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Iraq |
Turkey hits PKK in Iraq: why now and how far could it go? |
2020-06-19 |
[Rudaw] ...just another cheapjack Moslem dictatorship, brought to you by the Moslem Brüderbund... launched a rare ground assault into northern Iraq Wednesday, deploying special forces against rebels from the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) which is blacklisted by Ankara as a "terrorist" group. my sympathy level is flattened by the fact the PKK are Commies The The semi-autonomous Kurdish authorities which govern the area have kept mum on the vast operation which began early Wednesday despite protestations from Baghdad. - WHAT ARE THE PKK'S TIES TO IRAQ? - The PKK has fought an insurgency against the PKK rebels use the rugged mountains of neighbouring northern Iraq as a rear base, to the discomfort of the Kurdish administration in northern Iraq (KRG). "The PKK is considered an enemy by Iraqi Kurdistan's autonomous authorities because it presents itself as the sole representative of the Kurdish question," said Adel Bakawan, an expert in regional Kurdish affairs. It is seen as a rival by both the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP), whose stronghold is the regional capital Erbil, as well as the competing Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), which is strongest in the northeastern city of Sulaimani. Baghdad has slammed the PKK's presence in Kurdistan, as well as in disputed areas claimed by both Kurdish and federal authorities, as a "declaration of war". But neither the KRG nor federal forces have been able to oust PKK rebels, who have kept up their presence in the north through effective guerilla tactics and good ties to Iraq's powerful neighbour Iran. As a result, said Bakawan, "it is unimaginable that - WHY NOW? - Turkey has regularly targeted PKK military camps in northern Iraq by ground and air, including in large-scale operations in 2007 and 2018. The recent assault may be an attempt by ![]() to project power, Bakawan said. "Turkey is deeply engaged in the conflicts of Syria and Libya, and hopes to get involved in Yemen ...an area of the Arabian Peninsula sometimes mistaken for a country. It is populated by more antagonistic tribes and factions than you can keep track of... ," he told AFP. "It aims to present itself as an essential power when trying to resolve conflicts in the Middle East -- and Iraq forms a part of this," Bakawan added. But the assault also comes at a critical time for the Kurdish region, hit hard by falling crude prices and unable to pay public salaries or foreign debts. Erbil borrowed nearly $5 billion from Turkey in 2014 to pay public workers and also relies on a pipeline via Turkey as its only way to export crude oil. - WHAT HAS THE REACTION BEEN? - A few days before it launched its ground assault, Turkey conducted air raids against alleged PKK camps in the northern Iraqi areas of Makhmur and Sinjar. Iraq's foreign affairs ministry summoned But the following morning, Turkey nonetheless deployed its special forces across the border. Yildiz said he had informed Iraqi officials that if Baghdad did not take action against the rebels, Ankara would continue to "fight the PKK wherever it is". Iraqi-Kurdish analyst Hoshyar Malo accused Iraq of a "timid response" to Turkey's initial air operation. There has been no comment from Iraq's new Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein, who is close to KDP head Masoud Barzani. While the KRG may see the "Kurdish authorities are getting weaker as representatives of a political, Kurdish identity," said Bakawan. |
Posted by:trailing wife |
#3 or 4 - I forgot about frontier incursions against Greece. |
Posted by: Daffy Bonaparte6829 2020-06-19 07:45 |
#2 Common wisdom is don't start a 2-front war...wonder what they say about a putz who starts a three-front war? |
Posted by: Mercutio 2020-06-19 07:44 |
#1 time for Erdrogan to be took down a notch, I don' t give a shit who he is fighting. |
Posted by: Chris 2020-06-19 01:14 |