Turkey violates Iraqi airspace to ‘pursue terrorists’ amid Arab condemnation
Ankara has been subjected to Iraqi and Arab condemnation for
violating Iraqi airspace as part of its Operation Claw-Eagle, in which it
claimed that its aircraft destroyed terrorist tunnels, in reference to the
Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which Turkey has classified as a terrorist
organization, and the killing of a number of PKK members during the strikes,
according to the Anadolu Agency. The Turkish Defense Ministry said that it had
destroyed 81 PKK targets, including caves, bunkers and fortifications, which
resulted in heavy losses among the Kurdish group.
The ministry stated that its operations against the PKK
would continue until the last terrorist is killed, while Turkish Ambassador to
Iraq Fatih Yildiz stressed on Monday, June 16 that the PKK is a common enemy of
Turkey and Iraq "whose head must be crushed."
However, Iraq’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs summoned Yildiz
and delivered a memorandum of protest against the operation in northern Iraq. Arab
League Secretary General Ahmed Aboul Gheit also denounced Turkey’s operation,
stating that it represents an attack on Iraq’s sovereignty and is taking place
without coordinating with the government in Baghdad. He added that this
reflects Ankara's disdain for both international law and its relations with its
Arab neighbors.
The Iraqi Joint Operations Command denounced Turkey’s
violation of Iraq’s airspace and the targeting of a refugee camp near Sinjar in
the north of the country. It called for an end to these violations, adding that
Iraq is fully prepared to cooperate and control the security situation on its
borders.
Complaint to UN
On Tuesday, the Iraqi Parliament's Security and Defense
Committee revealed support for filing a complaint with the United Nations in protest
against the Turkish bombing of Iraqi territory.
The bombing, according to local media, led to the
displacement of about 2,500 people in the provinces of Nineveh and Duhok.
Iranian forces also launched a bombing campaign of the
Kurdistan region in conjunction with the Turkish bombing, causing many losses
in the region, which came after Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif visited
Turkey to discuss regional arrangements.
The timing of the operation at the beginning of the summer
and the exposure of the dense vegetation in the mountainous border areas
enhances the possibility of a Turkish land incursion in conjunction with the
air operation. Kurdish news has reported that the Turkish army has brought
reinforcements to the outskirts of the Kurdish Bradost region at the crossroads
of the Iraqi-Iranian border.
Problem for Baghdad
Iraq hosts a number of Turkish military bases, including the
famous Bashiqa base in the Kurdistan region. This issue has been a problem for
the Baghdad government in recent years, but Iraq’s demands have always been
rejected by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the pretext of
PKK-affiliated terrorist groups existing in Iraq’s Qandil Mountains that
threaten Turkish national security.
But on January 5, the Iraqi parliament passed a law to
remove foreign forces from Iraq, including Turkish forces, not just American.




