President Donald Trump on Thursday
warned his Turkish counterpart against sending troops to fight in Libya
hours after the Turkish Parliament voted to authorize such a move.
Trump and Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan discussed several “bilateral and regional issues,”
according to a readout of the call released by the White House, as well
as simmering tensions and ongoing instability in Libya that have been
condemned by the top United Nations official there.
In
Libya, where a rival regime in the nation's east has attempted a coup
to oust the Tripoli-based government of Prime Minister Fayez Sarraj,
"foreign interference is complicating the situation,” Trump said,
according to the White House.
The offensive has split the
international community: The rival regime led by commander Gen. Khalifa
Haftar has been backed the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, France and
Russia, according to The Associated Press, while Sarraj’s government
receives aid from Turkey, Qatar and Italy.
Erdogan and Sarraj recently signed a
deal allowing Ankara to send military experts and personnel to the
volatile region, the AP reported, and some in Turkey have argued that
threats to the Libyan government could "spread instability to Turkey."
Erdogan and Trump also discussed
ongoing violence in Syria’s Idlib province along the Turkish border,
where Syrian leader Bashar Assad’s forces have sought to retake one of
the last rebel strongholds in the country. The weekslong offensive has
sent hundreds of thousands of civilians fleeing north toward Turkey,
prompting Trump to issue a vague warning to Assad via Twitter last week.
“The leaders agreed on the need for
de-escalation in Idlib, Syria, in order to protect civilians,” the White
House readout of Trump and Erdogan's call said.
The White House statement made no
mention of whether the presidents discussed Turkey's campaign against
U.S.-allied Kurds in northern Syria, which Trump paved the way for by
withdrawing U.S. troops from the region this fall. The U.S. president
later condemned the Turkish operation.
No comments:
Post a Comment