Dr. Dave Campbell
The Kurdish population in northern Syria faces the existential risk of displacement, harm and death. As large numbers of those living in Kurdistan along the Syrian-Turkish border are moved out of their homes by Turkish, Russian and Syrian forces, hundreds of thousands of Kurdish civilians are facing a humanitarian crisis of dramatic proportions. This is not the Kurds first encounter with forced expulsion from their homeland. Former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s regime forced many to flee from cities to the mountains many years ago. This time the Kurds expulsion has been triggered by the abrupt withdrawal of United States military forces, after President Trump’s announcement October 7. They are leaving regions of northern Syria they have called home for years.
In the expulsion process, Kurdish men, women and children are evacuating as refugees without a country to call home. As refugees they are non-combatants, with profound risk of inadequate food, lack of safe drinking water, scant if any medical care and marginal if any housing.
South Florida Sun Sentinel this Thursday reported the observations of a group of South Florida physicians just returned from the affected areas of Kurdistan, where they were providing both medical care and training to local doctors to create a sustainable improvement of healthcare delivery once they vacated the region. Dr. Aaron Epstein who founded the humanitarian organization on the ground in Kurdistan, Global Surgical and Medical Support Group in 2014, was in Kurdistan when President Trump’s abrupt military withdrawal caught everyone by surprise. He is now back at his emergency medicine residency training program in Buffalo, New York. He said, “Unfortunate timing in that we’re all training and treating the Kurds when Trump made the decision to pull out.”
The Sun Sentinel had previously reported on Turkey’s President Erdogan staging the military offensive called, “Operation Peace Spring”, that aimed to take control of the region which heretofore was home to hundreds of thousands of ethnic Kurds.
On Twitter, Mustafa Bali, the spokesman of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) wrote, “Turkish warplanes have started to carry out airstrikes on civilian areas. There is a huge panic among people of the region.” The Sun Sentinel reported that the SDF, which has been the main partner allied with the United States in defeating Islamic State, had controlled this homeland of the Kurds, in a large region along the north-eastern regions of Syria, along the Turkish border to the north.
As United States troops have departed Syria for other posts in the Middle East, the Kurds living in the northern reaches of Syria have come under increasing pressure to leave or face combat forces threatening sniper fire, bombs and incendiary devices.
Last Friday, The Guardian reported the United Nations (UN), is investigating alleged use of burning white phosphorus in Syria. The Kurdish Red Crescent has reported six people, some civilians, and children, hospitalized with mysterious burns. The UN has stated their chemical weapons inspectors are gathering information. The Guardian reported one chemical weapons expert that looked at the photographs of one victim and said it was likely they showed chemical burns.
Peter Beaumont with Guardian’s Global Development desk reported white phosphorus a to be a chemical weapon used in the past as part of the targeting of civilians in the Syrian civil war. He wrote, “WP is a chemical that burns fiercely in contact with air, producing thick acrid smoke and a white light… International humanitarian law allows the use of white phosphorus in munitions for making smoke to mask troop movement and for illumination purposes. Its use as an incendiary weapon is generally understood to be forbidden in all circumstances where there is a risk to civilians, i.e. against military targets located amid concentrations of civilians.”
President Trump’s U.S. brokered temporary ceasefire between the Kurdish people of northern regions of Syria and Turkey and now the promise of a permanent ceasefire is a fragile safety net for thousands looking for safety and the basic-necessities of life.
Representative Ted Lieu said on Twitter Wednesday, “Trump told the American people he was bringing our great soldiers and military home from Syria. Today in @HouseForeign, Ambassador Jeffrey confirmed that’s not exactly true. Sadly, Trump’s disastrous decision has resulted in a great loss for America, and a win for our enemies.” He said in Congress, to Ambassador Jeffrey, “Turkish forces are slaughtering our allies the Kurds.”
The Washington Times (WT) reported on Wednesday that while Kurdish officials publicly remain grateful for the U.S. role in the ceasefire, neighboring Turkish and Syrian government forces, and those from Russia, are driving hundreds of thousands of Kurds, with no state of their own, from the regions they call home along the Turkish-Syrian border. WT also reported the combat offensive waged by the Turkish military against the Kurds has resulted in dozens of civilians being killed.
Since the start of Erdogan’s Operation Peace Spring started, other reports place the number of injured and killed much higher. The New York Review (NYR) reported Wednesday some 235 civilians have been killed, including twenty-two children, with a further 677 people injured.
WT reports humanitarian observers saying that the fighting in the homelands of the Kurds in northern Syria has driven more than 200,000 people from their homes. This number of displaced Kurds in just the most recent refugee crisis of the long-standing Syrian civil war and has been independently confirmed by the NYR.








