The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

After the attack in Istanbul: Turkey flies airstrikes in northern Syria and northern Iraq against Kurdish positions

2022-11-20T07:18:30.553Z


Turkey is responding to the Istanbul bombing with a military offensive in northern Syria and Iraq. At least twelve people died. It's "settlement time," the Department of Defense wrote on Twitter.


In the focus of Turkish airstrikes: the region around the Syrian city of Kobane

Photo: STRINGER/ AFP

A week after the deadly bomb attack in Istanbul, Turkey announced a military offensive against Kurdish positions in northern Iraq and northern Syria.

It was "settlement time," announced the Turkish Ministry of Defense on Sunday night via Twitter.

"Terrorist elements" should be neutralized and attacks on Turkey avoided, it said.

The focus of the attacks: the Kurdish militias YPG and the banned Kurdish Workers' Party PKK.

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, the Turkish air force attacked Kurdish positions in northern Syria on Sunday night.

At least 12 people were killed and others injured, a spokesman for the organization said.

According to the YPG, Syrian government posts were also attacked.

The regions of Kobane and Aleppo are affected.

Ankara claims the right to self-defense

The Defense Ministry in Ankara invoked the right to self-defense under the United Nations Charter.

It is about avoiding "terrorist attacks" against the Turkish people and security forces.

The conflict between Turkish armed forces and PKK has a decades-long history and has so far claimed thousands of victims - according to the organization International Crisis Group, the majority of PKK members and allies have been killed.

According to the Syrian Observatory, regions around the city of Kobane, which is particularly important for Kurdish forces, have now been attacked.

According to experts, Ankara's troops could aim to connect areas occupied by them west and east of the city.

Erdoğan had announced an offensive months ago

The airstrikes followed just days after the bomb blast that killed six on Istanbul's busy Istiklal shopping street, for which Ankara blames the YPG and PKK.

Investigations are ongoing and 17 people were arrested on Friday.

PKK and YPG clearly deny any involvement and accuse Turkey of having created a pretext for renewed military action in northern Syria.

Independent experts have also expressed such suspicions, especially since Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan had announced such an offensive months ago.

Turkey has conducted four military offensives in northern Syria since 2016, also targeting the YPG.

Ankara sees the YPG as an offshoot of the Kurdish underground organization PKK and regards both as terrorist organizations.

The USA is cooperating with the YPG in the fight against the terrorist militia IS, but classifies the PKK as terrorist.

Ankara is also blocking the NATO accession of Sweden and Finland, citing, among other things, the alleged support of the Kurdish militias by both countries.

In northern Syria, Turkey is occupying border areas as a result of its military operations and is cooperating with rebel groups.

Against the background of an increasingly hostile mood towards refugees in the country, Erdoğan had announced that he wanted to return one million Syrians there.

Erdoğan has been talking about a possible military offensive since the middle of the year, which should penetrate from the national border up to 30 kilometers deep into the neighboring country.

Russia and Iran – both also involved in the Syrian civil war – had advised Turkey against such an approach.

The USA had also warned Ankara against another offensive.

ktz/dpa

Source: spiegel

All news articles on 2022-11-20

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.