US shoots down Turkish drone after it came too close to US troops in Syria

A Syrian White Helmet civil defense worker runs at the site where a shell struck in the outskirts of the northern town of Jisr al-Shoughour. (AP)
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  • Official says the drone was armed and had been dropping bombs on nearby targets

WASHINGTON: The US on Thursday shot down a Turkish drone that had come in too close to US troops on the ground in Hasakah, Syria, three US officials told The Associated Press. The drone was armed and had been dropping bombs on nearby targets, and while it was not targeting US troops it was determined to be close enough that it posed a danger to US forces, one of the officials said.
The officials said the shootdown was ordered after more than a dozen calls to Turkish military officials stating that US forces were on the ground in the area and the US military would take action to protect them if the drone didn’t leave.
The drone was shot down by a US F-16 fighter jet, one of the officials confirmed to the AP.
Typically, the US and Turkish militaries, which are NATO allies, work in close coordination in conducting air maneuvers.
The drone had been flying in an “unsafe” and “unsychronized” manner, one of the officials said. After the US repeatedly warned its Turkish counterparts that it had dropped bombs deemed too close to US troops, the drone did appear to stand down, but it then returned, another official said.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the incident before an announcement.
The US has about 900 troops in Syria conducting missions to counter Daesh group militants.
There was no immediate comment from Turkiye on the shooting of the drone.
The country’s state-run Anadolu Agency reported, however, that the Turkish intelligence service, MIT, carried out an operation against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, and its affiliated Kurdish militia group in Syria, which is known as People’s Defense Units, or YPG. The report said the Turks struck suspected arms and ammunition depots and buildings believed to have been used by the groups’ “sabotage” teams. It did not provide further details on the operation.
On Wednesday, Turkiye had carried out airstrikes in Iraq and Syria against Kurdish militant targets following a suicide attack outside Turkiye’s interior ministry building earlier this week.
In a press conference following the attack, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said Turkish intelligence officials have established that the two assailants arrived from Syria, where they had been trained. He said Turkiye would now target facilities in Syria and Iraq belonging to the PKK or YPG.
The incident risks adding to longstanding tensions between Turkiye and the United States, even as Turkiye is a strategically important ally and NATO member. US officials and lawmakers have criticized Turkiye’s human rights record and its delays in agreeing to Swedish membership in NATO. Turkiye has been frustrated by US delays in approving 40 new F-16 fighter jets as well as kits to upgrade its existing fleet.
In 2016, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan accused the US of supporting a failed coup attempt against his government. The US has flatly rejected the claims but has also refused to extradite the leader of the group Erdogan claims was behind the attempt, cleric Fetullah Gulen, who lives in exile in Pennsylvania.
The US has designated the PKK as a “foreign terrorist organization” but has declined to make a similar determination regarding the YPK, which have been a key partner of the US in the fight against the Daesh group in northern Syria. The US does not believe the YPG represents a threat to Turkiye.
As recently as Wednesday, the State Department said there was no change in how the US regards the YPG.