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Iraq will prevent militant Kurdish attacks on Turkey

By REUTERS
March 28, 2018

BAGHDAD: Iraqi armed forces will prevent Kurdish militants based in northern Iraq from staging cross-border attacks against Turkey, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said on Tuesday.

Abadi’s pledge, made during a phone call with Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, came a day after Ankara threatened to intervene directly if the Iraqi operation against the militants based in the Sinjar region failed.

Turkey has long complained that fighters of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) are being given free rein to operate out of Sinjar against Turkish targets. "Iraqi security forces have been instructed not to allow the presence of foreign fighters in the border region," Abadi’s office quoted him as telling Yildirim in their conversation.

The chief of Iraq’s military General Staff, Lieutenant General Othman al-Ghanmi, echoed that message during an inspection tour on Tuesday of troops deployed in Sinjar, the state-run news website Iraqi Media Network reported.

"The Iraqi army is in full control of Sinjar and the border strip with Turkey," it quoted him as saying. On Monday Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey’s intelligence chief would meet an Iraqi official to discuss the Iraqi military operation in Sinjar. Erdogan said Turkey would do "what is necessary" if the Iraqi operation failed, raising the prospect of a possible direct Turkish military operation.