Austin American-Statesman

Turkish troops pour into Iraq in ‘hot pursuit’ of Kurd rebels

- By Suzan Fraser

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 U.S.-led alliance’s efforts against the Islamic State group 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 time frame 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 airstrikes 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 U.S.-led coalition, after a deadly suicide bombing in July blamed on the Islamic State. It has allowed U.S. warplanes and drones to take off for missions against the Islamic State in Syria and its jets have struck Islamic State targets near its border, in Syria.

But the country’s main focus remains its fight against the PKK, which has waged a decadeslon­g insurgency for Kurdish autonomy. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said in comments reported by the Turkish media that the Islamic State is a lesser threat to Turkey than the PKK.

Turkey’s ground and aerial incursions against the PKK pose a difficult situation for the U.S.-led coalition. The Kurds are doing much of the fighting against the Islamic State 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 that was taken by the Islamic State 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 the Islamic State.

Critics accuse Erdogan of reigniting 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.

“This is a short-term measure intended to prevent the terrorists’ escape,” the official said on condition of anonymity in line with government rules that bar officials from speaking to reporters without prior authorizat­ion.

The official didn’t say how many troops crossed into Iraq, or exactly how long the operation would last.

Turkey’s military has carried out numerous airstrikes and ground incursions into Iraqi territory in pursuit of the PKK over the past decades, but Tuesday’s raid was the first since 2011.

 ?? EMRE TAZEGUL / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Family members cry Tuesday during the funeral of Turkish army officer Tolga Artug in Turgutlu, Turkey. Artug and 15 other soldiers were killed in a roadside bomb attack Sunday in which Kurdish rebels were involved.
EMRE TAZEGUL / ASSOCIATED PRESS Family members cry Tuesday during the funeral of Turkish army officer Tolga Artug in Turgutlu, Turkey. Artug and 15 other soldiers were killed in a roadside bomb attack Sunday in which Kurdish rebels were involved.

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