Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK)-affiliated Democratic Union Party (PYD) terrorists have looted houses of civilians in northern Raqqa, local sources reported. Supporting the terrorist organization carrying out an ethnic purge in Syria’s north for years, Pentagon had to intervene when terrorists were endangered after the recent lootings.
The residents of Tal Samen, whose houses were burglarized, clashed with PKK terrorists. The United States, concerned about the lives of terrorists arrived in the district with armored vehicles and intervened in the conflict. “Cougar MRAP”-type armored vehicles, personnel carriers and Husky mine detectors established a buffer zone in the district. Tal Samen residents, protecting their houses against PKK/PYD, fear being slaughtered by the U.S. forces.
PKK/PYD terrorists, deployed by the U.S. under the cover of Daesh, does not allow civilians who escape death in Raqqa to enter the organization-held cities. The terrorist organization takes bribes from civilians, whom they detain in stony areas where sheltering and nourishment is not possible. They also ask for a reference or guarantor from civilians who want to enter the cities. The terrorists, after a while, even send the civilians who enter city centers in this way to so-called camps. A local activist network called “Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently” announced that 121 civilians were killed by the organization’s artillery fire in June alone.
Sending 909 truckloads of weapons-ammunition to PYD in June and July, the United States claimed that they have “not provided tanks” to the terrorist organization. Although the U.S. cannot use Daesh as an excuse for much longer, Pentagon continues to send heavy armored vehicles, personnel carriers, mine clearance devices, anti-tank systems, night vision goggles, designated marksman rifles, tons of bombs, and high-technology ammunition to the PKK. The U.S. on Thursday claimed that tanks are not among the product range that they offer to the terrorist organization. The U.S. embassy in Turkey, in a statement, denied the media reports that the United States had sent tanks to the PKK.
The PKK is listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the European Union and the United States.
The PKK has been conducting armed violence in the southeastern part of Turkey since 1984. More than 40,000 people, mostly civilians, have been killed in the three-decade long conflict.