'If this
proxy war continues, let me be clear, America and Russia will come to a
point of war
The US and Russia could
drive the world into a global war if the conflict in Syria is not resolved, Turkey has warned.
Tensions
have become increasingly heightened between Washington and Moscow in
recent weeks. Last week, the US and UK warned Russia and its ally the Syrian
government that new economic sanctions could be imposed if the bombing of
Syria's besieged Aleppo continues.
On Sunday, Russia condemned Washington for making
“unprecedented” threats of cyber attacks following accusations by the Obama
administration that Moscow had
hacked computers belonging to American political organisations.
Turkish
deputy prime minister Numan Kurtulmus said: "If this proxy war continues,
after this, let me be clear, America and Russia will come to a point of
war," the Daily Mailreports.
He
suggested the Syrian conflict could be the beginning of World War Three, saying
it had put the world "on the brink of the beginning of a large regional or
global war".
Earlier
this month a Russian newspaper warned that Russian President Vladimir Putin is
playing an "astonishingly risky game" in the Syrian conflict that
could lead to a Third World War.
Popular tabloid, Moskovsky Komsomolets, ran
an article that suggested hostilities in Syria could spark a “direct military confrontation" between
the nations of a similar scale to the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.
Russia's military announced on
Monday that Russian and Syrian forces would halt hostilities for eight hours in
the eastern districts of Aleppo.
It did
not include any promises of an extended cease-fire and followed a bloody day of
air strikes on rebel-held districts in and around the city.
The
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 50 civilians,
including 18 children, were killed in air strikes on the eastern part of the
city in the 24 hours before the Russian announcement.
Monday's air strikes coincided
with the launch in neighbouring Iraq of a major operation by Iraqi and Kurdish
forces, backed by the US-led coalition, to retake the northern city of Mosul
from the so-called Islamic State group.
Mr
Kurtulmus announced on Monday that Turkey is ready for hundreds of
thousands of refugees from Mosul if the operations fuels sectarian violence.
"If
the Mosul operation is handled correctly, there won't be a refugee wave into
Turkey," Mr Kurtulmus told a news conference in Ankara.
[But] if something goes
wrong in Mosul, hundreds of thousands will put their migrant bags on their
backs, they will be miserable and worn out, and come with their belongings to
the only place they can go to, which is Turkey," he said.
The
United Nations refugee agency said up to 100,000 Iraqis may flee to Syria and
Turkey to escape the assault on Mosul, a city of 1.5 million people where Isis
have declared a "caliphate".
Turkey is home to more than three million Syrian refugees,
however its refugee
camps can only house
around 200,000 people.

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