emailed comments, arguing that the main focus of the Turkish military campaign was the PKK rather than IS.
Turkish armed forces on Saturday pressed on with a new wave of strikes against IS and PKK targets, but there were no reports of new air raids overnight.
The military wing of the PKK said in a statement that one PKK fighter in northern Iraq — named as Onder Aslan — was killed in air strikes overnight Friday to Saturday and three others wounded.
The president of the Kurdish-ruled autonomous region in northern Iraq, Massud Barzani, expressed “displeasure with the dangerous level the situation has reached,” his office said.
With Washington gladdened by Turkey’s readiness to step up its role in the coalition against IS, the White House backed Turkey’s right to bomb the PKK.
“Turkey has a right to take action related to terrorist targets,” said deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes, noting that the US categorises the PKK as terrorist group.
Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu ordered the campaign after a week of violence in Turkey which began on Monday with a suicide bombing blamed on IS in a town close to the Syrian border that killed 32.
This incensed Turkey’s Kurds who have long accused the government of actively colluding with IS, allegations Ankara categorically denies.
Two Turkish policemen were shot dead on Wednesday while sleeping in their homes in the southeast, in murders claimed by the PKK.
The violence has fanned fears that the conflict in Syria’s civil war between IS and Kurdish militias allied to the PKK is spilling into Turkish territory.
With Turkey still without a permanent government after a June 7 election resulted in the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) losing its overall majority for the first time since 2002, parliament has been summoned to meet on Wednesday to discuss the security situation.
Tensions across the country are high, with police routinely using water cannon to disperse nightly protests in Istanbul and other cities denouncing IS and the government’s policies on Syria.
Police violently dispersed a demonstration in Ankara late on Saturday, using water cannon and making dozens of arrests.
The Istanbul authorities banned a planned anti-Jihadist “peace march” scheduled to take place in Istanbul on Sunday, citing security and traffic congestion.
Meanwhile, a 21-year-old man died in the town of Cizre in the southeastern Sirnak province in clashes between police and pro-Kurdish demonstrators, reports said.
Turkish security forces have rounded up 590 suspected members of IS, the PKK and other militant groups across the country on the grounds they pose a threat to the state.
One of those held in Istanbul was a senior IS manager in charge of foreign recruits in the city, named as Abdullah Abdullayev, a Russian from the North Caucasus region of Dagestan, the Anatolia news agency said.