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Turkish tanks drill on Iraqi border week before Kurdish vote

By Reuters - Sep 19,2017 - Last updated at Sep 19,2017

Turkish tanks are seen near the Habur crossing gate between Turkey and Iraq during a military drill on Monday (AFP photo)

ANKARA/BAGHDAD — Turkish tanks carried out drills at the Iraqi border on Monday, the army said, a week before a referendum across that frontier on Kurdish independence that Ankara has called a threat to its national security.

The exercises came as Turkey, the central government in Baghdad and their shared neighbour Iran all stepped up protests and warnings about the looming plebiscite in semi-autonomous Kurdish northern Iraq.

Iran, which like Turkey fears fuelling separatism in its own Kurdish population, warned of unspecified consequences if the vote went ahead. 

Turkey’s Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said any threats from inside or outside its territory would face immediate retaliation. The military command released pictures of the tanks speeding along roads and kicking up dust during exercises.

Iraq’s Supreme Federal Court formerly ordered Kurdistan region to suspend the vote, Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi’s office said. Baghdad, its neighbours and Western powers fear the referendum could distract attention from the fight against Daesh militants across the region.

But the Kurdish leadership showed no sign of bowing to pressure to call off the vote, including from the United Nations — which urged Erbil to resolve disputes with Baghdad over land and power sharing through dialogue.

 

Tanks, missiles

 

In Turkey, around 100 military vehicles, mostly tanks, took part in the drill near the Habur border gate, a crossing point into Iraq, the private Dogan news agency said. Vehicles carrying missiles and howitzers also participated.

Turkish military sources said the drill was due to run until September 26, a day after the planned Kurdish referendum.

Turkey has not spelt out what response it might take if the referendum goes ahead. It has brought forward meetings of the Cabinet and its national security council to Friday, three days ahead of the vote, to look again at the situation.

“Those who are chasing dreams in Syria and Iraq should know very well that any attempt that threatens our national security, from inside or outside our borders, will be immediately retaliated in kind,” Prime Minister Yildirim said in a speech in the southern Turkish town of Sanliurfa. 

Kurdish forces have, with US backing, been in the forefront of the battle against the Daesh extremist group in Iraq and Syria. But the Kurdish involvement strains relations between Washington and Ankara. 

The Iraqi Supreme Federal Court approved Prime Minister Abadi’s demand to consider “the breakaway of any region or province from Iraq as unconstitutional”, his office said in a statement.

The court is responsible for settling disputes between Iraq’s central government and regions including Kurdistan, but has no means to implement its rulings in the Kurdish region which has its own police and its own government, led by Massoud Barzani.

Iran issued a veiled warning to the Kurds that their security could be affected if Iraq’s unity was threatened.

“Any damage to this strategic principle would lead to the revision of and serious alteration in the existing cooperation between Iran and Iraq’s Kurdistan region,” said Ali Shamkhani, the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, according to state-run Press TV.

Turkey’s protests in the build-up to the vote had been relatively muted. It has built good relations with Barzani’s semi-autonomous Kurdish administration in northern Iraq, founded on strong economic links as well as Ankara and Erbil’s shared suspicions of other Kurdish groups and Iraq’s central government.

 

The Kurdish Regional Government, led by Barzani’s KDP Party, exports hundreds of thousands of barrels of oil per day to world markets via Turkey and said on Monday that Russian oil major Rosneft will invest in pipelines in the Kurdish region to export gas to Turkey and Europe. 

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