Turks call on Europeans to "take back" their nationals, prisoners of the Islamic State in Syria.

The Turks launched their offensive in northern Syria. They call on Europeans to take back their nationals who are currently prisoners of the Kurds.

The Security Council is agitating and everywhere is ringing the tocsin so that the Turks do not go too far. But in the camps of Kurdistan there is hope, that is where the Islamic State survives. In the midst of the miserable crowd, there is a Rump State, an army waiting for its hour, 12,000 men and 120,000 sympathizers.

There is Derik where foreign terrorists are imprisoned, including several hundred French. There are the prisoners of Roj, Ain Issa, Qamishli, waiting for chaos and wanting to join Idlib, the last bastion of jihad.

There is finally the annex to Al Hol camp where jihadists in niqab impose a relentless and faceless matriarchy, where children are trained to hate the disbelievers.

The Kurdistan camps are the Daesh campus, not the terminus. The peshmerga now have better things to do than babysit.

For a year, France has in turn wished that its nationals are tried in Kurdistan, then delivered to the Iraqi courts. She contemplated the repatriation of 250 miners and then retreated before bringing back some widows and orphans.

No anticipation, just precautions and one policy, the ostrich. It's a time bomb and the countdown ends.