Turkey, Iran attack northern Iraq's Kurds
Turkey is teaming up with Iran by staging joint attacks against the positions of the Kurdistan Workers Party, widely known as PKK, in northern Iraq.
Turkish
President Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan has ordered the deployment of special combat troops in northern
Iraq, within a ground operation against the party.
The Turkish air force
and infantry are providing the ground troops with an air cover.
The Turkish air force
has staged strikes against PKK positions in the northern Iraqi towns of Sinjar
and Makhmur.
The PKK has been
battling Ankara for decades. Ankara says the two towns have become strongholds
of the Kurdish group.
Turkish shelling of
the mountains along the border with Iraq has become a common occurrence since
the termination of the peace agreement between the PKK and Turkey in 2015.
Cooperation between
Iran and Turkey in the war on the PKK came shortly after Iranian Foreign
Minister Javad Zarif visited Turkey.
Zarif was in Turkey
to coordinate the war against the PKK. This war also came a short time after
Iran executed renowned Kurdish political prisoner Hedayat Abdollahpour. Iranian
authorities executed Abdollahpour, even without notifying his family.
He was put in jail in
the winter of 2017 and accused of having links with banned Kurdish opposition
parties. Abdollahpour was then sentenced to death.
Different Kurdish
villages in northern Iraq were shelled in the past few days, according to local
sources.
Iranian airplanes
flew over the villages before the same villages were shelled by the Iranian
infantry.
The sources said the
areas shelled were gathering places for shepherds from different parts of
northern Iraq. Local authorities have not assessed the extent of the damage
from the Iranian shelling and the Turkish attacks yet.




