Vanguard expresses the viewpoint of the
Communist Party of Australia (Marxist-Leninist)
Recent events in Syria call for the condemnation of the
seizure of territories by proxies of regional expansionists Turkey and
Iran.
Syrian government forces have relinquished control over Aleppo and other regions.
The situation is complicated by the continuing presence of Turkish
occupation forces who had invaded Syria in 2018 and occupied land along
the common border which they had taken from the progressive Kurds. This
included the city of Afrin. The Kurdish defence forces and women’s
forces (YPG and YPJ) resisted further Turkish incursions into their area
known formally as the Democratic Autonomous Administration of North and
East Syria (DAANES), and informally as Rojava.
Rojava celebrated the 10th anniversary of its existence earlier
this year. It is a region noted for supporting the aspirations of the
various components of North and East Syria, including Kurds, Arabs,
Syriacs, Assyrians, Armenians, Turkmen, Circassians and Chechens. More
than anything, it is noted for its emancipation and empowering of women.
The YPG-YPJ had to also fight powerful ISIS terrorists seeking to
seize Rojava. In addition to ISIS, al-Nusrah fought Rojava and is
currently threatening it in its new identity as Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
(HTS), as violence targets Yazidis and Kurds attempting to flee Islamist
forces.
Into the mix has to be added the Syrian National Army (SNA) loyal
to President Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian Defence Forces, aligned with
the Rojava region, the Syrian Arab Army – part of Assad’s SNA, and the
mainly volunteer corps of the pro-Assad National Defence Force.
Also present are US and Iranian military bases. Iran sees the
survival of the Syrian government as being crucial to its regional
interests and, together with Hezbollah, has provided Assad with security
and military support, including drone attacks on ISIS forces.
The U.S. still has an active presence in eastern Syria with around
1000 troops. The US collaborated with the SDF in the fight against ISIS
in the lead-up to the creation of Rojava, and closely monitors Assad’s
relationship with the Iranians and the Russians who have two major air
bases and a naval facility in the country.
According to Saudi Arabia’s Al Majalla website, by the end of the
first half of 2022, the number of foreign military bases and locations
had reached a total of 830 sites, distributed as follows:
• Iran: 570
• Turkey: 125
• Russia: 105
• US-led coalition: 30
As of December 3 there were already some 75,000 internally
displaced persons, mostly Kurds alongside other minorities, as well as
Arabs. Many are sleeping outside in freezing weather. Tens of thousands
have been transferred out of Shehba/Tel Rifaat region, seized two days
ago by the Turkish-backed Syrian National Army militias which previously
drove the bulk of the Kurdish population and all Yazidis and Christians
out of the Afrin region in 2018.
Turkish bombing has continued in Rojava for most of this year.
There is a grave risk of an imminent Turkish-backed assault against
DAANES-governed Manbij, with multi-ethnic population of c.300K,
creating further destabilisation. In addition, the Kurdish parts of
Aleppo have been surrounded and cut off from assistance.
Imperialist rivalry and the ambitions of regional expansionists are tearing Syria apart.
All foreign forces must be withdrawn and Syrian independence respected.
The rights of minorities to self-determination up to an including regional autonomy and secession must be guaranteed by Syria.
US and Russia out!
Turkey and Iran out!
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