Istanbul
Turkey started shelling Islamic State positions just over the border on Monday and also attacked Kurdish forces further south inside Syria.
The shelling of Islamic State in Jarablus, a city on the border, continued for a second day, while the extremist group retaliated with mortar fire into Turkey.
Also, three rockets fired from Syria landed on Tuesday in Kilis, southern Turkey, about 50 miles away. Islamic State and Syrian rebel factions hold villages on the other side of the border.
Biden is due in Ankara today for a brief trip set to last hours. He will be the most senior official from Washington to come since the July 15 failed coup attempt in Turkey.
Backed by U.S.-led alliance airstrikes, the Kurds have been a key force in driving Islamic State from territories in northern Syria.
Their advances have made NATO-member Turkey wary and caused tensions between Ankara and Washington, which are likely to be addressed during talks with Turkish leaders, including President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Despite the Turkish shelling of their positions, the Kurds claimed they advanced against Islamic State and took more territory from the extremist group near Minbij, a key northern Syrian border area.
The U.S. Department of Defense confirmed on Monday that operations in the northern Syrian city of Minbij with the Kurdish-led forces are ongoing, amid a “broader effort to prepare defendable positions for long-term security.”
Islamic State was driven from the city earlier this month but left behind many booby traps which were being cleared.
Seizing Minbij is meant to help cut down on the flow of foreign fighters to Islamic State from over the still-porous Turkish border and weaken the extremist group’s hold in northern Syria, according to Kurdish and U.S. officials.
The U.S. has special forces on the ground in northern Syria with the Kurdish-led forces.
Syrian rebels said this week that Turkey is planning to help them launch an attack on Jarablus, in a move that could cause fresh tensions with the Kurds and the U.S.
With regards to the recent shelling, CNN Turk quoted a government official as saying Turkey was aiming to open a corridor for rebels, from factions mostly focused on fighting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
Ankara is moving rebels from western Syria, though Turkey, to Karkamis, just across from Jarablus ahead of a planned attack, two rebel fighters told DPA. Karkamis is where Islamic State fired mortars landed.
Ankara is a major backer of Syrian rebel factions fighting al-Assad, including Islamist groups, and appears keen to have these forces control territory on its border, rather than the Kurds.
Turkey is currently facing a Kurdish insurgency on its own territory and is concerned about growing nationalist sentiment among the minority group.
Kurds, a minority in the area, have long complained about systemic discrimination in both countries.
The Syrian Kurds have begun to carve out autonomous zones for themselves and their latest military push appears aimed at linking up their eastern territory with a western enclave.
