Turkey deploys troops into Iraq to hunt down PKK rebels

Published September 9, 2015
Turkey is now hunting down the very fighters who are trying to hold back the militant group from taking more territory in Syria and Iraq. ─ AP
Turkey is now hunting down the very fighters who are trying to hold back the militant group from taking more territory in Syria and Iraq. ─ AP

ANKARA: Turkey deployed ground forces across the border into northern Iraq on Tuesday for the first time since 2011, stepping up its battle against Kurdish rebels who have stung the Turkish military with a string of attacks in recent weeks.

The move, however, could frustrate the US-led alliance’s efforts against the self-styled Islamic State because Turkey is now hunting down the very fighters who are trying to hold back the militant group from taking more territory in Syria and Iraq.

Turkish authorities haven’t given a specific timeframe for the operation in northern Iraq, although one official said it was a “short-term” offensive to root out rebels. Turkish jets also carried out more air strikes against rebel camps in the region.

The cross border operations came amid a wave of attacks by the rebels of the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, that killed at least 31 soldiers and police since Sunday.

Turkey, a Nato ally, signed up for a more active participation in the US-led coalition, after a deadly suicide bombing in July blamed on IS. It has allowed US warplanes and drones to take off for missions against IS in Syria and its jets have struck IS targets near its border, in Syria. But the country’s main focus has been its fight against the PKK, which has waged a decades-long insurgency for Kurdish autonomy.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said in comments reported by the Turkish media that IS is a lesser threat to Turkey than the PKK.

Turkey’s ground and aerial incursions against the PKK pose a predicament for the US-led coalition. The Kurds are doing much of the fighting against IS across the border in Syria and in northern Iraq. The PKK, which maintains bases in northern Iraq, has fought alongside Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga forces, notably in Shingal, a predominantly Kurdish town which was taken by IS during last year’s blitz.

“Turkey could not have helped Daesh more if it had tried,” said Nazmi Gur, a former legislator who is in charge of Turkey’s pro-Kurdish party’s foreign relations, in reference to Tuesday’s ground incursion in pursuit of the PKK. He was using an alternative acronym for IS.

Critics accuse Erdogan of re-igniting the fighting with the Kurds, after more than two years of peace efforts, for electoral gains. Opponents say he aims to rally nationalist votes around the ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, and discredit a pro-Kurdish party whose electoral gains in an election in June deprived the AKP which he co-founded of its parliamentary majority.

Erdogan denies the accusation. However, the Turkish leader has also suggested that strong single-party rule after a new election called for Nov. 1 would help end the turmoil.

The Turkish troops crossed the border as part of a “hot pursuit” of the PKK rebels, who were involved in a roadside bomb attack that killed 16 soldiers on Sunday, the government official said.

Published in Dawn, September 9th, 2015

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