Turkey Avoids Clash with Iran-Backed Forces in Iraq, Attacks Kurdish Villages Instead

Turkish warplanes staged airstrikes on Monday against the northern
mountainous terrain of Duhok province in Iraqi Kurdistan. Targets hit by the
raid are believed to be held by members of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).
No human casualties were reported, but a security source in the Amedi
district told Asharq Al-Awsat that Turkish fighter jets attacked two villages
located at the base of mountain Mtein after midnight on Monday.
Speaking under the conditions of anonymity, the source added that
another two villages at the base of mountain Karah were also targeted.
“Areas targeted by Turkish raids are
uninhabited, so the bombing did not cause any casualties, but it caused panic
among the residents of the nearby villages as smoke plumes were seen rising in
the area,” they explained.
Hashem Ahmed, a local from Amedi district, reported that Turkish jets
could be heard soaring over the region before six explosions went off near the
villages of Banavi and Korki.
“Turkish aircrafts usually target
any human presence in these areas, which endangers the lives of herders and
farmers there,” Ahmed told Asharq Al-Awsat, adding that many pastures and
farmlands have been grazed by the raids.
Monday’s raids were the fifth within a week.
For nearly two decades, Turkey has been launching cross-border attacks
against what it claims are PKK sites in northern Iraqi Kurdistan.
Civilians living close to borders have been heavily affected by the
attacks with at least 50 having been killed in the past three years alone.
“Turkish military operations
targeting Iraqi sites under the pretext of ending PKK terrorism are futile,”
said political researcher and analyst Saman Noah, explaining that Turkey needs
to talk to Kurdish leaders instead of pressing on with its offensive against
so-called separatists.
“Killing civilians, destroying homes
and grazing farmlands to the ground have not succeeded in wiping the PKK out,”
Noah told Asharq Al-Awsat.
Ankara’s ramped up military campaign, according to Noah, included
establishing around 20 military outposts and bases inside neighboring Iraq.
More so, Noah pointed out that Turkey did not respond to a recent attack
that targeted its base in Bashiqa because it was likely looking to avoid
confrontation with Iran-backed forces.
“Ankara knows that expanding operations in Iraq means a confrontation with pro-Iranian factions that have weapons and capabilities that can prove challenging,” said Noah.