By Ellen Francis and Ece Toksabay
BEIRUT/ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey warned on Wednesday that pro-Damascus forces would face "serious consequences" for entering Syria's Afrin region to help Kurdish fighters repel a Turkish offensive.
Their arrival raises the specter of wider escalation on Syria's northern battlefront, where the Syrian army, allied Iran-linked militias, Kurdish forces, rebels, Turkish troops, and Russian and American forces are all contending.
The Syrian Kurdish YPG militia said Turkish planes bombed a town in Afrin on Wednesday. Turkey began its assault last month to drive out the YPG, which it deems a security threat along its border akin to the Kurdish PKK insurgency on its own soil.
Paramilitary forces aligned with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad arrived in Afrin on Tuesday. Turkey and the Syrian insurgents it supports tried to force them back with artillery fire..
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan's spokesman said on Wednesday the forces in a convoy of some 40-50 vehicles had retreated. "Any step by the (Syrian) regime or other elements in this direction will surely have serious consequences," Ibrahim Kalin told a news conference.
But a YPG official and a pro-Assad military commander denied similar Turkish statements on Tuesday night.
The commander, in the alliance fighting alongside Damascus in Syria's almost eight-year-old civil war, told Reuters the forces in Afrin had returned fire against Turkey-backed rebels.
A new confrontation, pitting the Turkish army directly against pro-Assad forces, would further scramble the web of alliances and rivalries already at play in northern Syria.
RUSSIAN INTERVENTION
Erdogan described the pro-government fighters coming to the YPG's aid as Shi'ite Muslim militias acting independently and warned they would pay a heavy price.
"Any step there aimed at supporting the... YPG terrorist organization will mean they... become legitimate targets for us," his spokesman said on Wednesday. Kalin added that Turkey was not in direct talks with the Syrian government, but its messages were being indirectly conveyed.
The forces that arrived - which included combatants allied to Assad but not Syrian army troops - will deploy near the Turkish border, the YPG said.
Before they entered, Erdogan said he had won Russian President Vladimir Putin's backing to block a Syrian government deployment to Afrin. The pro-Assad commander said Russia had intervened to "delay the entry" of Syrian army troops, and so allied "popular forces" with heavy weaponry went instead.
Syrian Kurdish officials have said Moscow sought to stop a deal between Kurdish forces and the Damascus government for army soldiers to deploy to Afrin. Moscow, they said, wanted to secure its interests in Syria and keep leverage with Ankara to advance its wider ambitions of brokering a settlement of the conflict.
Turkey and Russia have backed opposing sides during the seven-year war, with Moscow the closest ally of Assad and Ankara one of the main backers of rebels fighting to overthrow him.
But Ankara shifted its Syria policy, seeking to mend broken ties with Russia and turning its efforts towards fighting what it sees as a growing menace from Kurdish forces in Syria.
Turkey has in recent months lent support to diplomacy by Russia, whose firepower helped Assad's government seize back most major cities from rebels and militants since 2015.
Ankara said last month it had sought Moscow's agreement before launching the Afrin assault.
"The Russians are the ones who decided this game," said Kurdish politician Fawza Youssef.
"The Russians have been playing it like this for a while... They pressure the Turks with the Kurdish card (and vice versa)," said Youssef, a senior member of the Kurdish-led autonomous authority in north Syria.
The Turkish offensive was slow to achieve gains along the frontier but appears to have accelerated recently, pushing several km (miles) into Syria. However, the YPG still holds most of the Afrin region including its central town.
Turkey regards the YPG as the Syrian extension of the Kurdish PKK movement which has waged a three-decade insurgency on its territory, though the groups say they are independent.
(Reporting by Ellen Francis and Ece Toksabay, with additional reporting by Angus McDowall in Beirut and Tuvan Gumrukcu in Ankara; writing by Ellen Francis; editing by Mark Heinrich)