few months back said food was finaly running out but this confirms it.
All rebels allowed to leave but not carry heavy weapons , civilians allowed out.
Id say any troops freed up (more likely largely militas and foriegners than saa at this stage of the war and prob much less than 8k..rebels numbers there were est under 1k )Apparently it also freed up around 8 thousand troops the SAA had manning the front line in that area too. They announced that the majority of those troops would be moving to the East Ghouta front.
My guess is that the Syrian army will withdraw from the area after this, allowing Turkey to bombard the Kurds at will. Iraq and Iran are both more than happy to watch the Kurds get pummeled. It's clear from the development in the past month that Turkey and Russia had reached some sort of agreement over the division of Syria.
Big losers here are the Kurds, ISIS, and the 'rebels.' Turkey will normalize relations with Assad, fact, and the Kurds will get rolled back, fact. North will be stabilized by Turkish intervention hand-in-glove with the Russians and Iranians. The war is already over, even if the plebes aren't aware of it yet. Yalta already went down. Over the next month, you'll see this play out.
Turks just saw the writing on the wall and dropped trousers for Putin.
I'd like to see the Kurds keep their gainz, but at the end of the day, Turks gonna Turk.
I wouldnt say they are all allies now or some grand deal is on the table just that in matters of mutual interest (kurds ,russian turkish buisness links, bosphorous trade, turk rus gas pipeline) they can deal while still having divergent goals elsewhere....its the new normal basicaly.TBH, is it that bad? Turkey being friends with Russia, Israel, Iran and Syria would make a big bulwark towards middle eastern stability.
Sucks for the Kurds though.