Erdogan: US Must Stop Supporting ’Terrorists’, Either Stand with Turkey or Against It
By Staff, Agencies
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday that Washington must stop its support for Kurdish "terrorists," as he accused the United States of standing "behind Kurdish militants who killed Turkish forces in Iraq."
"Weren't you standing with the terrorists? Weren't you standing with the PKK and YPG?", Erdogan called on the White House during the AK Party Congress, in a reference to the Syrian Kurdish YPG force also known as People's Protection Units, which it considers to be an arm of the Kurdistan Workers Party.
"If we are with you in NATO, you will not stand by the terrorists. If you are going to take part, you will be with us," he went on.
Speaking to his party members, Erdogan added that Washington's earlier statement on killed Turkish militants was "a joke."
Turkey's Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said on Sunday that 13 previously-kidnapped Turks, including police personnel, had been shot dead by Kurdistan Workers Party [PKK] militants.
The minister also said that three Turkish soldiers were killed during Ankara's military operation against the group, which was launched on 10 February in northern Iraq's Gara region. Three other soldiers were also wounded, Akar added, noting that 48 PKK militants had been killed by Ankara during the military operation. Turkey said that the offensive was launched to secure the country's frontier and search for people who'd previously been kidnapped by PKK.
Following the minister's words, the US State Department released a statement deploring "the death of Turkish citizens in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq."
"We stand with our NATO Ally Turkey and extend our condolences to the families of those lost in the recent fighting. If reports of the death of Turkish civilians at the hands of the PKK, a designated terrorist organization, are confirmed, we condemn this action in the strongest possible terms," the department claimed.
PKK has been branded a "terrorist" organization by Turkey, the United States, the European Union and a number of other states.
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