Reference Text
Time Left10:00
Talks
between
representatives
of
Syria's
Kurdish
rebels
and
President
Bashar
al-Assad's
regime
in
Damascus
bring
a
ray
of
hope
to
hundreds
of
thousands
living
in
the
country's
north
and
east.
After
the
talks
last
week,
leaders
of
the
Syrian
Democratic
Council,
the
political
wing
of
the
Kurdish-led
Syrian
Democratic
Forces,
said
they
were
ready
to
work
with
the
regime
towards
creating
“a
democratic,
decentralised
Syria
with
a
new
system
and
a
new
form”.
This
was
the
first
time
since
the
outbreak
of
war
that
a
delegation
was
sent
by
Kurdish
rebels
to
Damascus.
During
the
course
of
the
war,
both
sides
have
more
or
less
refrained
from
targeting
each
other.
While
the
Assad
regime
withdrew
troops
from
the
Kurdish
areas
in
the
early
days
of
the
civil
war
to
defend
its
coastal
stronghold
against
the
rebels,
Kurdish
fighters
consolidated
their
position
to
establish
autonomous
rule.
When
the
Islamic
State
moved
to
Kurdish
towns
in
2015,
the
rebels,
with
help
from
the
U.S.,
successfully
resisted
them.
Now
they
control
almost
a
third
of
Syria,
the
largest
chunk
of
territories
outside
government
rule.
The
talks
also
took
place
after
the
regime
recaptured
Deraa
in
the
south,
the
birthplace
of
the
Syrian
rebellion,
after
the
rebels,
apparently
abandoned
by
their
regional
and
western
backers,
agreed
to
surrender
as
part
of
a
Russia-mediated
deal.
Most
of
Syria's
population
centres
are
now
controlled
by
the
regime.
In
the
south,
rebels
retain
some
presence
in
parts
of
Quneitra.
In
the
north,
rebels
and
al-Qaeda-linked
jihadists
run
the
Idlib
province,
while
in
the
east
the
Kurds
are
in
control.
Damascus's
strategy
appears
to
be
to
seize
the
entire
south
and
then
move
north.
Before
attacking
Idlib,
the
last
stronghold
of
anti-regime
rebels,
the
government
is
seeking
to
engage
the
Kurds,
and
Kurdish
militias
say
they
could
join
the
Idlib
offensive
with
the
government.
Their
political
leaders
have
also
made
it
clear
they
are
not
seeking
independence
from
Syria,
and
only
want
to
protect
their
autonomy.
A
recapture
of
the
Kurdish
areas
by
force
is
not
a
feasible
option
for
the
regime.
Some
2,000
U.S.
soldiers
are
deployed
in
the
Kurdish
autonomous
areas,
and
both
Russia
and
Syria
would
prefer
not
to
get
into
a
direct
exchange
of
fire
with
U.S.
soldiers.
However,
a
deal
with
the
Kurds
could
upset
Turkey,
which
sees
Syrian
Kurdish
rebels
as
an
extended
arm
of
the
Kurdistan
Workers
Party,
which
it
calls
“terrorist”.
The
Syrian
regime
therefore
has
to
do
a
balancing
act
here,
with
support
from
Russia.
In
the
battle
for
Deraa,
Russia
managed
to
convince
the
U.S.,
Jordan
and
Israel
that
the
regime's
capture
of
the
province
was
the
best-case
scenario
for
the
region.
Likewise,
it
could
bring
the
U.S.