The following article, by Jason Ditz, was originally published on Antiwar.com, on November 10, 2020:
Turkey has continued to withdraw forces from some of its smaller outposts in military bases in northern Syria, this time shuttering two outposts in Aleppo Province, and relocating the troops in the town of Darat Azzaz, a town held by Turkish-backed rebels.
This is a part of a general order in Turkey which is closing a lot of posts in Aleppo and Idlib, and which is reportedly intended to shift away from contested areas and reduce the risk of direct fighting with the Syrian military.
This reflects the loss of territory by the Turkish rebels, as those posts were in areas they controlled at one point. Rebel losses to al-Qaeda, and subsequent al-Qaeda losses to Syria’s military, have put a lot of these posts well outside Turkish sphere of influence.
The rebels aren’t happy with this shift, as they saw Turkey’s presence as a sign that they could still claim the regions lost long ago. So much territory is now in government military hands they view the rebels as almost irrelevant, beyond Turkey sticking around, and this should indeed reduce the risk of fighting.