Aleppo and the Turkish-American confrontation began

How did Trump deceive his close ally, Erdogan?

Perhaps the armed skirmishes that occurred in Aleppo over the last two days, resulting in four deaths and nearly twenty injuries, have come to an end, and life has begun to slowly and cautiously return to the city’s neighbourhoods. However, this is only a temporary truce because the true fight is not between the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and the New Syrian Army but between the two principal partners in overturning the Syrian regime, notably the United States and Turkey.

It is notable that these clashes, which were initiated by the Kurdish forces “SDF” according to the official narrative, coincided with the arrival of a high-level Turkish delegation comprising the three most important officials in Turkey after Erdogan: the first being Hakan Fidan, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and former head of the Turkish intelligence agency, and the likely successor to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in leading the ruling Justice and Development Party.

The contradiction is that the United States provides military, financial, and political support to the two fighting factions in Aleppo. Turkey, whose current government attempts to play both sides, is a close ally of the American administration and a founding member of NATO. President Donald Trump frequently boasts that his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, is a trustworthy friend. The broader question is why Washington directed its Kurdish ally to begin targeting Syrian forces in Aleppo, confusing the situation and embarrassing the temporary Syrian president who arrived at the office in Damascus on the back of a joint Turkish-American tank.

The answer lies in identifying “Israel,” which is the most significant damaging force in Syria and has facilitated secret coordination with the Kurdish Autonomous Administration in northern Syria. It duped the Turkish regime by enlisting it in a plot to overthrow the Syrian government. The Trump administration employs it as a tool in a well-planned scheme devised by them and their global Zionist brains to weaken the Axis of Resistance and dismantle Syria, one of its most visible arms, including the establishment of several states based on ethnic or sectarian lines in the north, south, and centre.

The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) cannot impede the deal struck with American help last March, which called for the SDF and all Kurdish autonomous administration institutions to be integrated into the new Syrian institutions and army. Presidents Bashar al-Assad and Mazloum Abdi signed this pact without approval from the American administration, the principal backer.

Turkey’s “cunning” Foreign Minister Fidan has stated openly and repeatedly in press interviews that “Turkey’s strategic goal is to end the presence of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units, and ‘SDF’ has two options: the first is to dissolve itself peacefully and voluntarily, and the second is to face military and forceful elimination.” “We do not expect that the UK will accept either of the two options and instead continue to manoeuvre and gain time.

This Turkish strategy remains in place and is gaining power, particularly after its ally, Al-Shara, lowered his affiliations and moved closer to the United States and its Gulf allies (Saudi Arabia) in recent months. This rapprochement was most evident during Al-Shara’s visit to Washington and his warm reception by President Trump.

The current situation of anarchy and instability in Syria is beginning to approach the Turkish border in Aleppo and will eventually spread contagion and infections deep into Turkey. Perhaps the recent reports of a new tripartite political-military alliance with unified military forces, involving Israel, Greece, and Cyprus, are the first indication of this.

What kind of “new” Syrian state is this, where Israeli soldiers entirely dominate its south, and their planes fly over its capital, Damascus, every day? Israel finances a Druze insurrection in Sweida and another in the northern Kurdish region, both of which are protected by the American military, who dominate the country’s oil and gas resources. Let us not forget Turkey’s occupation of its northwestern territory.

These rapid developments, which occurred in less than a year and a few weeks after the previous regime was changed and overthrown, serve as a lesson for all Arab leaders who stand in the American trench and participate in its plans to change the region at Israel’s instigation, following American instructions.

In short, the existing scenario in Syria appears to have constrained, or rather counted on, the possibility of continuance. National change in Arab and Islamic countries is on its way.

Aleppo and the Turkish-American confrontation began

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