Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Nordic Monitor
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us
No Result
View All Result
Nordic Monitor
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
  • About Us

Turkish-backed fighters avoided battle against ISIS during US offensive on Manbij

December 2, 2019
A A
Turkish-backed fighters avoided battle against ISIS during US offensive on Manbij
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Abdullah Bozkurt

 

The Turkish Armed Forces grew frustrated with the lack of willingness on the part of Syrian rebels to fight against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) despite air cover, artillery support and arms supplies, a classified memo has revealed.

According to the memo, stamped secret and presented to Deputy Chief of General Staff Gen. Yaşar Güler on June 18, 2016, the rebels backed by Turkey had shown more unwillingness and less courage than usual when it came to battling ISIS militants in the Syrian town of Marea, near the Turkish border.

At the time the US and its allies had already launched an offensive against ISIS in order to capture Manbij with the help of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). Turkey did not join the offensive, claiming that the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), which forms a part of the SDF, was affiliated with the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), with which it has been fighting a separatist war in Turkey for decades.

 

 

Although ISIS moved some of its forces to the Manbij area to boost its resistance, providing ample opportunity for Turkish-backed rebels to make some gains in Marea, the poor performance and unwillingness to fight against ISIS seemed quite strange.

The Turkish military memo lamented that the rebels quickly retreat when confronted by ISIS or when facing improvised explosive devices (IEDs) planted by ISIS, not only in the village where the clashes took place but also in the neighboring villages where the rebels faced no action. The retreat had been so fast that there was not enough time for the Turkish army to provide close air support or artillery fire for the rebels. “In most cases, the operations would be halted within a short period of time or even before launching them,” the memo stated.

The Turkish military expressed disappointment at the performance of the rebels, whom it said often left areas that were previously taken over with great difficulty and a number of casualties.

 

 

Gen. Yaşar Güler, chief of the Turkish General Staff.

 

The memo further noted that the rebels rarely sought air cover or airstrikes during an operation even though air assets were made available specifically for the operation. In the rare cases when the rebels asked for a strike on an unidentified target, they provided coordinates that were incompatible with the rules of engagement and the concept developed by the US-led anti-ISIS coalition. The number of Turkish airstrikes were limited to only 37 in the period between June 1 and June 17, 2016.

However, artillery fire support was provided for unidentified targets when the rebels’ request was transmitted via the Special Forces Operations Base (ÖKHÜ-2). Since June 1, Turkish artillery units fired 708 times at 261 targets according to the memo. That was not enough for the rebels, either, as they showed no progress on the field and shied away from action with various excuses, the memo said.

 

 

The main reason for the rebel causalities was either sniper fire or car bombs, which were markedly reduced after airstrikes were carried out on depots where bomb-laden vehicles were designed.

The secret document also lists the arms supplies provided by the Turkish military in early June: Six pallets of arms and ammunition were parachuted and 40 trucks loaded with arms, ammunition, supplies and vehicles were shipped to the Marea region.

In the end the note says Turkish military officers were putting pressure on Lt. Gen. Sean MacFarland, the commander of the Combined Joint Task Force-Operation Inherent Resolve, which was mandated to fight against ISIS; US Army Maj. Gen. James Kraft, commander of Special Operations Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve (SOJTF-OIR); and Col. Kevin C. Leahy, deputy commander, Special Operations Command Central, US Central Command, to bring more air assets such as drones and close air support for rebels in the Marea area.

The note carries notations by Güler, who is now chief of General Staff. He initialed the report and asked that it be submitted to Hulusi Akar, the then-chief of General Staff and currently the minister of defense.

ShareTweet
Previous Post

Turkey planned military action against Armenia

Next Post

Radical Islamist figures, groups train African journalists in Turkey

Abdullah Bozkurt

Abdullah Bozkurt

[email protected]

Next Post
Radical Islamist figures, groups train African journalists in Turkey

Radical Islamist figures, groups train African journalists in Turkey

Deadly clash exposes systemic failures in Turkey’s fight against ISIS

Deadly clash exposes systemic failures in Turkey’s fight against ISIS

December 30, 2025
Smuggling conviction in US sheds light on expanding migrant pipeline run by Turkish networks

Smuggling conviction in US sheds light on expanding migrant pipeline run by Turkish networks

December 29, 2025
Erdogan appoints US-indicted police chief as counsellor at Turkish embassy in Switzerland

Turkey held liable for exporting political violence to US soil, court rules

December 26, 2025
Turkey extends military presence in Libya, giving Erdogan sweeping authority

Turkey extends military presence in Libya, giving Erdogan sweeping authority

December 25, 2025
UN clash on Libya maritime lines reveals persistent tensions between Egypt and Turkey

UN clash on Libya maritime lines reveals persistent tensions between Egypt and Turkey

December 24, 2025
Turkey’s aggressive spying activities on German soil continue, secret document reveals

German judiciary rules Turkish dissidents face renewed risk of persecution

December 23, 2025
Europe confronts a new menace: Turkish gangs born from Ankara’s institutional breakdown

Europe confronts a new menace: Turkish gangs born from Ankara’s institutional breakdown

December 22, 2025
Turkey’s controversial military fund gains sweeping control over Somalia’s fisheries

Turkey’s controversial military fund gains sweeping control over Somalia’s fisheries

December 19, 2025
Erdogan blames NATO allies for Turkey’s failure to meet alliance’s defense spending target

Turkish government book challenges Sweden’s tolerance, backs controversial diaspora figures

December 17, 2025
In a secret document, Turkey admitted jailing dozens of journalists while sticking to policy of denial in public

Turkish journalist arrested for smearing al-Qaeda-linked jihadists remains jailed more than a decade later

December 16, 2025

Nordic Monitor

Nordic Monitor is a news web site and tracking site that is run by the Stockholm-based Nordic Research and Monitoring Network. It covers religious, ideological and ethnic extremist movements and radical groups, with a special focus on Turkey.

Tags

al-Qaeda China Cyprus Diyanet Egypt Erdogan espionage European Court of Human Rights Germany Greece Gülen Movement Hakan Fidan Hamas Hulusi Akar Ibrahim Kalın Iran IRGC Quds Force ISIL ISIS Isis al-qaida Israel Libya Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu Milli İstihbarat Teşkilatı MIT Muslim Brotherhood NATO President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Profiling Qatar Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Russia SADAT spying Spying Activities Suleyman Soylu Sweden Syria terrorism Torture Turkey Turkish Intelligence Turkish intelligence agency MIT Ukraine United States

Recent News

Deadly clash exposes systemic failures in Turkey’s fight against ISIS

Deadly clash exposes systemic failures in Turkey’s fight against ISIS

December 30, 2025
Smuggling conviction in US sheds light on expanding migrant pipeline run by Turkish networks

Smuggling conviction in US sheds light on expanding migrant pipeline run by Turkish networks

December 29, 2025
Erdogan appoints US-indicted police chief as counsellor at Turkish embassy in Switzerland

Turkey held liable for exporting political violence to US soil, court rules

December 26, 2025

Copyright © Nordic Research and Monitoring Network All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us

Copyright © Nordic Research and Monitoring Network All rights reserved.