By Alex Leary and David Gauthier-Villars
ANKARA -- Turkey has agreed to a five-day suspension of military
activities in its incursion into Syria, allowing time for Kurdish
forces to withdraw, and in return the U.S. will pull back on
economic sanctions, Vice President Mike Pence said here following a
day of negotiations.
Mr. Pence, who led more than four hours of talks with Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said the U.S was already working
with Kurdish forces on an "orderly" withdrawal. Kurdish
representatives didn't immediately respond to a request for
comment.
"Today the United States and Turkey have agreed to a ceasefire
in Syria, " Mr. Pence told reporters in Ankara. He said Turkey
would "pause" military operations for 120 hours while the Kurdish
forces withdraw from a safe zone. Once that withdrawal is complete,
the ceasefire will become permanent, Mr. Pence said.
Mr. Pence and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo arrived in the
Turkish capital Thursday to press Mr. Erdogan to halt a
cross-border offensive in northeastern Syria that has deepened a
rift between the two NATO allies.
Turkey launched a military campaign last week to seize territory
held by U.S.-backed Kurdish forces in Syria after the withdrawal of
American troops from the region. Its forces have since captured
more than 400 square miles of territory using heavy artillery and
aerial bombardments despite global condemnation and threats of
fresh U.S. sanctions.
President Trump dispatched the delegation following a Monday
phone call with Mr. Erdogan, who had so far ignored U.S. warnings
over the military offensive.
The hastily arranged visit underscored rapid developments in the
region and growing bipartisan alarm in Washington as Mr. Trump said
the Turkish assault had "nothing to do with us" and describing the
U.S.-allied Kurds as "not angels" only hours before the officials
departed for Ankara.
Mr. Trump's national security adviser, Robert O'Brien, arrived a
day earlier and held advance talks with Turkish Foreign Minister
Mevlut Cavusoglu.
The crisis began after Mr. Trump's Oct. 6 order to withdraw
about 1,000 troops from northeastern Syria, contending he was
keeping a campaign promise to get the U.S. out of protracted
overseas engagements. He has also said he didn't want U.S. troops
in the middle of a longstanding feud between Turkey and Kurdish
fighters.
Ahead of Mr. Pence's trip to Ankara, the White House released a
brief letter written by Mr. Trump to Mr. Erdogan in which the U.S.
president implored his counterpart in colloquial language to be
reasonable, urging him: "don't be a fool." The letter was sent on
Oct. 9.
After reading Mr. Trump's letter, Mr. Erdogan threw it in a
waste bin, according to Turkish daily newspaper Hurriyet, which
cited sources within the Turkish presidency. The president's
response was to launch the offensive in northeastern Syria, the
newspaper said.
Turkish media refrained from quoting excerpts of the letter,
only referring to a document that lacked any diplomatic
courtesy.
Mr. Trump has denied any responsibility for the unfolding chaos,
which has, among other things, emboldened Russia to send soldiers
to the area. Abandoned by the U.S., the Kurds, who have helped
fight Islamic State terrorists, have turned to Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad for protection.
For Mr. Pence, the mission is among his most high profile and
complicated, a sharp detour from what has been a recent focus on
generating congressional support for passage of Mr. Trump's
reworked trade accord with Mexico and Canada.
Mr. Trump had threatened that he was "fully prepared to swiftly
destroy Turkey's economy." So far, Mr. Trump has authorized
sanctions on Turkey's defense, interior and energy ministers,
raised steel tariffs on Turkey and halted talks aimed at expanded
trade.
Fighting that pits the Turkish military against the Kurdish-led
militia has caused the deaths of 218 civilians, including 18
children on the Syrian side, according to an aid worker affiliated
with the semiautonomous Kurdish region. Turkish officials said
Wednesday that 19 civilians were killed by mortars shot from the
Syrian side.
Earlier Thursday, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces,
which Turkey views as a terrorist threat, said it suspects that
banned weapons were used against its fighters in Ras al-Ain, a town
on the Syrian side of the border with Turkey.
"We urge international organizations to send their teams to
investigate some wounds sustained in attacks," SDF spokesman
Mustafa Bali said on Twitter.
A senior Turkish official rejected the allegation. "We are
receiving information that the terrorist organization will use
chemical weapons and try to blame our armed forces for it to create
a negative perception about this," Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi
Akar said in a statement. "It is a known fact by everyone that
Turkey's armed forces do not possess chemical weapons in its
inventory."
The SDF claim couldn't be independently verified. Most rights
groups and nongovernmental organizations have left the area due to
the Turkish offensive. Chemical weapons have previously been used
in Syria's multisided war.
--Isabel Coles and Dion Nissenbaum contributed to this
article.
Write to Alex Leary at alex.leary@wsj.com and David
Gauthier-Villars at David.Gauthier-Villars@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 17, 2019 14:43 ET (18:43 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.