By: AP
Source: VOA News
Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s remarks were likely to add to tensions between the two neighbors, which are key U.S. partners in the fight against the Islamic State group.
In a speech delivered in Istanbul, Erdogan also said Turkish troops wouldn’t withdraw from a base near Mosul, saying the Turkish army wouldn’t take orders from Baghdad. Turkey is training anti-IS fighters to help retake Mosul from the extremist group.
Turkey-Iraq relations became strained after Ankara sent troops late last year to the region of Bashiqa, northeast of Mosul, to train anti-IS fighters there – a move Baghdad has since labeled a “blatant violation” of its sovereignty. Iraq has demanded a Turkish withdrawal, but Ankara has repeatedly ignored the call.
Turkish warnings about possible sectarian clashes in Mosul if the majority Sunni region were placed under Shi’ite militia control also have drawn Baghdad’s ire. Last week, both countries summoned each other’s ambassadors while Iraq requested an emergency session of the U.N. Security Council over the presence of unauthorized Turkish troops in northern Iraq.
Speaking to Muslim religious leaders from the Balkans and Central Asia, Erdogan said objections from Iraq wouldn’t stop Turkey from participating in any operation to free Mosul and proceeded to make vitriolic remarks against Iraq’s prime minister.
“You are not my interlocutor, you are not at my level, you are not my equivalent, you are not of the same quality as me,” Erdogan said, addressing Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi. “Your screaming and shouting in Iraq is of no importance to us. You should know that we will go our own way.”
Erdogan also said Turkey wouldn’t withdraw its troops from the base in Bashiqa, adding that it was Abadi himself who had asked Ankara to train fighters there back in 2014.
“Turkey’s army hasn’t lost enough of its quality to take orders from you,” Erdogan said in response to Iraqi calls for the troop’s withdrawal. “We would do whatever is necessary as we have done until today.”
Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, meanwhile, again warned that any operation to free Mosul shouldn’t lead to any demographic change. Turkey is worried that once Mosul is liberated from IS, Kurds or Shi’ite groups may take Mosul over and push out Sunni Arabs or ethnic Turkmens.
“We have explained to all of our friends that the operation planned for Mosul should be limited to removing Daesh,” Yildirim said, using an Arabic acronym for IS.
“If you, after removing Daesh, attempt to change Mosul’s demographic structure, you will light the fire of a very big civil war, of a sectarian war. This is our warning.”