TEHRAN(Basirat): Moscow, Turkey and Iran are all sending symbolic messages to Washington that the Americans are out in the cold and the post-ISIS era may well be dictated by regional powers.         
                                           
          
Turkish, Russian and Iranian diplomats will meet in Antalya on Sunday in
 the run-up to a major get-together in Sochi on November 22. The meeting
 is supposed to focus on Syria, but its real purpose is part of a larger
 effort by Moscow to illustrate its influence in the region.
Moscow, Turkey and Iran are all sending symbolic messages to Washington 
that the Americans are out in the cold and the post-ISIS era may well be
 dictated by regional powers, Jpost reported.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said the meeting was intended 
to find out "how we can restore stability and peace in Syria.”
According to Hurriyet Daily News, the foreign ministers from Moscow, 
Ankara and Tehran will meet in Antalya, followed a few days later by a 
meeting in Sochi between Vladimir Putin, Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Hassan
 Rouhani that is being billed as a "trilateral summit.”
Turkish officials, this year, have been increasingly critical of US policy.
Erdogan accused the US of not keeping its promises regarding the 
withdrawal of its partnered forces, YPG and SDF from areas taken from 
ISIL.
"Unfortunately, the current administration also tells us it is in 
cooperation with the SDF, the new name of the YPG. They shouldn’t do 
this.
We were here before them and we know perfectly well who is who in this region,” Erdogan said.
In comments that reflect the official Turkish view, Ibrahim Kalin, a 
special adviser to the Turkish president, wrote in the Daily Sabah: 
"There is growing assessment that the US is using both Daesh and the YPG
 as an excuse to remain in eastern Syria as a potential counter-weighing
 force against the Russian-Iranian presence.”
Turkey sees the YPG as the "Syrian branch” of the Kurdistan Worker’s 
Party (PKK) and, thus, a terrorist organization. In his piece, Kalin 
referenced claims that the US-led coalition and SDF allowed hundreds of 
ISIS fighters and their families to leave Raqqa in October.
"[This shows] once again the utter poverty of the policy of having one terrorist organization fight another,” he wrote.
Kalin says Turkey demands that "Syria’s territorial integrity must be 
maintained” and that foreign fighters for the regime and the YPG must 
leave Syria: "A transitional government should be established to include
 all Syrian stakeholders and prepare the ground for free and fair 
elections.”
He argues that the YPG "cannot be part of any political solution,” and 
that Assad "is not the person to lead Syria to a democratic and 
all-inclusive rule.” The meeting in Sochi is supposed to address these 
issues, alongside the talks that have taken place in Astana and Geneva.
The Russians, according to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, see the 
summit as including the "guarantors of the process of political 
settlement and stability and security that we see now in Syria.”
The Sochi meeting comes just a week and a half after Putin met US President Donald Trump in Danang, Vietnam.
"The presidents agreed that there is no military solution to the 
conflict in Syria,” a joint statement read on November 11. The statement
 called for the implementation of UNSCR 2254, which would involve 
constitutional reform and "free and fair elections under UN 
supervision.”
The statement emphasized the importance of communication in eastern 
Syria between US and Russian forces and "deconfliction” efforts. It also
 mentioned the southwest Syrian cease-fire agreed to with Jordan.
It was a practical statement, whereas the Sochi meeting is seen to be an
 important diplomatic step with wider regional implications.
Russia, Iran and Turkey all differ on the Syrian conflict, but over the 
last year it appears their relationship has trended toward a more 
harmonious one and the Americans have been left out in the cold.
Turkey and Iran grew closer over the Qatar crisis in July and over the 
Kurdistan independence referendum in northern Iraq in September. Turkey 
and Russia also surmounted the crises of the 2015 shooting down of a 
Russian Su-24 by Turkey.
The Trump administration faces political problems at home over the 
relations his former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn had with 
Turkey and his former campaign chair Paul Manafort had with pro-Russian 
elements in Ukraine. This, to some extent, ties his hands on relations 
with Moscow and Ankara.
In addition, Ankara is outraged at the increasing presence of the US in 
eastern Syria and inferences that it intends to stay for the long term.
Trump already has rolled out a robust policy to confront Iran in the 
region, a policy that, as yet, has no practical elements to it but is 
thought to have empowered the Saudis in their moves in Lebanon and the 
Persian Gulf.
What the Americans don’t have is a post-ISIS strategy for Iraq, Syria and the region.
The trilateral summit enshrines the inability of US strategy to make 
headway. Iran, an enemy of the US is sitting with Turkey, a NATO ally, 
alongside Russia. Washington’s allies in eastern Syria should be 
concerned.
Source:Mehrnews