Days before he traveled tao Moscow to hit a truce manage Russia to stop battling in Syria's Idlib, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan cautioned Syrian government powers to pull back or they would not have a "head left on their shoulders".
Following six hours of talks with Vladimir Putin, a grave Erdogan reported an agreement which concretes regional gains by Russian-supported Syrian powers over Turkish-sponsored rebels.
Coming back from Russia, Erdogan said his arrangement with Putin will lay the ground for soundness in Idlib and secure regular folks who could somehow or another become outcasts in Turkey, following quite a while of battling that has uprooted about a million people.
"The truce achieves significant additions," he said.
The understanding, on the off chance that it holds, stems the advances of powers faithful to President Bashar al-Assad, facilitating Ankara's biggest dread - an inundation of Syrians escaping assault in Idlib and clamoring to cross its outskirt and join 3.6 million Syrian evacuees as of now in Turkey.