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Are there any partners for Turkey among radicals in Idlib?

The reopening of the M4 highway in Idlib remains a tall task for Turkey, which is grappling with how to remove jihadi groups from the area.

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Turkish army troops wearing protective masks against the novel coronavirus take position behind sand barricades on the M4 highway, which links Aleppo and Latakia, Syria, April 13, 2020. — IBRAHIM YASOUF/AFP via Getty Images

The latest Russian-Turkish deal on Syria’s Idlib province has opened rifts in the ranks of jihadi groups holding sway in the region amid a Turkish military buildup as part of efforts to reopen the key M4 highway.

The number of Turkish military posts in Idlib has exceeded 50 since the March 5 Moscow deal, which calls for the reopening of M4 and the establishment of a security corridor with a depth of six kilometers (nearly four miles) on either side of the road that links Latakia and Aleppo. Whether Turkey will fight the jihadi groups that reject the deal has been a key question for weeks. On March 19, a deadly rocket attack on Turkish forces was passed over with a brief statement by Ankara, which blamed the incident on “some radical groups” in the region. 

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