Turkey had yesterday launched operation "Olive Branch" seeking to oust from the Afrin region of northern Syria the Peoples' Protection Units (YPG) which Ankara considers a terror group.
But the campaign risks further increasing tensions with Turkey's NATO ally the United States -- which has supported the YPG in the fight against Islamic State jihadists -- and also needs at least the tacit support of Russia to succeed.
Turkish artillery pounded YPG targets around Afrin today after the first strikes the previous day saw 72 Turkish aircraft hit a total of 108 targets inside Syria, according to the army.
Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim had raised the prospect that Turkish ground forces would also join the fight later today.
An AFP correspondent on the southwestern edge of the Afrin region saw a warplane bombing the western outskirts of the area early today.
A small unit from a Turkish-backed rebel group was manning a monitoring point on a hilltop overlooking several Kurdish-controlled villages below.
The operation is Turkey's second major incursion into Syria during the seven-year civil war after the August 2016- March 2017 Euphrates Shield campaign in an area to the east of Afrin against both the YPG and IS.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had repeatedly vowed that Turkey would root out the "nests of terror" in Syria of the YPG, which Ankara accuses of being the Syrian offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).
The PKK, which has waged a rebellion in the Turkish southeast for more than three decades, is regarded as a terror group not just by Ankara and but also its Western allies.
Afrin is an enclave of YPG control, cut off from the longer strip of northern Syria that the group controls to the east extending to the Iraqi border. Turkey wants the YPG to retreat east of the Euphrates River.
The Turkish army said there were casualties but insisted they were all members either of the YPG or the PKK.
"Now is the time of triumph" headlined the pro-government Yeni Safak daily.
In a sign of the risks to Turkey, four rockets fired by the YPG hit a town in southern Turkey on the Syrian border early today without causing loss of life, local officials said.
There was damage to one building that caught fire and one woman was slightly injured in the rocket fire on the town of Kilis, the Dogan news agency said.
Turkey risks entering a diplomatic minefield with the offensive and the foreign ministry lost no time in inviting the ambassadors of all major powers to be briefed on the offensive.
The ministry said it had even informed Damascus through its Istanbul consulate. But the Syrian regime, which is at odds with Turkey, however strongly denied this, denouncing the operation as a "brutal Turkish aggression".
There was no immediate comment from the United States on the offensive but ahead of its launch a senior State Department official had raised concerns it risked being harmful for security in the region.
The Russian foreign ministry said it was concerned and urged Turkey to show restraint. But the Russian defence ministry said its troops were withdrawing from the Afrin area to prevent any "provocation" and ensure the security of its troops.
Timur Akhmetov, Ankara-based researcher at the Russian International Affairs Council, told AFP that Russia appeared to have given the "green light" to the operation but made clear it should not lead to destabilisation elsewhere.
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