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Syrian Kurdish militia draws recruits as its territory expands
Published in Albawaba on 15 - 08 - 2015

A Kurdish militia that has captured swaths of northern Syria from ISIS has signed up thousands of fighters in recent months as it seeks to tighten control over newly won territory.
The People's Protection Units (YPG), which has been fighting ISIS with U.S.-led air support, says it now controls territory the size of Qatar and Kuwait combined.
YPG spokesman Redur Xelil, speaking to Reuters, said the YPG had drawn 5,000 new recruits, growing to 40,000 fighters. After a period of rapid territorial gains, the priority was to strengthen defensive positions in newly captured land.
"This is the priority now but this does not mean there are no plans to hit ISIS in places near the front lines," Xelil said. "Attack is the best form of defense."
The YPG has doubled the amount of territory it controls between the Euphrates River and the Syrian border with Iraq to 21,000 square kilometers this year, Xelil said. It also controls an area of the northwest known as Afrin and parts of Aleppo.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which tracks the war using its own sources, said the YPG had grown by 4,000-5,000 fighters in the last three months, though it gave a bigger estimate for the militia's overall size at more than 50,000.
Turkey's concern about the expansion of Kurdish influence in northern Syria is seen as a major factor behind its new plan to help Syrian rebels seize ISIS' last remaining zone of control at the Turkish border in an area north of Aleppo.
The autonomous Kurdish administration in northern Syria is deeply suspicious of the Turkish plan, believing its primary aim is to contain the YPG and stop Afrin being joined to the expanding zone of Kurdish controlled territory further east.
The last major YPG victory over ISIS was in late July, when it seized the town of Sarrin on the eastern bank of the Euphrates River.
On the western bank at the Turkish border, ISIS still controls the town of Jarablus. It also controls other towns further west in areas north of Aleppo.
"After the liberation of Sarrin, the continuous battles stopped. But there are still intermittent clashes ... from the border with Iraq to the town of Sarrin," Xelil said.
The Kurdish security forces include a unit called the Women's Protection Units (YPJ).
Xelil said an internal security force known as the Asayish has also drawn many new recruits, though he didn't have a number.
Yet the YPG complains that its arsenal is still far inferior to that of ISIS, which seized modern, U.S.-supplied weapons from the Iraqi army during rapid gains last year.
The YPG says its requests for weapons from the U.S.-led alliance against ISIS had not been met.
One of the YPG's most significant recent gains was in the northeastern city of Hassakeh. A provincial capital, Hassakeh had been split equally between the Syrian government and the Kurdish administration until an ISIS attack which the YPG says resulted in the collapse of pro-government forces.
With the ISIS attack beaten off by the YPG, Xelil says the Syrian government's presence in the city is now at best "symbolic." Most of Hassakeh is under the control of the YPG, which has mostly avoided conflict with Syrian government forces.
While the YPG has been accused of ethnically cleansing Arabs from areas captured from ISIS, Xelil said its victory over ISIS in Hassakeh had in fact helped draw Arabs to its ranks. "There is demand to join the YPG, be it from Kurds, the Arabs or from other minorities," he said.
The YPG strongly denies accusations of ethnic cleansing.


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